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Chapter 3

作者: Sword of Thunder
Todd's lips parted slightly, the truth hovering on the edge of his tongue—and then came the deafening crash of the front door being kicked open.

Anne stormed in, face blazing with fury. She shoved me aside and rushed to the couch, frantically checking on Todd's condition.

"Brett! You insane bastard! What the hell are you doing to Todd?!"

She whirled around, her eyes bloodshot, boring into me like she wanted to tear me apart with her bare hands.

"I should've seen this coming. You're just jealous—you can't stand that Todd is better than you! So you try to destroy him with some cheap, cowardly trick!"

My body was so wrecked from the last few days that I had no strength to resist. Her shove sent me stumbling into the corner of the coffee table. A searing pain shot through my ribs.

"I wasn't—"

"Don't you dare lie to me!" Anne cut me off, yanking the strip of sleeping pills from my bag. Her face twisted into something ugly. "You say you're exhausted? I think you're just bored out of your mind. Since you love sleeping so much, I'll make sure you get your fill!"

She lunged at me, her fingers digging into my jaw, forcing my mouth open. She crammed the entire strip of pills past my lips, then grabbed the water glass from the table and tipped it down my throat.

"Drink! Every last one of them!"

The icy water mixed with the bitter, chalky pills flooded my windpipe. I choked, gagged, tears streaming down my face as I coughed uncontrollably.

She watched me gasping on the floor, not an ounce of pity in her eyes.

"If you ever lay a finger on Todd again, I'll make you disappear. Permanently."

She helped the still-dazed Todd to his feet, cradling him like he was some priceless treasure, and swept out of the apartment.

The door slammed shut behind them, sealing me off from the world.

I lay crumpled on the floor, jamming my fingers down my throat, forcing myself to vomit up the pills she'd crammed down me.

My stomach churned violently, but I didn't care. With the last shred of strength I had, I crawled to the door, pulled it open—and collapsed in the hallway, unconscious.

I woke up in a hospital bed. Again.

A nurse told me a neighbor had found me passed out in the hallway and called an ambulance. They'd pumped my stomach, but the overdose had still knocked me out for three days straight.

I lay there, my body weightless, drained of every ounce of energy. Even after sleeping for seventy-two hours, that bone-deep exhaustion clung to me like a second skin.

My chest felt heavy, compressed. Every breath came with a dull, persistent ache.

Anne hadn't visited once.

Good. I didn't want her there anyway.

I stared up at the harsh fluorescent lights, raising a feeble hand to block the glare—then shot upright in bed.

The nurse yelped in protest. I ignored her, yanking the IV out of my arm.

It all clicked into place. The truth hit me like a freight train.

This was how Todd did it. This was how he fed on my life force.

I finally understood.

A few days later, I checked myself out of the hospital. I didn't go home. I took a cab straight to my uncle's holistic wellness retreat upstate.

My grandfather was a well-respected naturopath who'd been practicing integrative medicine for over forty years. When I was a kid with a weak constitution, he'd helped build me back up with supplements, dietary plans, and alternative therapies that actually worked.

The retreat smelled of eucalyptus, lavender, and fresh pine—clean and calming, a world away from the sterile stench of the hospital.

My grandfather took one look at my pale, hollow face and nearly dropped his teacup.

He checked my vitals, ran a few quick assessments, and his brow furrowed deep.

"Kid, what the hell have you done to yourself?" he muttered. "Your blood pressure's bottomed out, your heart rate's irregular, and your nervous system is completely fried. You keep going like this, and you won't last the year."

I didn't explain. I just asked him to help me.

He sighed, shook his head, and wrote out a comprehensive recovery plan—high-dose multivitamins, adaptogenic herbs, amino acid supplements, and a strict anti-inflammatory diet.

Along with the supplements, he designed a daily routine of breathwork and gentle movement exercises.

"Morning and evening, every day," he instructed. "Rebuilds your nervous system, restores your adrenal function. It'll take time, but it'll bring you back from the brink."

He also set me up with weekly IV nutrient therapy sessions—bags of magnesium, zinc, B-complex vitamins, and glutathione dripping straight into my veins. Within minutes of the first session, I could feel the warm flush spreading through my limbs, chasing away the hollow, drained feeling that had become my constant companion.

For the next few weeks, I stayed at my grandfather's retreat. I stuck to the protocol religiously—the supplements, the breathwork, the IV drips, the clean eating. Every day, I felt a little less like a ghost and a little more like a person again.

I blocked out everything about Anne and Todd. No calls. No texts. No social media. I vanished from their world completely.

I was conserving my strength.

Stockpiling my energy.

Waiting.

Because I knew—something was coming. And when it did, I wanted a front-row seat.

Todd, you think you're some kind of productivity machine? You love burning the candle at both ends?

Let's see how long you can last on your own.

