
My Killer Wore the Face of Love
Chapter 1
The pain hit me like a sledgehammer—sharp, brutal, tearing through my abdomen as I tumbled down those stairs. Bruce's face, twisted with rage, loomed above me. The metallic taste of blood filled my mouth. My baby...
I jolted awake, gasping.
My heart hammered against my ribs as I stared at the familiar ceiling of our bedroom. The pale moonlight filtered through the curtains, casting shadows across the walls I knew so well. But this couldn't be right. I had been dying. I had felt my life slip away on those cold stairs, my unborn child's life ending with mine.
Yet here I was.
The familiar weight of Bruce's arm draped possessively across my waist made my skin crawl. His breathing was deep and even beside me, the same rhythm I'd listened to for three years of marriage. The same rhythm that had once comforted me, before I learned what those hands were capable of.
I pressed my palm to my stomach, and there it was—that subtle fullness, the tender sensitivity of early pregnancy. The same symptoms I'd experienced weeks ago, when I first discovered I was carrying Bruce's child. When I still believed that motherhood might soften him, might save us both.
How was this possible?
My mind raced, trying to make sense of what felt impossible. The last thing I remembered was the excruciating pain, the cold seeping into my bones as I lay crumpled at the bottom of our staircase. Bruce standing over me, his face a mask of fury and disgust, not even calling for help as I bled out on the hardwood floor.
But now I was here, in our bed, with his arm around me like a shackle.
The digital clock on the nightstand glowed 2:47 AM. I recognized this moment with crystal clarity—it was the night I'd first told Bruce about the pregnancy. In my previous life, I'd woken from a nightmare about losing the baby, and Bruce had been irritated by my tears, rolling over with an annoyed grunt when I tried to seek comfort.
But if I was truly back, if some impossible miracle had given me another chance, then everything that followed was still to come. The escalating violence. His affair with that woman. The night he would push me down those stairs in a drunken rage, ending two lives without a second thought.
Unless I changed it.
The thought terrified me more than death itself. In my previous life, I had spent three years walking on eggshells, trying to be the perfect wife, believing that if I just loved him enough, tried hard enough, he would become the man I married. The man who had swept me off my feet when I was just a lonely waitress, who had made me feel like I mattered for the first time in my life.
I had been such a fool.
A strangled sob escaped my throat before I could stop it. The sound was raw, primal, torn from the depths of a grief too profound for words. I had lost everything—my child, my life, my naive belief that love could conquer all.
Bruce stirred beside me, his arm tightening reflexively around my waist. In my previous life, this was when he had muttered something cruel about my dramatics and turned away. I braced myself for his familiar irritation, for the cutting words that would remind me how pathetic I was.
Instead, his voice came soft and drowsy in the darkness.
"Evanna? What's wrong, baby?"
I froze. The endearment, spoken with such gentle concern, was like a knife twisting in my chest. This was the Bruce from our early days, before the mask had fully slipped. Before I learned that his tenderness was just another form of control.
His hand moved to stroke my hair, the gesture achingly familiar. "Did you have a bad dream?"
I couldn't speak. Couldn't breathe. The juxtaposition of his gentle touch with my memories of his violence was too much. I knew what those hands would do to me. I had felt their brutality, their capacity for cruelty. Yet here he was, touching me like I was something precious.
"Hey, look at me." His voice was still soft, but there was an edge of command that made my body tense involuntarily. He shifted, propping himself up on his elbow to peer down at me in the dim light. "You're shaking."
I was. My entire body trembled with a terror so deep it felt like it might tear me apart. Because I knew what was coming. I knew how this story ended—with me broken and bleeding, with our child dead before it ever drew breath.
"I..." My voice cracked. "I dreamed that I fell down the stairs. That I lost the baby."
The words tumbled out before I could stop them, and I immediately regretted the admission. In my previous life, any mention of my fears had been met with dismissal or anger. Bruce hated what he called my "emotional outbursts."
But instead of the expected irritation, his face softened with something that looked almost like concern.
"That's not going to happen," he said, his thumb brushing away a tear I hadn't realized had fallen. "I would never let anything hurt you or our baby. You know that, right?"
The irony was so bitter it made me sick. He was the danger. He was the one who would hurt us both. Yet here he was, playing the role of protector with such convincing sincerity that for a moment, I almost believed him.
Almost.
"Bruce," I whispered, my voice barely audible. "Promise me something."
"Anything."
The word came so quickly, so earnestly, that it broke something inside me. This was the man I had fallen in love with—the one who made grand promises and swept me off my feet with romantic gestures. The one who had convinced me I was lucky to be chosen by him.
"Promise me you'll never hurt me," I said, the words heavy with the weight of everything I knew was coming.
Something flickered in his eyes—so brief I might have imagined it. Then his expression smoothed back into that mask of loving concern.
"Evanna, what kind of question is that?" His voice held a note of hurt confusion that would have fooled me completely in my previous life. "I love you. I would die before I let anyone hurt you, including myself."
Lies. All of it, lies.
But as he pulled me closer, as his lips pressed against my forehead in a gesture that felt both protective and possessive, I found myself caught between two realities. The memory of his violence warred with the present moment of his tenderness, leaving me dizzy with confusion.
Was it possible that something had changed? That my rebirth had somehow altered the course of events?
Or was this simply the calm before the storm—the brief respite before the monster showed his true face once again?
As Bruce's breathing gradually returned to the steady rhythm of sleep, I lay awake in the darkness, my hand pressed protectively over my stomach. Whatever miracle had brought me back, whatever chance I'd been given, I couldn't waste it.
I wouldn't let him destroy us again.
But as I stared into the shadows of our bedroom, feeling the weight of his arm across my body like a chain, I realized that knowing what was coming and knowing how to stop it were two very different things.
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