Follow
Chapters
Share
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.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 4

Ansley Fuller POV: The silence that fell over the dinner table was absolute. It was thick and heavy, punctuated only by the faint hum of the Sub-Zero refrigerator. Dollye' s triumphant smile froze, her fork halfway to her mouth. Casey' s mask of sweet innocence slipped, revealing a flash of genuine shock. Holden just stared at me, his blue eyes wide with disbelief, the seafood paella forgotten on his plate. My calm agreement was a bomb they hadn' t anticipated. They had prepared for tears, for accusations, for a dramatic, messy fight. They were not prepared for surrender. I placed my napkin neatly on the table. "If you' ll excuse me," I said, my voice still unnervingly steady. I pushed my chair back and stood up. "I have some packing to finish." I walked out of the dining room, my back straight, my steps measured. I could feel their collective gaze on me, a physical weight of confusion and suspicion. "Ansley!" Holden' s voice, sharp with panic, followed me. He caught up to me in the hallway, his hand closing around my arm. "What the hell was that? What do you mean, you think it' s a 'wonderful idea' ?" I looked down at his hand on my arm, then back up at his face. "It' s what you want, isn' t it?" I said, my voice flat. "It' s what your mother wants. I' m just agreeing with the family." "It' s not what I want!" he insisted, his voice a low, desperate hiss. "It' s just… to keep Mom happy. You know how she is. The wedding, it' s just for show. We' re not really getting divorced." "Aren' t we?" I asked, my voice laced with a cold irony he didn' t seem to notice. "The papers are already filed, Holden." He flinched. "I' ll withdraw them. I told you I would." I just looked at him, my silence more damning than any accusation. "Please, Ansley," he whispered, his grip tightening. "Don' t be like this." He tried to pull me closer, to use the physical intimacy that had once been his most effective tool. I recoiled as if his touch were a lit match. I pulled my arm from his grasp, a small, derisive laugh escaping my lips. "Like what, Holden? Accommodating? Agreeable? I' m just trying to be the sensible girl your mother always wanted." A muscle twitched in his jaw. The confusion in his eyes was slowly being replaced by a familiar flicker of frustration. I was not playing my part. I was not making this easy for him. A wave of unease washed over his face, a premonition of a future he couldn' t control. The next morning, the atmosphere in the house was thick with unspoken tension. I was an alien presence, my placid compliance a disruption to their carefully crafted drama. "Ansley," Dollye commanded from her wheelchair in the living room, a stack of magazines in her lap. "Fetch me my reading glasses. They' re on my nightstand." For two years, I would have scurried to obey. Today, I didn' t move. I was sitting on the sofa, sipping a cup of tea, a book open in my lap. I didn' t even look up. "Casey can get them for you," I said calmly. The magazine Dollye was holding slipped from her fingers, landing on the floor with a soft thud. Her face, usually a mask of smug control, was a picture of disbelief. Casey, who was scrolling through her phone on the adjacent armchair, looked up, her eyebrows raised. "Casey, darling," Dollye said, her voice tight, "would you be a dear?" Casey' s smile was strained. "Of course, Dollye." She shot me a look that was pure venom before heading upstairs. I took another sip of my tea, a small, cold satisfaction blooming in my chest. It was a petty rebellion, but it was a start. I watched Casey come back down, her heels clicking angrily on the stairs, and hand the glasses to Dollye. I saw the flicker of resentment in her eyes. She hadn't signed up to be a nursemaid. She'd signed up to be the lady of the manor. "I' d like to get some sun," Dollye announced, her glare fixed on me. "Push me out to the garden, Ansley." "I' m sure Casey would love to," I replied, turning a page in my book. The silence was electric. Casey' s face was a thundercloud. Dollye' s lips were a thin, white line. But they had painted me as the villain, the unstable, difficult wife. Now, my calm refusal was something they didn't know how to fight. Reluctantly, Casey got up and began pushing Dollye' s wheelchair towards the French doors that led to the garden. I watched them go. I followed a few moments later, keeping a safe distance. The garden sloped gently downwards towards a wrought-iron gate that opened onto the street. It was a beautiful day, the sun warm on my skin, the scent of roses thick in the air. Halfway down the path, Casey stopped, pretending to adjust the blanket on Dollye' s lap. As I drew level with them, Casey suddenly stumbled, shoving the wheelchair hard. It lurched forward, directly into my path. I stumbled, my arms flailing for balance. The wheelchair, now free, began to roll, picking up speed as it headed down the incline. Instinct, stupid and ingrained, took over. I lunged forward, my fingers brushing against the cold metal handlebar, trying to stop Dollye' s descent towards the open gate and the street beyond. That' s when it happened. Dollye, the frail invalid, twisted in her seat. Her hand, strong and brutal, shot out and shoved me, hard, in the chest. The force of the push sent me staggering backward. My heel caught on the edge of the stone pathway. I lost my balance, my body pinwheeling in a slow, horrifying arc. I landed on the asphalt of the road. A horn blared, a sound of pure, shrieking panic. The squeal of tires was deafening. Pain, white-hot and blinding, exploded in my leg. The world went black, then burst into a kaleidoscope of agonizing color. Through a haze of shock and agony, I looked up. The last thing I saw before the darkness consumed me was Dollye, still sitting in her wheelchair, and Casey standing beside her. And they were both smiling.