
She Carved Into My Face On Anniversary Day
Chapter 2
I woke with my heart hammering against my ribs, the taste of copper still sharp on my tongue. The morning light streaming through our bedroom curtains felt like a cruel joke—soft, golden, normal. Everything about this moment should have been ordinary, but the phantom pain across my cheek told me otherwise.
My hands flew to my face, fingers trembling as they traced smooth, unmarked skin. No cuts. No carved letters. No blood.
But I remembered everything. The masks, the camera flashes, the knife dragging across my flesh. That woman's voice, cold and mocking. The mole on her wrist.
I stumbled to the bathroom mirror, my reflection staring back unmarked and whole. The black lingerie I'd worn last night hung on my body like a mockery of romance. In the harsh bathroom light, I looked exactly like what those masked figures had called me—desperate, pathetic, dressed up for a man who hadn't even come home.
The digital clock read 7:23 AM. Leon's side of the bed was still empty, still cold.
I grabbed my phone with shaking hands and dialed his number. It rang once, twice, three times before going to voicemail.
"Leon, please call me back. Something happened. I need—" My voice cracked. "I need you to come home."
I hung up and immediately called again. Voicemail.
Again. Voicemail.
By the fourth call, my hands were shaking so badly I could barely hold the phone. This wasn't just about him missing our anniversary anymore. If what I remembered was real—if somehow I had lived through that nightmare and been given a second chance—then Leon's absence wasn't coincidental.
The house felt different in the morning light. Every shadow seemed to hide potential threats. Every creak of settling wood made me jump. I found myself checking the locks on every door, testing every window. The back door where they had dragged me—it was locked tight, showing no signs of forced entry.
But they hadn't needed to force anything, had they? The woman had used a key.
I called Leon again at nine o'clock. Then at nine-thirty. Each unanswered ring felt like confirmation of something I didn't want to believe.
By noon, I couldn't stand the waiting anymore. I threw some clothes into an overnight bag, my hands moving with frantic efficiency. Jeans, sweaters, underwear—practical things that wouldn't make me look like I was performing for anyone. The black lingerie went into the trash, silk pooling in the garbage can like a discarded dream.
I tried Leon's number one more time before I left. This time, it went straight to voicemail without ringing. He had turned off his phone.
"I'm leaving the house," I said to his voicemail, my voice steadier than I felt. "I'll be at the Riverside Park if you decide you want to find me. If you decide I'm worth coming home for."
The October air bit through my jacket as I walked the three blocks to Riverside Park. I had played here as a child when we first moved to this neighborhood, back when Leon and I were newlyweds and everything felt possible. Now it felt like a refuge—public enough to be safe, close enough that I could watch our house from the bench near the playground.
I settled onto the cold metal bench with a clear view of our street. From here, I could see our front door, our driveway, the back gate that led to the yard where they had—where I remembered them dragging me.
The day stretched endlessly. Families came and went from the playground, children's laughter a sharp contrast to the dread coiling in my stomach. I called Leon every hour, leaving increasingly desperate messages.
"Leon, please. I know this sounds crazy, but I think someone is going to try to hurt me tonight. I need you to call me back."
"Leon, it's three o'clock. Where are you? Why won't you answer your phone?"
"Leon, I'm scared. Please don't let this happen to me again."
As evening approached, the park emptied. The temperature dropped, and I pulled my jacket tighter around me. Street lights flickered on, casting long shadows across the playground equipment. Our house sat dark and empty, just as I had left it.
I almost convinced myself I was being paranoid. Almost convinced myself that the vivid nightmare was just my mind's way of processing the disappointment of our ruined anniversary. Almost.
Then, at exactly midnight, I saw them.
Figures emerged from the shadows between houses, moving with purposeful stealth toward my home. Even in the dim streetlight, I could make out the shapes of masks covering their faces—the same grotesque Halloween masks from my nightmare.
My breath caught in my throat. This was real. This was happening.
I watched in frozen horror as they approached our front door. The female leader—I could tell by her build, by the way she moved—stepped forward and reached into her pocket.
The metallic glint of a key caught the streetlight.
She inserted it into our lock like she belonged there. Like she had every right to enter my home. The door opened without resistance, without the screech of forced entry or the crack of splintered wood.
Only Leon and I had keys to that house. Only Leon and I.
The group disappeared inside, and I could see flashlight beams dancing through our windows as they searched. They moved through the living room, the kitchen, up the stairs to our bedroom. Looking for me. Hunting for me.
I pressed my hand over my mouth to stifle the sob that threatened to escape. My husband—my husband of seven years, the man I had waited for in silk lingerie—had given our house key to someone who wanted to hurt me.
After twenty minutes that felt like hours, they emerged empty-handed. I could hear muffled voices, frustrated and angry. The woman gestured sharply, and even from a distance, I could sense her rage at finding the house empty.
They disappeared back into the shadows as suddenly as they had appeared, leaving our front door standing open like a mouth screaming into the night.
I sat on that park bench until dawn, shivering in the cold, my mind racing with terrible realizations. Leon hadn't missed our anniversary by accident. He hadn't been working late. He had deliberately stayed away, knowing what was planned for me.
As the first rays of sunlight painted the sky pink, I finally understood the depth of my husband's betrayal. Whatever was happening to me, whoever those people were, Leon was part of it.
And now I had to figure out how to survive what was coming next.
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