
The Doctor's Ten - Year Lie
Chapter 2
Three days after our wedding, Amelia stood in the doorway of my home office, her slender frame silhouetted against the hallway light. I could tell by her rigid posture that something was wrong. Her hands trembled slightly as she clutched a small leather-bound journal—the one I'd given her to record her "feelings" during our therapy sessions.
"Amelia," I said warmly, setting down my pen. "What is it, darling?"
She stepped inside, closing the door behind her with a soft click that sounded unnaturally loud in the quiet room. "I need to talk to you about something."
I gestured to the leather chair across from my desk. "Of course. Anything."
She remained standing, her eyes fixed on mine with an intensity I hadn't seen before. "I saw you with Sage at the wedding."
My expression must have flickered—surprise, perhaps—before I carefully composed my features into clinical detachment. "What exactly do you think you saw?"
"I saw you on your therapy couch with her. I heard what you said." Her voice wavered slightly. "That you never really loved me."
I leaned back in my chair, studying her. The sunlight streaming through the window caught the golden flecks in her eyes—eyes I'd spent years training to look to me for guidance, for truth.
"Amelia," I said gently, my voice taking on the authoritative tone I used during our sessions, "what you're experiencing is common after traumatic events. Your mind creates false scenarios to protect itself from overwhelming emotions."
"But I heard you," she insisted, her voice gaining strength. "You said I was damaged goods."
I stood slowly, circling my desk to approach her. "Your wedding day was emotionally intense. Your mind is creating scenarios to avoid intimacy."
"No." She backed away as I reached for her. "I know what I heard."
Something darkened inside me. I closed the distance between us in two strides, grabbing her wrist. My fingers pressed into her delicate skin, feeling her pulse quicken beneath my touch.
"You're being hysterical," I said coldly. "And ungrateful."
Her eyes widened in shock. "Ungrateful?"
"I saved your life," I reminded her, my voice low and dangerous. "Everything you are belongs to me."
That night, I took what belonged to me.
Amelia's tears meant nothing as I forced myself into her body. Her pleas were just background noise to the satisfying sound of her skin against mine. I watched her face contort with pain and humiliation, feeling a surge of power with each thrust.
"You made me do this," I whispered afterward, stroking her hair as she curled into herself on our bed. "If you hadn't doubted our love..."
Her silence was more satisfying than any words could be.
---
Weeks passed in a blur of morning sickness and fatigue. Amelia moved through our home like a ghost, her eyes hollow yet somehow more determined than before.
"I'm pregnant," she announced one evening, holding up a plastic test with two pink lines.
I smiled, calculating how this would change our dynamic. "Wonderful news, darling."
That night, I noticed her laptop open to a banking website. A new account, in her maiden name. My fingers hovered over the keyboard as I memorized the password she'd carelessly left visible.
The next day, I found her phone with a search history of domestic violence shelters and divorce attorneys.
"Planning something?" I asked casually over breakfast.
She startled, nearly dropping her coffee. "Just researching for a... friend."
I nodded slowly. "Of course."
That evening, Sage arrived at our home, her perfume lingering in the foyer as she followed me to my office.
"She's getting suspicious," Sage murmured, leaning against my desk. "I saw her on the phone with someone yesterday."
"Let her plan," I replied, pulling Sage close. "It will make her downfall all the more devastating."
Upstairs, I heard Amelia moving quietly between rooms, gathering what she thought was evidence of my betrayal. Little did she know, I'd been documenting her every move since we met.
The game was just beginning.
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