
The Wife He Threw Away, Rebuilt
Chapter 10
Amanda POV:
My body seized, an uncontrollable tremor shaking my frame. Fear. Pure, primal, bone-deep terror. I knew that face. Even disfigured, even twisted by a decade of evil and a recent explosion, I knew it. Cain Glass. He wasn' t dead. He was here.
He recognized me too, a slow, predatory smile stretching his scarred lips. His eyes, the same ones that had haunted my nightmares for years, burned with a triumphant glee. He had survived. And he was waiting for me.
The memories hit me like a tidal wave: the suffocating darkness of his cells, the piercing needles, the mind-bending drugs, the screams of my fellow agents, silenced forever. I had thought I escaped him, thought I buried him in my past, along with the terror and the trauma.
"No," I choked out, my voice raw with a sudden, desperate plea. My eyes locked onto Brody, who stood a few feet away, his face a mask of grim satisfaction. "Brody, please! You can't leave me here! This is him! Cain Glass! He' s the one who kidnapped me! He' ll kill me! He' ll finish what he started!"
Brody's brow furrowed, a flicker of impatience crossing his face. "Stop it, Amanda," he snapped, his voice tight. "You're delusional. This is a reputable facility. You're just trying to manipulate me, as always." He glanced at Glass, then back at me, his eyes filled with disgust. "You're a madwoman. Seeing ghosts. It's just more proof you need this... treatment." He didn't even recognize him. Or didn't care to. He just saw a scarred man running a facility. He just saw an ugly, inconvenient problem. Me.
Cain Glass chuckled, a dry, rattling sound. "Ah, the drama. Always a pleasure with you, my little Nightingale." He looked at Brody, his eyes glinting. "Perhaps the good husband would like to stay and observe our... unique methods of persuasion? It might help him understand the true nature of his... problematic wife."
Brody hesitated, then, to my horror, he nodded. "Fine," he said, his voice flat. "But I'm not staying long. I have a gala to attend."
I watched, frozen, as they led me into a sterile room. My body was roughly strapped to a gurney. Brody watched from behind a one-way mirror, his face impassive. Glass approached, a needle glinting in his hand.
The ice-cold needle pierced my skin. My body convulsed, a guttural cry tearing from my throat. The drug surged through my veins, hot and cold at once, a fire in my blood, an ice in my mind. My muscles spasmed, my back arching violently. Agonizing screams ripped from me, echoing off the bare walls. My clothes were soaked with cold sweat. The world blurred, then sharpened, then blurred again. Every nerve ending was on fire.
Glass injected me again. A fresh wave of agony, more intense than the last, shot through me. I screamed, a raw, animalistic sound, my body thrashing against the restraints. My bladder released. Humiliation burned.
Brody, behind the glass, flinched. His brow furrowed, a flicker of discomfort in his eyes.
Then, Carla. She appeared beside him, her hand sliding into his. "She's so dramatic, isn't she, darling?" she purred, her voice dripping with scorn. "Always so high-maintenance. And so disgusting. No wonder Eben got sick. He must have been terrified of her." She leaned into Brody, her voice dropping. "Remember how he choked, Brody? How his little face turned blue? All because of her."
Brody visibly stiffened. The brief flicker of unease in his eyes vanished, replaced by a cold, hard glare. My son. His son. He truly believed I had poisoned him.
The last trace of humanity in Brody's eyes evaporated, replaced by a chilling hatred. He looked at me, a broken, convulsing mess, and saw only the venomous woman who had tried to hurt his son. He saw the villain. And in that moment, I knew. There was no going back for him. No redemption.
He turned, his back to the glass, his face set. He walked away, not even a backward glance. He was gone.
My eyes, glazed with tears and drugs, fixed on his retreating back. My mind, despite the chemical haze, began to count. Seven seconds. That was how long it would take him to reach the end of the corridor. To disappear completely.
Glass leaned over me, his scarred face inches from mine. "What are you mumbling, little bird?"
I ignored him, my gaze piercing through the wall, through the building, following Brody' s receding figure. My lips, numb and swollen, began to move. "Seven… six… five… four… three… two… one…"
Brody's silhouette vanished around the corner.
A single tear, mixed with blood, tracked down my face. A faint, almost imperceptible smile touched my lips. It was done. The last seven seconds. The final farewell. The end of Amanda Park, his wife.
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