
My Husband Let His Sister Ruin Our Marriage
Chapter 4
The chlorine still burned my throat, a chemical fire that no amount of scotch could extinguish. I sat on the edge of the master bed, wrapped in three towels, shivering so violently my teeth clicked together. Ian stood by the window, staring out at the Manhattan skyline, his silhouette cut from the same cold steel as the buildings.
"She told me, Ian," I rasped, my voice sounding like gravel grinding against glass. "Before she pushed me. She looked me in the eye and said she pushed your mother down the stairs."
Ian didn't turn. He took a slow sip of his whiskey, the ice clinking—a cheerful sound in a room suffocated by tension.
"Hypoxia is a dangerous thing, Blaire."
"I wasn't drowning then!" I stood up, the towels slipping, puddling around my feet like the water that had nearly killed me. "She confessed. She said she’s 'loved' and that you cover for her. She killed your mother."
He finally turned. His face was a mask of pity—not for my near-death experience, but for my sanity. He walked over, closing the distance not to comfort me, but to inspect the damage. He reached into his suit pocket and pulled out a heavy cream card, placing it on the nightstand.
"Dr. Aris. He specializes in trauma-induced psychosis and paranoid delusions."
I stared at the card, the gold embossing catching the light. "You think I'm crazy?"
"I think you underwent a severe shock," he said, his voice terrifyingly calm. "You were trapped in a cellar for three days. You nearly drowned tonight. The brain invents narratives to cope with stress. Arielle loves you, Blaire. She was hysterical when you fell."
"She threw herself back! She staged it!"
Ian sighed, the sound of a man exhausted by a child's tantrum. "Call the number. If you continue these slanderous accusations against my sister, I will have you committed for your own safety. Do not test me."
He walked out, leaving me with the card and the terrifying realization that my husband wasn't just indifferent; he was the architect of my reality, and he was rewriting it to erase me.
***
I didn't call the doctor. I called a private investigator named Cole, a man who smelled like stale tobacco and charged by the hour to dig up the graves of the rich. I gave him the name of the Edwards’ old family physician and the date of the matriarch’s death.
But I needed more than old records. I needed to know where the monster went when he took off his human suit.
I installed a tracker on the Aston Martin’s undercarriage two nights later. It was a simple magnetic device, smaller than a deck of cards, linked to an app on my phone. For a week, I watched the blue dot traverse the city—office, penthouse, Arielle’s apartment. The holy trinity of his life.
Then came Tuesday.
The dot moved past the usual exits, crossing the bridge into the industrial desolation of Queens. It stopped at a derelict warehouse district near the water. It sat there, blinking, a digital heartbeat in the void.
I grabbed my keys.
The rain was relentless, turning the Queens streets into slick, oil-stained mirrors. I parked my car two blocks away, pulling my trench coat tight against the wind. The warehouse was a rotting hulk of corrugated metal and shattered windows, looming against the gray sky like a tomb.
Ian’s car was parked around the back, hidden behind a dumpster. I moved through the shadows, stepping over rusted chains and debris, until I found a side door that hung slightly askew. A faint, flickering orange light bled through the crack.
I pressed my eye to the gap, holding my breath until my lungs burned.
The interior was cavernous, smelling of wet concrete and iron. In the center of the vast, empty space, a circle of candles flickered. They surrounded a large, framed portrait of an older woman—Ian’s mother. But it wasn't a memorial. It was a shrine.
Ian was there.
He wasn't wearing his suit jacket. His white dress shirt was rolled up to the elbows, pristine against the filth of the floor. He was on his knees, head bowed, rocking slightly back and forth.
"I almost lost control," he whispered. The acoustics of the warehouse carried his voice directly to me, stripping it of its usual command. It sounded broken. "She asked questions, Mother. She’s getting too close."
He reached out, his hand trembling, and picked up a heavy framing hammer from the floor.
My stomach turned over.
"I have to protect Arielle," he murmured, his voice rising to a fevered pitch. "I promised. I promised I would take the sin. I promised I would bleed so she doesn't have to."
He placed his left hand—his ring hand—flat on a concrete block in front of the portrait. He spread his fingers wide, the gold wedding band glinting in the candlelight.
"Forgive me," he choked out. "For letting her see. For being careless."
He raised the hammer.
I slapped a hand over my mouth, but the scream died in my throat as the hammer came down.
*Crunch.*
The sound was wet and sickening, the noise of bone giving way under steel. Ian didn't scream. He threw his head back, a guttural, animalistic groan tearing from his chest as he curled in on himself, cradling his mangled hand. Blood bloomed on the concrete, dark and thick.
"For Arielle," he panted, sweat dripping from his forehead, mixing with the tears streaming down his face. "It's all for her."
I stumbled back from the door, my legs giving out. The rain soaked through my coat, but I couldn't feel it. I had thought I was married to a cold man, a cheater, a liar. But as I scrambled back toward my car, the sound of his ragged breathing echoing in my ears, I realized the truth was far worse.
I was married to a fanatic.
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