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Reborn to Revenge: Fighting My Devil Husband Novel Cover

Reborn to Revenge: Fighting My Devil Husband

"Lucien," I whispered, my voice cracking. "Please. I need to understand why. The doctor said—he warned me that if I have another procedure, I might never be able to..." The words caught in my throat like broken glass. "I might never be able to have children." He finally looked up from his phone, his ice-blue eyes meeting mine with an expression I couldn't read. "Ariadne," he said, his voice carrying that tone of barely contained impatience I'd grown to dread. "We've discussed this. The embryo's implantation is unstable. It poses significant health risks." "But why does this keep happening? Nine times, Lucien. Nine times I've lost our babies. There has to be something we can do differently, some treatment—" "Treatment?" His laugh was cold, cutting through the antiseptic air like a blade. "The treatment is to stop subjecting your body to these failed pregnancies. Your inability to maintain a stable pregnancy isn't just disappointing, Ariadne. It's dangerous. How is that not your responsibility as a mother?" The words hit me like a physical blow. I stared at him, my mouth opening and closing soundlessly. The man I'd planned to spend my life with, the father of the children I kept losing, was blaming me for our losses. For my body's failures.
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Chapter 3

The shift change happened at eleven PM, just like it had every night for the past week. I'd been watching, counting the seconds between when the day security guard left his post and the night guard arrived. Forty-three seconds. That was my window.

My leg throbbed beneath the heavy cast, but adrenaline masked the pain as I slipped out of my room. The corridor stretched ahead like a tunnel of fluorescent-lit freedom, and I moved as quickly as my injured leg would allow, using the wall for support.

"Hey!" The shout came from behind me, sharp and commanding. "Stop right there!"

I didn't stop. I couldn't. This might be my only chance.

The sound of heavy footsteps echoed behind me as I hobbled toward the main entrance, my hospital gown flapping around my legs. The exit sign glowed like a beacon ahead, so close I could almost taste the night air beyond those doors.

"She's getting away!" another voice called out.

Hands grabbed at my shoulders just as I reached the staircase leading to the main floor. I twisted away, desperate, clinging to the handrail as my cast caught on the top step.

"Let me go!" I screamed, struggling against the security guard's grip. "I'm not supposed to be here! This is kidnapping!"

"Ma'am, you need to calm down," the guard said, his voice professionally patient but his hands rough as they pulled at my arms. "You're not well. Let us help you."

"I don't need help! I need out!" I wrenched myself away from him with a strength born of pure desperation.

That's when everything went wrong.

My cast, heavy and unwieldy, caught the edge of the step. My balance, already precarious, gave way entirely. The world tilted, and suddenly I was falling, tumbling down the concrete stairs like a broken doll.

Each impact sent lightning bolts of agony through my body. My shoulder hit first, then my hip, then my already-injured leg twisted at an impossible angle. The sound it made—a wet crack like breaking branches—will haunt me forever.

I came to rest at the bottom of the staircase, my vision white with pain, a scream tearing from my throat that seemed to go on forever. Through the haze of agony, I heard voices shouting, feet running, the squeak of wheels as someone brought a gurney.

"Jesus Christ, look at her leg," someone whispered.

I looked down and immediately wished I hadn't. My right leg, the one that had been healing, was now bent at a grotesque angle. Bone protruded through the skin, white and sharp against the spreading pool of blood.

"Get Dr. Finch," another voice commanded. "And call her husband."

No, I wanted to scream, but only a whimper emerged. Not Lucien. Anyone but Lucien.

As they lifted me onto the gurney, the last thing I saw before the pain dragged me under was a security camera in the corner, its red light blinking steadily. Recording everything. Recording my failure.

The next twenty-four hours passed in a blur of surgery, medications, and suffocating despair. They'd reset my leg, installed more hardware than a construction site, and confined me to a bed with restraints "for my own safety." The cast was bigger now, heavier, like a concrete anchor chaining me to this nightmare.

