
Unveiling the Fake Love
Chapter 2
The manila folder landed on the coffee table with a soft thud that somehow felt louder than a gunshot.
"These are your medical records, Everett," Elisa said softly, her voice trembling just enough to seem genuine. "From three years ago."
I stood frozen in the doorway of our living room, watching as Everett reached for the folder with the reverence of someone approaching a sacred text. The late afternoon sunlight streamed through the windows, casting long shadows across his face as he opened it.
"What is this?" he asked, his voice barely audible.
"Proof," Elisa whispered, glancing at me with eyes that held no trace of the vulnerability she showed Everett. "That not everyone who claimed to help you actually did."
I stepped forward, my heart hammering against my ribs. "Everett, don't listen to—"
"Silence!" he roared, holding up a document stamped with an official seal. "Dr. Mercer's statement. The doctor you recommended I see after..."
His voice trailed off as he read further, his expression hardening into something I'd never seen directed at me before. Paranoia. Suspicion. Coldness.
"This says you deliberately misdiagnosed me," he said, each word precise and cutting. "That you saw an opportunity to make me dependent on you."
"That's absurd," I said, reaching for the paper. "Let me see what—"
He snatched it away, his eyes flashing. "Don't touch it. Don't touch anything."
"Everett, I'm a psychologist. I've dedicated my life to helping people like you—"
"People like me?" He laughed, a hollow sound that sent chills down my spine. "Is that what I was to you? A case study?"
He stood abruptly, crossing to his desk where he kept his old therapy files—the ones I'd encouraged him to keep as a reminder of how far he'd come.
"You groomed me," he said, flinging the files at me. They scattered across the floor like fallen leaves. "When I was at my most vulnerable, you manipulated me into believing I needed you."
The accusation hit harder than any physical blow could have.
---
The party was in full swing, champagne flowing freely as Everett's business associates and friends mingled in our garden. He'd insisted on hosting it—"a celebration to lift Elisa's spirits," he'd said.
I'd retreated to the bathroom, waves of morning sickness finally overwhelming me. Bracing myself against the cool marble countertop, I tried to breathe through the nausea.
The door clicked open behind me. In the mirror's reflection, I saw Elisa's face—no longer fragile or haunted, but twisted with malicious satisfaction.
"Poor Isla," she purred, closing the door behind her. "Not feeling well?"
I straightened, wiping my mouth with a tissue. "Just a migraine."
"Liar." She stepped closer, her perfume cloying in the confined space. "It's morning sickness, isn't it? You're pregnant."
My blood ran cold. I hadn't told anyone yet—not even Everett.
"How did you—"
"I notice things," she said, trailing a finger along the marble countertop. "The way you've stopped drinking. How you touch your stomach when you think no one's looking."
She moved closer, her voice dropping to a venomous whisper. "Do you really think he'll want a child with you now? After everything?"
Before I could respond, she suddenly lurched forward, slamming her head against the mirror with a sickening crack. Glass splintered, and blood trickled down her temple as she collapsed to the floor.
"Help!" she screamed. "She's attacking me! Help!"
The door burst open. Everett stood there, his eyes wild with panic that transformed to rage when he saw me standing over Elisa.
"What have you done?" he demanded.
"Everett, she did this to herself—"
The slap came without warning, his palm connecting with my cheek with enough force to snap my head to the side. The sting brought tears to my eyes as I staggered back.
"You jealous monster," he hissed, kneeling beside Elisa. "What were you thinking?"
---
"I have something for you," Everett said to Elisa the next evening, his voice tender in a way it hadn't been with me for weeks.
We stood in his study, the safe open behind his desk. From it, he withdrew a velvet box that made my heart stop.
No. Please, no.
He opened it reverently, revealing the emerald necklace that had belonged to his mother—the one he'd promised would be mine alone on our wedding day.
"This belongs to someone with a pure heart," he said, stepping behind Elisa to fasten it around her neck.
I watched, unable to speak, as the pendant settled against her collarbone—a green flame that should have been mine.
"Everett," I finally managed, my voice barely audible. "That's—"
"That's what?" he challenged, his eyes cold as they met mine. "Something you think you deserve?"
I raised my wrist instinctively, rubbing the spot where he'd grabbed me earlier—a bruise forming beneath my sleeve.
He followed the movement, his lip curling in disdain. "Always the victim, aren't you, Isla?"
Elisa touched the necklace with reverent fingers, her eyes meeting mine over Everett's shoulder—triumphant, cruel, and utterly without remorse.
The emerald caught the light as she turned, sending green reflections dancing across the walls—like the first flames of a fire that would consume everything I'd once believed was mine.
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