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  • The Secondhand Fatigue Curse   Chapter 8

    Anne had rung the death knell for the man she loved and her most capable partner—with her own greed and stupidity.She was taken into custody on charges of unlawful imprisonment and manslaughter.The company they'd pinned all their hopes on collapsed overnight—founder scandal, failed core project. Bankrupt.The police investigation came back quickly. The coroner found extreme levels of stimulants in Todd's system—dozens of times over the safe limit. Combined with his chronic, severe overwork, it had caused his heart to give out.Anne hadn't killed him with her own hands. But she'd pushed him past every breaking point, forced him to work beyond human limits, and her actions in those final days amounted to indirect homicide.The final twist: Todd's claim that Anne was pregnant? A complete lie.The medical report was crystal clear—Anne was not and had never been pregnant.That lie became Todd's final regret. He'd died for a "future" and a "child" that never existed.In her holding

  • The Secondhand Fatigue Curse   Chapter 7

    Todd stood behind her, his eyes gleaming with vicious satisfaction.I looked at these two people—cornered, desperate, completely unhinged—and asked them, "Anne. Do you really think something like this comes for free? Do you really think that bracelet works however you want it to?"My words made them pause for a second."Shut up! I don't care who says what—you're giving us your life, whether you like it or not!"They dragged me into the bedroom, tied me down to the bed with ropes, and locked the door behind them.From the living room, I soon heard the frantic clatter of Todd's keyboard.I closed my eyes and waited.Todd felt it immediately—a surge of "energy" like he'd never experienced. It was like someone had injected pure adrenaline into his veins. His mind sharpened, his fingers flying across the keys.Anne hovered over him, watching the proposal grow on the screen, her face splitting into a manic grin."Yes! Todd! I knew this would work!""That worthless Brett—all that ti

  • The Secondhand Fatigue Curse   Chapter 6

    Anne had put it on my wrist herself, telling me I could never take it off.In my past life, I'd worn that silver bracelet right up until the day I died.And Todd had an identical one on his wrist.I'd asked Anne about it once. Her face had flickered with something—then she'd brushed it off, saying she'd bought a few extras from the boutique as perks for top performers.But that bracelet was never a lucky charm.It was the link between me and Todd. The medium that transferred every ounce of his exhaustion onto me.Todd must have used Anne's hands to put it on me.I turned and walked out of the room, leaving him behind.…To get back on his feet and return to work as fast as possible, Todd started injecting himself with stimulants.The man had lost his mind.With the drugs pumping through his system, he forced himself to stay sharp and wired—handling business during the day, grinding through proposals at night, like a machine with no off switch.Anne came to check on him. See

  • The Secondhand Fatigue Curse   Chapter 5

    Todd stood there in silence, taking the verbal beating without a word. He just gave a dull, mechanical nod.I watched from the shadows. I knew exactly how Anne operated—you were only worth as much as you could produce. I was living proof.Over the next three days, Todd locked himself in his office, mainlining coffee and energy drinks, trying to fight off the crushing wave of exhaustion.Meanwhile, I kept up my routine at my uncle's retreat—daily IV therapy, breathwork, clean meals. Every day, I felt a little stronger.Three days later, the re-pitch arrived.Todd shuffled onto the stage, looking like death warmed over—dark circles so deep they looked bruised, his whole frame swaying.This time, he held it together. He delivered the entire presentation flawlessly.But the moment the investors announced they'd won the bid, something in him snapped. His eyes rolled back, and he collapsed like a puppet with its strings cut, hitting the floor with a sickening thud—completely unconscio

  • The Secondhand Fatigue Curse   Chapter 4

    Two weeks later, my chance finally came.Anne's company was hosting its annual make-or-break event—the pitch presentation for the "Project Starlight" initiative. In my previous life, this was the project that made Todd a legend. He'd locked himself in for seven straight days, cranked out a flawless proposal, and walked away with ten million in funding. That same day, I'd been wheeled into the ER with heart failure.This time, I cleaned myself up and showed up at the presentation hall.Anne's eyes flickered with surprise when she saw me, then quickly settled into cold irritation."What are you doing here? Haven't you embarrassed yourself enough?"I let the jab slide. Instead, I held out the insulated tote bag I was carrying."I heard today's a big deal for the company. Figured Todd's been pulling more all-nighters, so I brought him some bone broth to keep his energy up. And I grabbed coffee and energy drinks for everyone else. Break a leg out there."My tone was humble, my deli

  • The Secondhand Fatigue Curse   Chapter 3

    Todd's lips parted slightly, the truth hovering on the edge of his tongue—and then came the deafening crash of the front door being kicked open.Anne stormed in, face blazing with fury. She shoved me aside and rushed to the couch, frantically checking on Todd's condition."Brett! You insane bastard! What the hell are you doing to Todd?!"She whirled around, her eyes bloodshot, boring into me like she wanted to tear me apart with her bare hands."I should've seen this coming. You're just jealous—you can't stand that Todd is better than you! So you try to destroy him with some cheap, cowardly trick!"My body was so wrecked from the last few days that I had no strength to resist. Her shove sent me stumbling into the corner of the coffee table. A searing pain shot through my ribs."I wasn't—""Don't you dare lie to me!" Anne cut me off, yanking the strip of sleeping pills from my bag. Her face twisted into something ugly. "You say you're exhausted? I think you're just bored out of y

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