Sleep was impossible. Every time I closed my eyes, I felt myself falling again, heard that terrible crack, saw Lucien's cold smile. The pain medication made everything fuzzy around the edges, but it couldn't touch the ache in my chest, the crushing weight of hopelessness.

Somewhere around midnight, unable to bear the silence any longer, I fumbled for the TV remote with my unrestrained hand. Maybe mindless late-night programming would distract me from the throbbing in my leg and the deeper pain in my heart.

The screen flickered to life, showing the tail end of a commercial. Then the late news began, and my world shattered all over again.

"...at tonight's Children's Hospital Charity Gala, where prominent medical heir Lucien Ward made a generous donation of two million dollars alongside his longtime companion, Celeste Morano..."

There he was. My husband. Looking absolutely radiant in a perfectly tailored black tuxedo, his smile warm and genuine in a way I hadn't seen directed at me in years. His arm was wrapped around Celeste's waist, possessive and proud, as she laughed at something he whispered in her ear.

She was stunning. Her emerald green gown clung to her curves like liquid silk, her dark hair swept up to show off the diamond earrings that caught the camera lights. But it was the way she looked at him that broke something inside me—with complete adoration, with the security of a woman who knew she was loved.

The way I used to look at him.

"The couple has been together for several years," the reporter continued, "though Ward's arranged marriage has kept their relationship private. Sources close to the family suggest that may change soon..."

I watched them dance, watched him spin her around the ballroom floor while I lay broken and alone in this sterile prison. The other guests smiled and applauded, society's elite celebrating what everyone clearly saw as the real couple, the ones who belonged together.

While his wife—his inconvenient, disposable wife—rotted away in a hospital bed with a shattered leg and a destroyed womb.

The remote slipped from my numb fingers as sobs wracked my body. This was what he'd been working toward all along. Not just my death, but my complete erasure, so he could step into his real life with the woman he actually loved.

I cried until there were no tears left, until my throat was raw and my chest ached with each breath. The news had moved on to other stories, but I kept seeing them together, kept hearing the reporter's casual mention of their "several years" together. How long had this been going on? How long had I been the fool, the obstacle, the unwanted wife standing in the way of true love?

The answer came the next morning, delivered with the cruelty of a master torturer.

I smelled her before I saw her—expensive French perfume mixed with something else, something musky and intimate that made my stomach turn. The door opened, and Celeste Morano glided into my room like she owned it.

She looked exactly as beautiful as she had on television, but up close I could see the subtle signs of a night well spent. Her usually perfect hair was slightly mussed, as if fingers had run through it. Her lipstick was gone, her makeup smudged just enough to suggest recent intimacy. She wore a silk blouse that was buttoned wrong, the fabric wrinkled in a way that spoke of hasty dressing.

She'd come here straight from his bed.

"Hello, Ariadne," she said, her voice honey-sweet and poisonous. She perched on the edge of my bed like she had every right to be there, her perfectly manicured fingers drumming against my cast. "You look... unwell."

I tried to speak, but only a croak emerged. She smiled, clearly pleased by my condition.

"I thought it was time we had a proper conversation, woman to woman," she continued, crossing her long legs with deliberate grace. "About Lucien. About us. About where you fit into all of this."

"Get out," I finally managed to whisper.

"Oh, but I've only just arrived," she said with mock disappointment. "And we have so much to discuss. Like how Lucien spent last night, for instance. Would you like to hear about it?"

My silence seemed to encourage her.

"He was magnificent," she purred, her eyes growing distant with memory. "So passionate, so hungry for me. Do you know what he whispered while he was inside me? He said my name. Over and over. 'Celeste, Celeste, Celeste.' Never yours, darling. Never yours."

Each word was a knife between my ribs, precisely placed for maximum damage.

"He loves me, you see," she continued, leaning closer so I could smell his cologne still lingering on her skin. "He's always loved me. You were just... a business arrangement. A temporary inconvenience that's taken far too long to resolve."

