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My Husband's Treacherous Game

My Husband's Treacherous Game

For two years, I was the perfect daughter-in-law, caring for my "paralyzed" mother-in-law to pay for a mistake my husband, Holden, never let me forget. The day I found out her paralysis was a lie was the day I also discovered he' d tricked me into signing our divorce papers. They moved his mistress into our home. When I tried to expose their lies, they had my leg broken and sent me for electroshock therapy, forcing a false confession while my husband watched. On the night of his wedding to her, I overheard him say his biggest regret was ever marrying me. That' s when the last of my love finally turned to ash. Months later, as I turned my back on his pathetic pleas for forgiveness, a speeding car hurtled toward me. Holden pushed me to safety, sacrificing himself. Now, he lies broken in a hospital bed, looking at me with hope in his eyes, asking if I can finally forgive him.
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Chapter 2

Ansley Fuller POV: I walked back into the bedroom I had once shared with Holden. The air was stale, thick with the ghost of a love that had died so quietly, I hadn' t even noticed its passing. Now, its absence was a physical presence, a cold spot of pressure in the middle of the California King. I pulled my suitcase from the top of the closet, the wheels rattling loudly in the silent room. I opened drawers, pulling out the few clothes that were truly mine, not the sensible, muted-toned garments Dollye preferred. The front door opened and closed downstairs. Footsteps, heavy and familiar, ascended the stairs. "Ansley?" Holden' s voice was tired. He appeared in the doorway, his tie loosened, his suit jacket slung over his shoulder. He saw the open suitcase on the bed and his brow furrowed. "What are you doing?" I didn' t look at him. I continued to fold a sweater, my movements precise and mechanical. "Dollye wanted me to get rid of some of my old things. She says they' re cluttering up the closet." He let out an exasperated sigh, the sound grating on my raw nerves. "For Christ' s sake, Ansley. Can' t you just ignore her for one night? I' m exhausted." He tossed his jacket onto a chair and collapsed onto the edge of the bed, running a hand through his perfectly styled hair. "She' s not easy, I know. But you' ve changed. You used to be so… patient." That' s when I turned. I held up the scorched, stained blouse from yesterday. The purple juice stain had dried into a dark, ugly blotch, like old blood. The burn mark was a gaping hole. "This is your mother' s patience, Holden," I said, my voice dangerously quiet. "This is what it looks like." His face darkened. He snatched the blouse from my hand, his gaze flicking from the stain to the burn. For a second, a muscle in his jaw twitched. Then, his face hardened into a mask of pure, unadulterated anger. "So you burned her blouse. Is that what this is about? A piece of clothing?" He balled up the fabric and threw it violently against the wall. "You' re making a scene over a damned blouse?" Something inside me snapped. The carefully constructed dam of two years of silent suffering crumbled, and a torrent of rage poured out. "A blouse?" I laughed, a harsh, ugly sound. "I gave up my career, Holden. I gave up my partnership at one of the top architectural firms in the country. I gave up my friends, my family, my entire life to come here and be a full-time, unpaid nurse to your mother. And you think this is about a blouse?" "My mother is sick!" he roared, jumping to his feet. "She' s paralyzed because of what happened! Because of you!" The old, familiar guilt twisted in my gut. It was his favorite weapon, the one he unsheathed whenever I dared to voice my own pain. Two years ago. The anniversary of my mother' s death. I had been a wreck, drowning in grief. Holden was supposed to be in a crucial, late-night conference call, a deal that would secure a massive investment for his mother' s portfolio. I' d been crying, and he' d held me, whispering comforts. In my haze of sorrow, I' d accidentally switched his phone to silent while trying to turn down the brightness. He missed the call. The deal collapsed. Dollye' s portfolio lost millions. A week later, she had a "stress-induced psychosomatic paralysis." The doctors couldn' t explain it. But Holden and Dollye had their explanation. It was my fault. And I, drowning in guilt and grief, had believed them. "It was an accident, Holden," I whispered, the words tasting like ash. "And I have spent every single day of the last two years trying to make up for it. I have catered