
Wife Uncovers Ex's Plot
Chapter 3
The door to our beachfront villa closed behind us with a soft click, sealing away the chaos of the evening. I exhaled slowly, feeling the tension begin to uncoil from my shoulders. The familiar scent of sandalwood and sea air wrapped around me like a comforting blanket.
Abel's hand remained at the small of my back, steady and grounding. Without speaking, he guided me to the sofa, then disappeared into the bathroom. I heard water running, cabinet doors opening and closing. When he returned, he carried a small first aid kit.
"Let me see," he said softly, kneeling before me.
I extended my wrist, wincing slightly as his fingers traced the red marks blooming on my skin. His touch was feather-light, a stark contrast to the security guard's rough handling. Abel's face remained impassive, but I could read the controlled fury in the tightness around his eyes, the slight clench of his jaw.
"It's nothing," I said, trying to sound dismissive. "I've had worse paper cuts."
He didn't smile at my weak attempt at humor. Instead, he carefully applied a cooling balm to the bruises, his movements methodical and gentle. The silence between us felt heavy, charged with unspoken words.
"You're trembling," he observed quietly.
I hadn't noticed until he mentioned it. My hands were indeed shaking slightly. I reached for the cloth napkin on the coffee table, my fingers automatically beginning to fold it into familiar patterns—a habit I'd developed as a child whenever anxiety threatened to overwhelm me.
Abel watched as the paper crane took shape beneath my nervous fingers. When I finished, he carefully took it from me, examining the delicate folds before placing it on the nightstand beside several others I'd made during our time here—a small flock of paper birds, each one marking a moment of vulnerability I'd shared with him.
"Tell me about Lewis," he said, returning to sit beside me. "Not what you've told me before. Everything."
I looked into his eyes, finding no judgment there, only patient concern. Something inside me unraveled. The story poured out—not the sanitized version I'd shared when we first met, but the raw truth of that birthday night. The diamond necklace I'd thought was for me. The public humiliation as Lewis draped it around Christina's neck instead. The whispers and pitying glances that followed me for weeks afterward.
"And then, barely a month later, my parents' company collapsed," I said, staring at the paper crane on the nightstand. "The timing couldn't have been worse. It was like losing everything at once—my relationship, my family's security, my sense of who I was supposed to be."
Abel remained silent, but I felt his body tense beside me. When I glanced up, something in his expression had shifted—a coldness had entered his eyes, a calculating look I recognized from boardroom negotiations but had never seen directed at our personal life.
"What is it?" I asked.
He shook his head slightly, his expression softening as he focused on me again. "Nothing important right now," he said, pulling me gently against his chest. "Just thinking."
I didn't press him. The steady rhythm of his heartbeat beneath my ear was comforting, and for the first time since seeing Lewis and Christina on the dock, I felt truly safe.
"He can't hurt you anymore," Abel murmured into my hair. "I won't let him."
I believed him. What I didn't know was that Lewis would spend the next several days trying desperately to prove him wrong.
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