"Why?" The word came out broken, barely audible.

"Why what, dear? Why does he love me and not you? Why are you lying here broken while I'm planning our future together? Why have you been so stupidly, blindly devoted to a man who sees you as nothing more than an obstacle to remove?"

She stood up, smoothing down her skirt with satisfied precision.

"Because I'm everything you're not, Ariadne. I'm beautiful, I'm interesting, I'm worthy of his love. And you?" Her gaze swept over my broken body with undisguised contempt. "You're just a pathetic little girl who thought an arranged marriage meant something real. Who thought that loving someone meant they had to love you back."

The door opened again, and Lucien walked in, looking fresh and rested despite what must have been a very late night. His eyes moved between Celeste and me, and I saw something flicker across his face—not guilt, but satisfaction.

"Good morning, darling," Celeste said, rising to kiss him softly on the lips. Right in front of me. "I was just explaining to Ariadne how things really stand."

"I see," he said, his voice neutral. "Well, I'm afraid visiting hours are over. Ariadne needs another procedure this morning."

The words hit me like ice water. "What procedure?"

"Complications from your fall," he said smoothly. "Dr. Finch is concerned about infection in your leg. We need to operate immediately."

"No," I said, panic rising in my throat. "No more procedures. I won't let you—"

"Mrs. Ward, please don't distress yourself," a young voice interrupted. Clara Jenkins, the nurse who'd been kind to me, stepped into the room. Her face was pale, her hands shaking slightly. "Mr. Ward, perhaps we should contact the authorities about Mrs. Ward's concerns. This all seems very irregular."

The temperature in the room dropped ten degrees. Lucien's mask of concern slipped for just a moment, revealing something cold and dangerous underneath.

"Nurse Jenkins," he said quietly, "I think there's been a misunderstanding about your role here."

"Sir, I've been thinking about Mrs. Ward's situation, and I believe—"

"You believe you're qualified to make medical decisions?" His voice was soft, deadly. "You believe you understand the complexities of psychiatric care better than Dr. Finch?"

"No, sir, but—"

"Then I suggest you remember your place." He pulled out his phone, dialed a number. "Security? Yes, I need Nurse Clara Jenkins escorted from the premises immediately. She's been terminated for insubordination and interference with patient care."

Clara's face went white. "Mr. Ward, please, I have a family—"

"You should have thought of that before overstepping your boundaries," he said coldly.

Two security guards appeared as if by magic, flanking Clara on either side. As they prepared to escort her out, she suddenly broke free and rushed to my bedside.

"Here," she whispered urgently, pressing something small and hard into my palm. "Call for help. Call anyone."

Then she was gone, dragged away by security while Lucien watched with cold satisfaction.

I looked down at what she'd given me—a small cell phone, old but functional. Hope flared in my chest for exactly three seconds.

"Oh, Ariadne," Lucien said, noticing my expression. "You didn't think I'd overlook that possibility, did you?"

He pulled out his own phone, showed me the screen. A contact labeled 'Detective Morrison - Palm Beach PD.'

"I had a very productive conversation with the local authorities yesterday," he said conversationally. "Explained your condition, your delusions, your tendency toward paranoid accusations against your devoted husband. They've been instructed to treat any calls from this number as the ravings of a mentally ill woman."

The phone in my hand felt like it weighed a thousand pounds.

"The police won't help you, Ariadne. Your friends won't help you. Your family thinks you're having a breakdown. No one is coming to save you." He smiled, and it was the cruelest expression I'd ever seen. "There's only me. Only us. And we're going to take very good care of you."

Dr. Finch appeared in the doorway with an orderly and a syringe.

"Time for your procedure, Mrs. Ward," he said pleasantly.

As the needle slid into my arm and darkness began to claim me, I heard Celeste laugh—a sound like breaking glass that followed me down into unconsciousness.

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