
My Killer Wore the Face of Love
Chapter 2
Morning light filtered through our kitchen windows, casting everything in a deceptively warm glow. I sat across from Bruce at our breakfast table, studying his face over the rim of my coffee cup like I was seeing him for the first time.
In a way, I was.
He looked so normal. Handsome, even, with his dark hair still slightly mussed from sleep and his expensive dress shirt crisp and perfectly pressed. The morning routine was exactly as I remembered—Bruce scanning the financial section of the newspaper while absently stirring sugar into his coffee, occasionally making comments about market trends or office politics.
"Henderson's pushing for that merger again," he said, not looking up from the paper. "The man has no vision. Can't see past his own quarterly bonuses."
I nodded, making the appropriate murmur of interest, but my eyes never left his face. Where was the monster? Where was the man who would push me down the stairs in a drunken rage? This Bruce seemed so... ordinary. So civilized.
"You're quiet this morning," he observed, finally glancing up. His blue eyes—the same ones that had captivated me when we first met—held nothing but mild curiosity. "Still thinking about that nightmare?"
The nightmare. If only he knew.
"Something like that," I managed.
He reached across the table and squeezed my hand, his thumb tracing gentle circles across my knuckles. The same hands that would later... I forced myself not to flinch.
"You worry too much, baby. Everything's going to be perfect. You, me, the baby—we're going to have the life we always dreamed about."
The casual certainty in his voice made my stomach clench. In my previous life, I had clung to those promises like a lifeline, believing that our love story would have a fairy tale ending. Now they sounded like a death sentence.
After Bruce left for work, planting a lingering kiss on my forehead and promising to be home by seven, I found myself staring at my reflection in our hallway mirror. The same face looked back at me—pale, drawn, with dark circles under my eyes that no amount of concealer could hide. But something had changed. There was a hardness in my gaze that hadn't been there before, a knowledge that felt like carrying stones in my chest.
I had to do something. I couldn't just wait for history to repeat itself.
The community center was a twenty-minute walk from our house, a modest brick building that housed various social services. I had passed it countless times but never had reason to go inside. Now, clutching the business card I'd found in our junk drawer—one that Bruce must have thrown away without telling me—I pushed through the glass doors.
Ann Martinez's office was small and cluttered, filled with case files and motivational posters that had seen better days. She was younger than I'd expected, maybe in her forties, with graying hair pulled back in a practical ponytail and eyes that had seen too much.
"Mrs. Langley?" She gestured to the chair across from her desk. "You said on the phone this was urgent."
I sat down, my hands trembling as I tried to find the words. How do you explain that you've lived through your own murder? That you know your husband will kill you, but it hasn't happened yet?
"I need help," I whispered. "I think... I think my husband is going to hurt me."
Ann's expression immediately sharpened, her pen poised over a notepad. "Has he hurt you before?"
The question hung in the air like a loaded gun. In this timeline, the answer was no. Bruce had been nothing but loving and attentive since I'd told him about the pregnancy. But I remembered every bruise, every cruel word, every night I'd spent cowering in our bedroom while he raged about imagined slights.
"Not yet," I said finally. "But I have these... dreams. Nightmares. They feel so real, Ann. I see him hitting me, pushing me, and I'm terrified they're going to come true."
Tears spilled down my cheeks before I could stop them. "I know how that sounds. I know you probably think I'm crazy, but—"
"I don't think you're crazy." Ann's voice was firm, cutting through my rambling. She leaned forward, her eyes intense. "Mrs. Langley, in my experience, women don't have nightmares like that without reason. Our subconscious picks up on warning signs that our conscious mind wants to ignore."
She pulled out a manila folder, extracting several pamphlets and business cards. "These dreams, these fears—they're your mind trying to protect you. And I'm going to help you listen to it."
The next hour was a blur of statistics and resources. Ann spoke with the matter-of-fact tone of someone who had seen this story play out too many times. She gave me contact information for legal aid attorneys, domestic violence shelters, and support groups. She explained restraining orders and safety planning with the efficiency of a general preparing for war.
"The most important thing," she said, her voice grave, "is that you leave before the violence escalates. Once it starts, it only gets worse. And with a baby on the way..." She shook her head. "You need to get out now, while you still can."
I clutched the pamphlets to my chest like a shield. "But what if I'm wrong? What if the dreams don't mean anything?"
Ann's laugh was bitter. "Mrs. Langley, I've been doing this for fifteen years. I've never met a woman who was wrong about this kind of intuition. Trust yourself. Your life—and your baby's life—may depend on it."
The walk home felt endless, Ann's words echoing in my head. Leave now. Get out while you still can. It sounded so simple, so logical. But the thought of walking away from the only stable home I'd ever known, from the man who had once made me feel like I was worth something, felt impossible.
I turned onto our street just as Bruce's car was pulling into the driveway. My heart lurched. He was home early.
But instead of the familiar dread, I found myself studying him with new eyes as he climbed out of his BMW. He moved with the confident stride of a man who had never doubted his place in the world, his expensive suit tailored to perfection. When he saw me approaching, his face lit up with a smile that would have melted my heart just yesterday.
"Perfect timing," he called out, jogging over to wrap his arms around me. "I left work early to surprise you."
He kissed me deeply, right there on the sidewalk, and I forced myself not to pull away. His hands were gentle as they framed my face, his touch reverent.
"I've been thinking about you all day," he murmured against my lips. "About us. About our future."
As we walked up the front steps together, his arm possessively around my waist, I caught a glimpse of our neighbor's window. Frederick Beaumont was there, partially hidden behind his curtains, watching us with an expression I couldn't quite read.
But it was the smell that hit me as Bruce opened our front door—candles and something delicious cooking in the kitchen. The dining room had been transformed, complete with our good china and wine glasses filled with sparkling cider.
"Bruce, what is all this?"
He grinned, looking boyishly proud of himself. "I wanted to do something special. To celebrate." His hand moved to rest on my still-flat stomach. "Our little family deserves to be celebrated, don't you think?"
The candlelight flickered across his features, casting shadows that made his smile seem almost predatory. But when I blinked, it was just Bruce again—my husband, the father of my unborn child, the man who had supposedly moved heaven and earth to make this romantic evening happen.
"You didn't have to do all this," I whispered, but my voice sounded hollow even to my own ears.
"Of course I did." He pulled out my chair with a flourish. "You're carrying our child, Evanna. You're the most important person in my world."
As I sat down, the pamphlets from Ann crinkled in my purse, a paper reminder of the choice I had to make. Leave now, she had said. Get out while you still can.
But looking at Bruce as he served me dinner with such tender care, his eyes shining with what looked like genuine love, I found myself wondering if maybe, just maybe, this time could be different.
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