
My Husband Tried to Kill Me for His Mistress’s Child
Chapter 3
The basement door creaked open, jolting me from my fitful sleep on the concrete floor. I'd lost track of time in this windowless prison—was it days? Weeks? The hunger gnawing at my stomach suggested it had been a while since my last meal.
Elliot's silhouette filled the doorway, his face half-hidden in shadow. Behind him stood four men—their bulk blocking what little light filtered down the stairs.
"You've had time to think about what you've done," Elliot said, his voice eerily calm. "Now it's time for consequences."
A tall man with a jagged scar across his jaw stepped forward. "Vincent Torres," he introduced himself with a mock bow. "Your personal trainer for the next few weeks."
The other three men flanked him—one with dead eyes, another with tattooed knuckles, and a third with a smile that never reached his eyes.
"Elliot, please," I crawled toward him, my legs too weak to stand. "Whatever you think I did—"
"You attacked a pregnant woman," he cut me off, adjusting his cufflinks with practiced precision. "You tried to kill my child."
"That's not true!" My voice cracked from dehydration. "Olivia set me up!"
He nodded to Vincent, who grabbed my hair and yanked my head back. "Your first lesson: respect."
The fist came so fast I didn't see it. Pain exploded across my cheekbone as I crumpled to the floor.
"Stop," Elliot commanded from the doorway. Not out of mercy—he wanted to savor this. "Let's be methodical."
For days that blurred together, they worked on me. Vincent would wake me every hour with ice water or a slap. The dead-eyed man controlled my food—a crust of bread here, a sip of water there. The tattooed knuckles belonged to a man who specialized in pressure points that left bruises no one could see.
Through it all, Elliot watched from the doorway, sipping whiskey like he was attending a business meeting.
"Still alive?" he'd ask each morning, his voice devoid of emotion. "Good. You haven't paid enough yet."
I lost weight rapidly. My ribs became visible, my collarbones sharp as knives. The concrete floor left patterns on my skin that never quite faded.
"Please," I begged one night when Vincent was alone with me. "I need to sleep."
"Sleep is a privilege," he replied, his voice almost gentle. "Earn it."
I'd scream sometimes, when the pain became too much. Elliot would appear then, his face twisted with disgust.
"Your screams are pathetic," he'd say. "Olivia's baby almost died because of you. Your screams are nothing compared to what she went through."
Weeks passed in this haze of agony. My body became a map of bruises and half-healed wounds. I stopped fighting. Stopped crying. Stopped feeling.
Until the morning I woke up and realized something was different.
My period was late.
I lay on the cold floor, counting backward through the fog of pain and hunger. It had been... weeks. Maybe six or seven.
"Please," I whispered to the maid who brought my water ration. Maria was new—her eyes still showed pity when she looked at me. "I need something."
She glanced nervously at the camera in the corner. "Señor Hudson will know."
"Please," I repeated, clutching her wrist with surprising strength. "Just this one thing."
Something in my eyes must have reached her. She nodded once.
The pregnancy test came that night, hidden in a dirty rag.
I dragged myself to the bathroom, the cold tile biting into my bare skin. My reflection was a stranger—hollow-eyed, gaunt, with bruises blooming across pale skin.
With trembling hands, I took the test.
Two minutes that stretched like eternity.
Then the second line appeared.
Positive.
A child. Our child.
For the first time in weeks, warmth flooded through me. A tiny spark of life in this hell. Proof that something beautiful could still exist in this nightmare.
"Maria," I called weakly. "I need to see Elliot."
He came that evening, his expression bored. "What now?"
I sat up straighter, one hand instinctively moving to my stomach. "I'm pregnant."
The words hung in the air between us.
For a moment—just a moment—something flickered in his eyes. Then his face hardened.
"Impossible," he said flatly.
"It's true," I insisted, desperation making my voice stronger. "Elliot, please—for the baby's sake. Stop this."
He stepped closer, crouching to my level. His breath smelled of whiskey and expensive cologne—so familiar it made my heart ache despite everything.
"You're lying," he said softly.
"I'm not."
His hand shot out, gripping my chin painfully. "Or it's not mine."
The accusation hit harder than any physical blow. "How can you think that?"
"Olivia warned me," he hissed. "About your... adventures while I was working. About how you couldn't be trusted."
The room spun around me as his words sank in. Of course. Olivia's final poison—planting seeds of doubt about my fidelity.
"Elliot," I whispered, tears streaming down my face. "I've never been with anyone else. This is your child."
His expression shifted to something worse than anger—disgust.
"If it's even real," he said, standing up and straightening his suit. "We'll find out soon enough."
As he turned to leave, the tiny spark of hope I'd nurtured flickered and died.
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