
Reborn to Revenge: Fighting My Devil Husband
Chapter 2
When I finally surfaced from the medicated haze hours later, the truth hit me like ice water in my veins. Every gentle touch, every whispered promise, every moment I'd believed we were building something together—it had all been theater. Lucien hadn't been trying to help me carry his children. He'd been systematically trying to kill me with my own desperate hope.
The isolation room felt smaller now, the walls pressing in as the full scope of his betrayal crystallized in my mind. Nine times. Nine times I'd laid on that table, trusting him, believing his lies about unstable pregnancies and health risks. Nine times he'd watched me grieve, held me while I cried, promised we'd try again—all while orchestrating my slow destruction.
"LUCIEN!" The scream tore from my throat before I could stop it. "LUCIEN, GET IN HERE!"
My voice cracked and broke, but I didn't care. I pounded on the door with both fists, the sound echoing through the sterile hallway. "I know what you did! I know what you've been doing to me!"
Footsteps approached, measured and unhurried. The door opened to reveal my husband—no, my would-be murderer—looking perfectly composed in his expensive suit. Behind him stood Dr. Finch, his expression clinically concerned.
"How could you?" I lunged toward Lucien, but my legs gave out, the medication still coursing through my system. I caught myself against the bed rail, my hospital gown twisting around my trembling body. "How could you pretend to love me while you were trying to kill me?"
Lucien's face remained a mask of calm concern, but I caught something flicker in his ice-blue eyes. Not guilt—calculation.
"Ariadne, you're clearly distressed," he said softly, his voice carrying that patronizing tone I'd once mistaken for gentleness. "Dr. Finch, I think we need to discuss her mental state."
"No!" I screamed, my voice raw and desperate. "Don't you dare! I heard you talking! I heard Dr. Finch say you wanted me to bleed out! That you've been paying him to—"
"Mrs. Ward," Dr. Finch interrupted, stepping forward with practiced authority, "you're experiencing severe psychological distress following multiple pregnancy losses. These delusions are not uncommon in cases of—"
"They're not delusions!" I grabbed the bed rail, using it to pull myself upright. "You said he wanted me dead! You said he was paying you! You said—"
"Ariadne." Lucien's voice cut through my hysteria like a blade. "Look at yourself. Listen to what you're saying. Do you think I would marry you, build a life with you, just to hurt you?"
The gentle reasonableness in his tone was worse than any shout. It made me sound insane, made my accusations seem like the ravings of a broken mind.
"But I heard—"
"You heard what your traumatized psyche needed to hear to make sense of your losses," Dr. Finch said smoothly. "It's a defense mechanism. Rather than accept that your body has failed repeatedly, your mind has created an elaborate conspiracy to explain your pain."
I stared between them, seeing the careful coordination in their responses, the way they'd clearly rehearsed this moment. "You're lying. Both of you are lying."
Lucien exchanged a meaningful glance with Dr. Finch. "I think we need to consider immediate psychiatric intervention. She's clearly a danger to herself in this state."
"No, wait—" I backed against the wall, but there was nowhere to go. "Please, just listen to me. I'm not crazy. I know what I heard."
"Prepare a sedative," Dr. Finch instructed the nurse who had appeared in the doorway. "And contact psychiatric for an emergency consultation."
"Lucien, please," I whispered, reaching for him one last time. "I'm your wife. I love you. I've always loved you. How can you do this to me?"
For just a moment, his mask slipped. I saw something cold and foreign in his eyes, something that had maybe always been there but I'd been too blind to see.
"That's exactly the problem, Ariadne," he said quietly. "You've never understood your place."
The needle slid into my arm before I could react, and the world began to blur around the edges. As consciousness faded, I heard Dr. Finch speaking to someone in the hallway about "isolation protocols" and "restricted communication."
When I woke again, everything had changed. The room was different—smaller, with no windows and a heavy door that locked from the outside. My clothes were gone, replaced with a hospital gown that tied in the back. There was no phone, no call button, no way to contact the outside world.
I was a prisoner.
Days blended together in that windowless room. Nurses came and went like ghosts, administering medications I didn't want, speaking in hushed tones about my "condition." When I demanded to speak to someone, anyone, they exchanged those same knowing looks I'd seen pass between Lucien and Dr. Finch.
"You need to focus on getting better, Mrs. Ward," they'd say. "Your husband is very concerned about you."
On the fourth day—or maybe the fifth, time had lost all meaning—I saw my chance. A young nurse had left her cart unattended while dealing with another patient down the hall. I slipped out of my room and grabbed the phone from her supplies, my hands shaking as I dialed the only number I could remember clearly.
Noah Levant. My college friend, brilliant with computers, someone who'd always been loyal to me.
"Noah," I whispered when he answered, glancing nervously down the hallway. "It's Ariadne. I need help. I'm trapped in—"
"Ariadne?" His voice was filled with concern, but not the kind I'd expected. "Oh my God, where are you? Lucien has been looking everywhere for you. He said you had some kind of breakdown after the surgery and wandered off."
My blood turned to ice. "What? No, Noah, I'm in the hospital. They're keeping me here against my will. Lucien is—"
"Honey, you sound really confused right now. The news said you've been having some mental health issues after losing the baby. Everyone's been so worried about you."
The news. He'd gotten to the news.
"Noah, please, you have to believe me. I'm not crazy. Lucien has been trying to kill me. He's been—"
"Ariadne, I'm going to call Lucien right now, okay? He needs to know you're safe. Just stay where you are."
"No, don't—" But the line was already dead.
I stared at the phone in my trembling hands, the full scope of Lucien's plan finally becoming clear. He hadn't just isolated me physically. He'd destroyed my credibility, turned my own friends against me, made me into the unstable wife who couldn't handle her grief.
Footsteps echoed down the hallway—quick, purposeful, angry. I dropped the phone and tried to make it back to my room, but it was too late. Lucien rounded the corner, his face a mask of concerned authority, Dr. Finch close behind.
"There you are," Lucien said, his voice carrying just the right note of relief mixed with worry. "We've been so concerned."
But his eyes were cold as winter, and I knew that whatever small freedoms I'd had left were about to disappear entirely.
"You called Noah," he said quietly, stepping closer. "That wasn't very smart, Ariadne."
The walls seemed to close in around me as I realized the true extent of my helplessness. He hadn't just tried to kill me—he'd killed who I was, piece by piece, until no one would believe a word I said.
And now I was completely at his mercy.
You may also like





