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His Obsession, My Hell

Chapter 2 

Word Count: 780    |    Released on: 01/07/2025

e were a blur of physical a

my body heal while my mind tried

nstant reminder of the choice I had made, a cho

g enough, I went

another one of his

hat had once felt like home

of jewelry, every designer bag, ever

a local charity, and left them on t

want hi

part of the life h

er, finding me sitting in t

furniture and assumed I was sti

rition. "It was an emergency with a client. I' ll make it up to you

o thick I could

ware, living in the f

ired to argue, too f

to feel the baby that was no l

, my voice flat. "The doc

able lie, and he accept

er, my mot

was planning a small famil

l, oblivious to the storm her words created. "It' s been

id as I relayed

r light flicker

d, almost too quickly. "It wil

for me, but for th

a cold, hard kno

rty, David handed m

," he said. "A little

ened

silver necklace, a single whale t

, and completely unlike a

for S

f her in his study, we

ir was thick with f

n, she

iking in person, with an easy

uch like me it

s followed h

of the complex drama

don' t you?" my uncle boomed.

, charming smile that

e was strained as

ed as David ga

up as she o

her fingers tracing the whale tail. "

," David lied smoot

e, my express

nal act of this c

grilled shrimp was

gic to shellfish, a

ice as I carefully

tention was ent

without a word, he took her plate, neatly peeled s

intimacy that spoke of years of shar

t look a

ly forgotten I

ent, I wasn

t even a

space next to the w

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His Obsession, My Hell
His Obsession, My Hell
“My marriage to David Miller was a picture of perfection, a dream life built on his charm and our shared happiness. Then came the call: my mother in an accident, and David, my husband, utterly unreachable. Hours bled into sterile dread in the hospital waiting room, a dread far deeper than my mother' s condition. An unknown text arrived, a single photo: David, arm around another woman, intimate, familiar. It was my aunt, Sophia Hayes, my mother' s estranged sister, her smile painfully like mine. My world, once perfect, splintered into a million icy shards under the humming hospital lights. He returned late, weaving slick lies about dead phones and urgent meetings, as if I were a child to be placated. But as he signed the papers I put before him, oblivious, a chilling sense of irony settled heavy in my gut. The man I thought I knew, the husband who murmured of naming our child "Sophia," was a stranger. I found his study, not an office, but a shrine to her, filled with desperate letters and a diary detailing his monstrous plan: I was just a "perfect-looking replacement" to bear "his Sophia." The love, the marriage, the baby-all a grotesque fabrication, designed to resurrect his lost obsession. The pain threatened to split me, but beneath it, a cold, hard resolve began to form, sharper than any grief. He thought he' d signed investment papers; he' d signed his divorce, and my consent to end the lie he' d so carefully constructed within me. I walked out that night, leaving his diary open, his delusion exposed, ready to erase every trace of his monstrous fantasy.”