I barely caught her last words before she disappeared into the hallway. My mind was spinning too violently to process them. All I heard was her laughter echoing against the walls, mocking, sharp, and cruel. It stuck to me like poison, seeping under my skin.
Dinner came. I prepared the meal as she smugly signed for me to do, keeping my face neutral, my lips sealed. Nathan sat at the table, Melissa at his side, her laughter filling the room while his hand lingered too long on hers. I ate in silence, every bite heavy, every swallow burning. I didn’t taste the food. I only tasted betrayal. When night fell, I lay awake. Nathan’s side of the bed stayed cold he hadn’t bothered to return. My tears soaked the pillow, but I bit them back, forcing myself to breathe quietly. I couldn’t let them hear me break. Not anymore. The next morning, the house was quiet. Nathan had already left. Melissa, too. I moved like a ghost, cleaning, arranging, making sure everything looked perfect. But my heart wasn’t in any of it until the knock came just past noon. I opened the door, and there he was. Dave. His eyes softened the moment they landed on me, like they always did. He was Nathan’s rival, yes, but with me, he wasn’t the arrogant man the world feared. He was… different. Almost tender. He leaned on the doorway, his eyes running over me, not in lust but in pity. His fingers moved quickly in sign, sharp, impatient. See what you’re doing to yourself? he signed. Leave this man. He doesn’t love you. When will you open your eyes and see? “Rachel,” he continued “How much longer are you going to do this to yourself?” I froze. He stepped inside, shutting the door behind him, his tall frame blocking out the light. But his hands moved again, faster, angrier. “You deserve better than this house, this prison,” he continued, his jaw tight. “Divorce him. Leave him. Be free.” I froze, halfway through folding Nathan’s shirt. My hands trembled, but I forced myself to keep working, as if ignoring him would make the ache in my chest lighter. When will you stop being stubborn? The words cut. I dropped the shirt. My body moved before my mind caught up. My lips parted. My voice was shaky, dry from disuse spilt out. “I’m not stubborn.” Dave blinked. His whole body stiffened. The shirt slid from my hands to the floor. His mouth opened, but no words came. I looked straight at him, tears spilling down my cheeks faster than I could wipe them. My voice cracked like glass under pressure. “Dave… I’ve regained my hearing.” I pressed a hand to my chest as if it would hold me together. “And the first thing I heard was my husband whispering ‘I love you’—” my throat choked “but not to me, to that useless woman.” For a moment, silence filled the room. Then Dave crossed the space in two strides and held my shoulders firmly. His eyes searched mine, and for the first time in years, I felt seen. “Rachel…” he said softly, but with the weight of thunder. “I’m sorry.” I shook my head violently. “Don’t pity me. I don’t want your pity.” My voice broke again. “I sat there like a fool, happy because I could finally hear. And what did I hear? l knew my marriage was breaking, but not to that extent. Dave, why will he break my heart to this extent .” Dave pulled me down to the sofa, forcing me to sit. He crouched in front of me, so his face was level with mine. His hand brushed away a tear I couldn’t stop. “Listen to me,” he said, his voice steady. “You don’t deserve this pain. You’ve been giving your life to a man who doesn’t even see you. How much longer will you keep killing yourself for him?” I buried my face in my hands, sobbing. The words spilt out, raw and jagged. “I took a bullet for him, Dave. I lost my hearing because of him. I have endured five years of silence, of insults, of being treated like a shadow in my own home. And for what? So he could hand everything...everything I bled for to her, to that bitch?” Dave gripped my wrists gently and pulled my hands away from my face. His eyes burned into mine, fierce and unrelenting. “Then stop. Stop letting him kill you slowly. Leave him, Rachel.” I shook my head. “You don’t have to tell me dave but it is not as easy as you thing. I love him, I love him so deeply. it hurts me so bad, I am really hurt. Dave’s jaw tightened. “so what are you saying?” The words came out like a confession I had been holding back for too long. “I’m saying… It will take time. His eyes widened, but he didn’t argue. He didn’t call me crazy. Instead, he took a deep breath, nodded slowly, and said, “Then we plan it. Together.” That broke me all over again. The sobs came harder, deeper, but this time they weren’t silent, they echoed. My regained hearing made them louder, crueller. Dave pulled me into his arms, holding me like I might shatter if he let go. His voice was firm against my ear. “Cry all you want tonight. But after this, we fight. You’re not going to be their victim anymore.” I clutched his shirt, trembling. “Dave… I don’t even know who I am to him anymore.” “You’re Rachel,” he said fiercely, “the woman who risked her life for love. But now you’ll risk it for yourself. And I’ll be by your side.” I wanted to believe him. I wanted to believe there could be freedom and happiness beyond Nathan’s shadow. We sat like that for a long time, my tears soaking his chest, his arms tightening around me like a vow. And for the first time since that bullet, since the silence swallowed my world, I felt like maybe just maybe I wasn’t completely alone. When he finally left, I moved to the kitchen, my throat dry, desperate for water. I opened the fridge. That’s when I saw it in an envelope, carelessly left on the shelf beside the milk. My name scribbled on the front in his handwriting. My heart pounded as I tore it open. The note was short. Cruel. “Make sure you dress well, like a human being. My friends are throwing a party at Damsel Hotel. Don’t be late.” I stood there, the paper shaking in my hand. His words sliced me open. “Like a human being…” As if I wasn’t one already. As if I hadn’t given him everything. As if I hadn’t bled for him. My reflection on the fridge door blurred with my tears. I pressed the note to my chest, whispering to myself. “He’s just inviting me to disgrace me. Like always.”Dave’s POVThe world stopped spinning when the doctor finally walked out, mask pulled down, exhaustion written all over his face. My legs nearly gave way, but his words caught me before I crumbled.