to her every whim, endured her every insult. I have let her strip away every piece of me. Does that mean I deserve this? To be treated like dirt? To have my husband stand by and watch?" He looked away, unable to meet my eyes. That was his answer. He took a deep breath, his voice softening into the placating tone he used when he was trying to manage me. "Look, Ansley. Things are going to be different now. Casey is coming to stay for a while. She can help you with Mom. It will take some of the pressure off." The name hung in the air between us, a toxic cloud. Casey Bush. His high-school sweetheart. The woman Dollye never tired of telling me was "so much better suited" for Holden. "Casey is moving in?" I asked, my voice flat. "Just for a little while," he said quickly, not looking at me. "To help out." "I see," I said. The final piece of the puzzle clicked into place. The lie I had overheard in the sunroom was about to become my living reality. "I guess you' ll need to make space for her." I walked to the closet and started pulling more of my things out, piling them on the bed. He watched me, a flicker of panic in his eyes. "What are you doing?" "Making space," I said calmly. "For Casey. You' re right. It will be much easier with her here." And then, I played my last card. "I went to the dry cleaner' s today, Holden. I got an email notification from the courthouse." His face went white. The blood drained from his cheeks, leaving his skin a pasty, sickly color. "What… what are you talking about?" "The legal separation papers," I said, my voice devoid of all emotion. "The ones you had me sign. The ones you told me were investment documents for your mother." He stumbled back, his hand coming up to grip the doorframe. "Ansley, I… I can explain. Mom… she made me do it. She threatened to… to cut off my funding for the company. I had no choice." The excuses. Always the excuses. It was never his fault. It was always his mother, the market, the pressure. It was always someone else. "You had a choice, Holden," I said, my voice as cold and hard as a diamond. "You could have told me. You could have treated me like your wife, your partner. But you didn't. You treated me like a problem to be managed. An asset to be liquidated." "That' s not true!" he shouted, his voice cracking. "You' re twisting things! You' re always so dramatic, so emotional!" I stopped what I was doing and looked at him, really looked at him, for the first time in what felt like years. I saw the weakness in his eyes, the petulant set of his mouth. The man I had married, the man I had loved with every fiber of my being, was gone. Or maybe he had never been there at all. I remembered our wedding day, the way he' d looked at me, his eyes shining. I remembered him promising to stand by me, to protect me. I remembered all the little moments, the shared laughter, the whispered secrets. It was a lifetime ago. Another woman's life. "Do you still love me, Holden?" The question fell from my lips before I could stop it. A desperate, final plea from a part of me that refused to die. "Of course I love you!" he bit out, the words sounding automatic, rehearsed. He ran a hand through his hair again, a gesture of pure frustration. "But you have to understand. My mother… she needs me. Can' t you just… not make this so difficult?" Don' t make this difficult. The last ember of hope in my heart flickered and died, leaving nothing but cold, gray ash. I was just a difficulty. An inconvenience. "Fine," I said, my voice a hollow echo. I turned back to my suitcase. He seemed to sag with relief. The crisis was averted. Ansley was being reasonable again. "Casey can take the guest room for now," he said, his voice regaining its usual confident tone. He was already moving on, arranging the pieces of his new life. "I' ll have it cleared out tomorrow." He left, closing the door behind him, leaving me alone in the wreckage of our marriage. I sank onto the bed, the mattress dipping under my weight. My hand came to rest on a small, dusty picture frame on the nightstand. It was a photo of us from our honeymoon, smiling and sunburned, the future stretching out before us like an endless ocean. Seven years. Seven years of my life, reduced to a stack of deceptive legal documents and a lie. A ghost in my own home. I picked up my phone and sent a message to the number I had called earlier. A secure, encrypted line. Seven days. I' ll be ready. The reply was instantaneous. We' ll be waiting. I set the phone down. A sudden, loud crash from downstairs made me jump. It was followed by Dollye' s shrill, demanding voice, and Casey' s saccharine-sweet response. The invasion had begun.