
My Husband Locked Me Away While His Mistress Wore My Ring
Chapter 3
I remained on my knees, staring up at Stella as she twirled my mother's diamond ring between her manicured fingers. The diamond caught the light, throwing tiny rainbows against the walls of my father's study.
"You want to know the truth about your precious mother?" Stella leaned down, her voice dropping to a whisper meant only for me. "She didn't die of illness, Harper. She was murdered."
My breath caught in my throat. "What?"
"My mother and I took care of her." Stella's smile widened, becoming predatory. "We poisoned her food, slowly, over months. We isolated her from friends. We made her believe your father never loved her."
"You're lying," I whispered, but the certainty in her eyes told me otherwise.
"Ask your father." She glanced toward the doorway where he stood with my stepmother. "He knew. He was too much of a coward to stop it."
I looked at my father, searching for denial, for outrage—for anything that would tell me Stella was lying. Instead, I saw guilt. Shame. And something else—relief that the truth was finally out.
"She was so pathetic at the end," Stella continued, her voice almost dreamy. "Begging for help that never came. Just like you're begging now."
With deliberate slowness, she unclasped the necklace. The diamond ring—my mother's last remnant—dangled from her fingers.
"This means nothing to me," she said. "But I know it means everything to you."
She turned and walked to the bar cart in the corner of my father's study. With a graceful motion, she dropped the ring into a glass of red wine.
"No!" I lunged forward, reaching for the glass.
Stella's laughter cut through the air as she tipped the glass, pouring the wine over my head. The cold liquid soaked my hair, my face, my clothes. And somewhere in that crimson cascade was my mother's ring.
Something inside me snapped.
I screamed—a primal sound that tore from my throat—and launched myself at Stella. My hands clawed at her face, her arms, anywhere I could reach. She stumbled backward, her eyes wide with shock that quickly turned to fear.
"Get her off me!" she shrieked.
My father grabbed me from behind, pulling me away. I fought against his grip, my vision blurred with tears and wine and rage.
"You killed her!" I screamed, struggling against my father's iron grip. "You killed my mother!"
The room spun around me as I heard sirens approaching. Then Watson's voice, cold and commanding: "What is going on here?"
"She attacked me!" Stella sobbed, her performance flawless as she pressed herself against Watson's chest. "I just came to return her mother's ring, and she went crazy!"
Watson's eyes found mine, and I saw nothing there—no recognition, no love, not even anger. Just cold calculation.
"Harper," he said, his voice eerily calm. "You're hysterical."
"No, Watson, please—" I reached toward him, but he stepped back.
"Mr. Brooks," my father said, his voice oily with false concern. "I'm so sorry about this. Harper has been... unstable."
"I can see that." Watson nodded, his expression hardening. He pulled a folder from his briefcase and began writing. "This is exactly why I've been considering this option."
"What option?" I asked, dread pooling in my stomach.
Watson didn't answer. Instead, he signed the papers with a flourish and handed them to a man in a suit who had appeared in the doorway.
"Blackwood Psychiatric Facility," Watson said, finally meeting my eyes. "You need help, Harper. You need to calm down."
"No!" I struggled against my father's grip. "Watson, please! She's lying! They're all lying!"
But Watson had already turned away, his arm around Stella's shoulders as he guided her toward the door.
---
The cell was white and bare except for a thin mattress on a metal frame. The walls were padded, the window reinforced with steel bars. They'd taken my clothes, my jewelry, everything except the hospital gown they'd given me.
"Sleep deprivation," I heard a voice say through the small window in the door. "Director's orders."
I hadn't slept in... how long? Three days? Four? The fluorescent lights never dimmed. Every time I closed my eyes, someone would spray cold water through the small opening at the bottom of the door.
"Please," I begged when a nurse appeared with medication. "I need to sleep."
"Doctor's orders," she replied, her voice flat as she injected something into my arm.
The door opened on the fifth day. Stella stood there, her silhouette framed by the harsh corridor light.
"Hello, Harper." She smiled, stepping into the room. "Comfortable?"
"What do you want?" My voice was hoarse from screaming.
"I want you to know that no one is coming for you." She approached the glass partition that separated us. "Watson has already forgotten you exist."
"He'll find out," I whispered. "About what you did to my mother—"
"Who will believe you?" Stella laughed, the sound echoing off the padded walls. "A crazy woman locked away in Blackwood? You'll rot here forever, Harper. And I'll be there to watch."
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