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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 5

Ansley Fuller POV: The harsh, sterile smell of antiseptic was the first thing that registered. Then, the pain. A dull, throbbing ache in my leg that pulsed in time with the frantic beeping of a machine somewhere to my left. I blinked my eyes open, the fluorescent lights of the hospital room searing my retinas. Holden was sitting in a chair by the bed. His face was a mask of grim concern, his brow furrowed, his eyes filled with a complicated mix of anger and exhaustion. "You broke your leg," he said, his voice low and accusatory. A clean break of the tibia. The doctor said you'll be in a cast for at least six weeks." The events in the garden came rushing back, a sickening tidal wave of betrayal. "Casey pushed me," I said, my voice a raw, painful croak. My throat felt like it was full of sand. "And your mother... she pushed me into the road." Holden's face hardened instantly. "Don't be ridiculous, Ansley," he snapped. "Casey would never do that. And Mom is paralyzed. How could she possibly push you?" "She's not paralyzed, Holden," I insisted, trying to sit up, but a fresh wave of pain shot up my leg, and I fell back against the pillows with a gasp. "I saw her. She was standing. She was dancing." "Stop it!" he roared, his voice echoing in the small room. He stood up, pacing back and forth like a caged animal. "You're not well. You're hysterical. Casey said you tripped, and in your panic, you sent Mom's chair rolling. You're lucky Casey was there to stop it before she rolled into the street." The gaslighting was so blatant, so absolute, it stole my breath. They had already rewritten the narrative, casting me as the clumsy, hysterical villain and Casey as the hero. "I want to see the security footage," I said, my voice shaking with a mixture of pain and fury. "Our house has cameras. They'll show you what happened." He stopped pacing and stared at me, his eyes cold. "There's nothing to see. You fell. It was an accident. My mother and Casey are traumatized enough without you making these wild accusations." The utter injustice of it was a physical blow. He wouldn't even consider the possibility that I was telling the truth. His loyalty was already bought and paid for. I reached for the call button clipped to my pillow. "Then I'm calling the police." His eyes widened in alarm. "Don't you dare." I pressed the button, the small click a declaration of war. He was in a full-blown panic when two uniformed officers arrived. He immediately launched into a pre-emptive strike, painting a picture of a mentally fragile wife, prone to fantasy and paranoia, still grieving a past tragedy. "She's been under a lot of stress," he told them, his voice oozing with feigned concern. "She's not herself." I looked at the officers, my gaze steady. "I was pushed into the road. I want to press charges. I want you to retrieve the security footage from our home." The officers exchanged a look. They saw a wealthy, powerful man and his "hysterical" wife. Their expressions were a mixture of pity and impatience. They took a brief statement, their pens scratching half-heartedly on their notepads, and left with a promise to "look into it." I knew they wouldn't. As soon as the door closed, Holden's facade of concern vanished. "What the hell is wrong with you?" he seethed. "Why are you trying to ruin this family?" "I just want the truth, Holden," I said, my voice weary. He let out a cold, humorless laugh. "The truth? The truth is you're trying to frame my mother and the woman who is helping care for her. You've been gunning for Casey since she arrived." I stared at him, at the handsome face I had once loved, now twisted by a blind, willful ignorance. The love wasn't just dead; its corpse was beginning to rot. Just then, the door creaked open. Casey stood there, her eyes red and puffy, clutching a tissue. "Holden," she sobbed, "Dollye is beside herself. She keeps blaming herself, saying she should have been stronger, that she could have stopped the chair herself..." Holden's expression melted from anger to deep sympathy. He rushed to her, wrapping his arms around her as she buried her face in his chest. And in that moment, as he held her, his gaze met mine over her shoulder. It was a look of pure, unadulterated ice. The last shred of doubt, the last glimmer of who he used to be, was gone. "Get the restraints," he said to the nurse who had followed Casey in. "And prep the ECT room. My wife is a danger to herself and others." Panic, cold and sharp, pierced through my pain-filled haze. ECT. Electroconvulsive therapy. "No," I whispered, shaking my head. "Holden, you can't." Two large orderlies entered the room. They moved with a chilling efficiency, their faces impassive. They strapped my arms and legs to the bed, the leather cuffs biting into my skin. I struggled, a primal scream tearing from my throat, but I was weak, helpless. Holden watched, his face a stone mask. Casey clung to his arm, a flicker of triumph in her tear-filled eyes. "Holden, please," I begged, the last vestiges of my pride crumbling. "Don't do this." He hesitated. For a fraction of a second, I saw a flicker of the man I married in his eyes. A flash of doubt. Casey saw it too. "Holden, darling," she whispered, her voice a poisonous balm. "It's for her own good. And for Dollye's safety. We have to be sure she won't hurt anyone again." He closed his eyes. When he opened them, they were empty. "Begin," he said, his voice cold and final. The doctor placed the electrodes on my temples. A jolt, violent and searing, tore through my body. My muscles seized, my back arched, and a scream was ripped from my lungs. The world dissolved into a universe of pure, agonizing electricity. "Did you push my mother's wheelchair?" a voice asked from far away. Holden's voice. I shook my head, tears and saliva mixing on my cheeks. Another jolt. More pain. More darkness. "Did you?" My body convulsed. A low, animalistic moan escaped my lips. "Holden, stop," a voice said. A doctor? "Her heart rate is spiking." I saw Holden's hand tremble. "Stop," he croaked. "She hasn't admitted it yet," Casey hissed, her nails digging into his arm. "She's trying to trick you. Think of Dollye!" He turned his face away from me, his jaw clenched. He gave a sharp, almost imperceptible nod. The third jolt was the worst. It was a supernova of pain that shattered my consciousness into a million fractured pieces. In the blinding white light, I heard myself scream a single word. "Yes." The electricity stopped. The agonizing tension in my muscles released, leaving me limp and shuddering. Holden stepped forward, his face pale. "See?" he said, his voice hollow. "All you had to do was tell the truth." He reached out, as if to touch my face, but I flinched away, my entire being recoiling from him. His hand dropped. He turned to the orderlies. "Keep her in isolation for two days. Observation." He turned and walked out of the room without another glance. Casey lingered for a moment. She leaned down, her lips close to my ear, her voice a triumphant whisper. "This is just the beginning, Ansley." She gave the doctor a small, conspiratorial nod before she followed Holden, leaving me alone in the echoing silence, a prisoner in my own broken body.
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