“Sir,” he said, and I braced for the worst. “Congratulations. You’re the father of twins.”Twins.The word echoed in my skull like fireworks. Relief flooded my body so hard I laughed and cried at the same time. I grabbed the doctor’s hands, thanking him over and over until he slipped away, leaving me trembling with gratitude.I didn’t wait. I ran straight into the ward.Rachel lay there, pale but glowing, her chest rising gently as she slept. My heart ached at the sight of he my warrior, my wife, my miracle. I bent down, pressed my lips to her forehead, and whispered against her skin, “Thank you, baby. You did it.”My eyes shifted to the two tiny bundles in their cribs. My chest swelled. Two little angels, two pride.I swallowed hard, forcing myself to breathe normally, and stepped back. “S
Nathan’s POVMorning light poured into my office, but nothing about it felt warm. My head was pounding from the night before, restless with thoughts I couldn’t silence. I was still staring at the stack of files when my PA barged in, breathless.“Sir—” he stammered, his voice shaking. “It’s Dave. He’s filed a court case. I… I looked at the documents, and from the evidence he has, even if you call the best lawyers in the country… you’re going to jail.”My throat tightened. I gripped the edge of my desk as though it could steady the storm in my chest.“Jail?” The word scraped out of me.The PA swallowed hard, lowering his voice as if whispering would soften the blow. “Life imprisonment, sir. And that’s not all… some of the staff are already talking. They said Melissa was the cause of the accident. They’re preparing to sue you for that, too.”For a second, the ground shifted beneath me. My knees gave way, and I fell back into my chair. I couldn’t breathe.Just then, the door swung open, a
I lit my third cigarette in twenty minutes and waited for the boardroom to fill. I summoned them, every senior manager, every head of department. Ten a.m., I said. Sharp suits. Sharp faces. Answers.An hour passed. The chairs stayed empty, the sunlight cut across my desk, and a dull panic started to seep in like cold water through cracked concrete.My PA, Emmanuel, finally wandered in, breathless. “Sir… you called for me?”What the hell?” I slashed the air with my hand. “Where is everyone? They never miss a meeting.”His mouth trembled. “Sir, I’m… I’m sorry. It seem there’ve been offers. Dave Collins bought over a number of our suppliers and resources. Some of the board were approached. He’s been aggressive in acquisitions. We’re… we’re near bankruptcy, sir.” His voice dropped like a stone.Twenty billion. Twenty billion profit last year. I felt the number as a physical thing heavy, metallic, impossible to lose. “How? Where is that profit? We didn’t invest in new plants. We didn’t buy
Rachel’s POVThe hospital smelled like bleach and despair. I hated that smell it crawled into my chest and made it hard to breathe. Dave had insisted we come first thing in the morning, even when I told him I felt fine.“You’re not fine,” he had said, his jaw tight, his hand firm around mine as though I’d shatter if he let go.Now the doctor sat across from me, his glasses sliding down the bridge of his nose. “You need rest, Rachel. Real rest. No stress, no heavy work. If you push yourself, you’ll risk more than exhaustion.”I swallowed the lump in my throat, my gaze flicking to Dave. His expression softened, but his voice came out firm. “Then she’ll rest. I’ll make sure of it.”He said it like a vow, like a promise carved in stone.When we stepped out of the consultation room, his hand brushed the small of my back. Protective. Possessive. Warm. My chest tightened in ways I couldn’t put words to.We hadn’t walked two steps when I saw him.Mr. Ramsey.He was leaning against the wall of t
Rachel’s POVThe hospital smelled like bleach and despair. I hated that smell. It crawled into my chest and made it hard to breathe. Dave had insisted we come first thing in the morning, even when I told him I felt fine.“You’re not fine,” he had said, his jaw tight, his hand firm around mine as though I’d shatter if he let go.Now the doctor sat across from me, his glasses sliding down the bridge of his nose. “You need rest, Rachel, like real rest, no stress, no heavy work. If you push yourself, you’ll risk more than exhaustion.”I swallowed the lump in my throat, my gaze flicking to Dave. His expression softened, but his voice came out firm. “Then she’ll rest. I’ll make sure of it.”He said it like a vow, like a promise carved in stone.When we stepped out of the consultation room, his hand brushed the small of my back. Protective. Possessive. Warm. My chest tightened in ways I couldn’t put words to.We hadn’t walked two steps when I saw him.Mr. Ramsey. He was leaning against the wa
Nathan’s POV“What are you talking about?” My voice thundered across the hall, the kind of voice that once shut investors up with a single word. “This is my project. My creation. There is no default.”I jabbed my finger toward the device glowing on the stand. My palms were hot, but my face had to stay carved in marble. “How can I not know what I built?”Then she laughed. Rachel. That laugh that used to slice my pride clean in half. She stepped forward, eyes glinting, and for a second, the whole hall bent toward her.“You’re a terrible liar, Nathan.” Her lips curved into something dangerous. She turned to the crowd, voice strong. “This project is called Drole. It’s not just a data collector, it’s an assistant. An observer. A truth mirror.”A murmur rippled through the audience. Investors leaned forward. Journalists poised their pens like knives.Fine,” she said, pulling the prototype into her hands. “Let’s test it out.”Rachel’s POVThe weight of the prototype was familiar—like holding a