
My Killer Wore the Face of Love
Chapter 3
The candlelight danced across Bruce's face as he poured sparkling cider into my glass, his movements precise and graceful. Everything about this evening felt surreal—the romantic setup, his early return from work, the way he kept touching me with such reverence. It was like living in a dream version of my marriage, one where Bruce was the man I'd fallen in love with instead of the monster I knew he could become.
"To us," he said, raising his glass with a smile that could have graced a magazine cover. "To our growing family."
I clinked my glass against his, the sound sharp and clear in the intimate space. "Bruce, this is beautiful. But you really didn't need to—"
"Of course I did." His eyes softened as he reached across the table to take my hand. "Evanna, you're carrying our child. You deserve to be treated like a queen."
The words should have warmed me, but instead they sent a chill down my spine. I'd heard variations of this speech before, in my previous life, usually right before his mood would shift without warning. Yet tonight, there was something different in his tone—a genuine tenderness that made me question everything I thought I knew.
As we ate, Bruce regaled me with stories from his day, his animated gestures casting shifting shadows on the walls. He seemed lighter somehow, more present than I remembered him being in months. When he laughed at his own joke about his insufferable colleague Henderson, the sound was rich and genuine, not the sharp bark I'd grown to associate with his humor.
"You're quiet tonight," he observed, cutting into his steak with practiced precision. "Everything alright?"
This was it. The opening I'd been waiting for, even though my heart hammered against my ribs like a caged bird. I set down my fork, my hands trembling slightly as I gathered the courage to speak.
"Bruce, I wanted to talk to you about something important."
His eyebrows rose, but his expression remained patient, encouraging even. "Of course. What's on your mind?"
I took a shaky breath, choosing my words carefully. "Today, I was reading some articles online, and I came across some... disturbing statistics about domestic violence. About how it affects families, especially when there are children involved."
Bruce's fork paused halfway to his mouth, his blue eyes sharpening with what looked like confusion. "Domestic violence? Evanna, what does that have to do with us?"
"I just..." I struggled to find the right words, knowing that one wrong phrase could trigger the explosion I was trying to prevent. "I want to make sure our marriage stays healthy. That we always treat each other with respect and kindness. That our child grows up in a home filled with love, not fear."
For a moment, Bruce simply stared at me, his expression unreadable in the flickering candlelight. Then, slowly, he set down his fork and leaned back in his chair.
"Evanna, I'm not sure I understand what you're getting at." His voice was measured, controlled, but I caught the subtle edge beneath the surface. "Are you suggesting that I would hurt you? That I'm some kind of... abuser?"
The word hung in the air between us like a loaded weapon. I could see the shift happening in real time—the way his jaw tightened, how his hands curled slightly on the table. This was familiar territory, the warning signs I'd learned to read too late in my previous life.
"No, that's not what I'm saying at all," I said quickly, my voice barely above a whisper. "I just think it's important that we communicate about these things. That we establish boundaries and—"
"Boundaries?" Bruce's laugh was sharp, cutting through my words like a blade. "Evanna, we're married. We're about to be parents. What boundaries could there possibly be between us?"
He stood up abruptly, his chair scraping against the hardwood floor with a sound that made me flinch. The romantic atmosphere evaporated in an instant, replaced by a tension so thick I could barely breathe.
"I work my ass off every day to provide for this family," he said, beginning to pace behind his chair. "I come home to a beautiful wife, I treat you like a goddess, and this is what I get? Accusations? Suspicion?"
"Bruce, please, I'm not accusing you of anything—"
"Then what would you call it?" He spun to face me, his eyes blazing with an anger that was both familiar and terrifying. "You sit there talking about domestic violence and boundaries like I'm some kind of monster. Like I haven't spent the last three years loving you, protecting you, giving you everything you could possibly want."
I pressed my back against my chair, my body instinctively trying to make itself smaller. This was how it always started—my attempts at communication twisted into attacks on his character, his love transformed into a weapon to use against me.
"I love you," I whispered, the words tasting like ash in my mouth. "I just want us to be happy."
Bruce's expression softened slightly at my obvious distress, but there was still steel in his voice when he spoke. "Then why are you trying to fix something that isn't broken?"
He moved around the table toward me, his movements predatory despite the gentle tone. When he reached my chair, he knelt beside it, taking my hands in his with a grip that was just a little too tight.
"Evanna, look at me." His voice was soft now, almost hypnotic. "I would never hurt you. You know that, right? Everything I do, I do out of love."
I stared into his eyes, searching for any sign of the man who had pushed me down those stairs, who had stood over my broken body without calling for help. But all I saw was Bruce—my husband, the father of my unborn child, looking at me with what appeared to be genuine confusion and hurt.
"Sometimes," he continued, his thumb stroking across my knuckles, "a husband has to guide his wife. To help her make the right decisions. That's not violence, sweetheart. That's love. That's protection."
The words sent ice through my veins, but his tone was so reasonable, so gentle, that for a moment I almost believed him. Almost let myself think that maybe I was the problem, that my fears were unfounded.
"If you don't like the way I handle things," he said, his eyes never leaving mine, "then just tell me. I'll adjust. But don't you ever compare me to those animals who actually hurt their families. Don't you ever question my love for you again."
He leaned forward and kissed my forehead, the gesture tender and possessive all at once. "Now, can we please enjoy our dinner? This was supposed to be a celebration."
I nodded mutely, not trusting my voice. As Bruce returned to his seat and resumed eating as if nothing had happened, I sat frozen in my chair, my mind reeling.
He genuinely didn't see it. The control, the intimidation, the way he'd twisted my concerns into an attack on him—to Bruce, this was all perfectly normal. Natural, even. In his mind, he wasn't an abuser. He was a loving husband who sometimes had to discipline his wife for her own good.
The realization was more terrifying than any physical threat. Because how do you fight an enemy who doesn't even know he's the enemy? How do you escape a prison when your captor believes he's your savior?
As I forced myself to take another bite of dinner, I caught Bruce watching me with satisfaction, clearly pleased that he'd resolved our "misunderstanding." The candlelight continued to flicker between us, but now it felt less romantic and more like a funeral pyre.
I was trapped in a nightmare where my killer wore the face of love.
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