/1/101378/coverbig.jpg?v=68c0cb9af7fd7aea6c1296c3ecae9e07)
sum that was supposed to be our new beginning. I cou
e door, he didn't see a succe
at money?" he spat, his words
e's work. Then he turned on me, kicking my pregnant belly un
from the fertility clinic. The paternity test was
forgiveness. But the man I married was gone. H
my turn to
pte
Castil
erything. My husband, Axel, was away on a business trip, as usual. I imagined his surprise, his pride. Instead, the moment he walked through the door, his eyes burned holes int
rt as a hobby, had worn down my spirit. But this? This was a new low. My studio, the place where I poured my soul onto canvas
rely a whisper. My hands trembled, not from fear, but fr
red, his eyes narrow. "My mother told
her son's attention and resources. I should have known she was behind this. She was a
th. "That I finally achieved something without your permiss
out of nowhere? Don't insult my intelligence, Keyla. You've been painting for years, and w
he oldest story in our marriage: my ambition, my talent, twisted into something ugly by his insecurity. His love, I re
empty display stands in my studio. "My work. I s
Or a man? My mother said Jule saw you with someone. Someon
d it almost made me laugh. Jule and I barely exchanged pleasantries.
e laced with disbelief. "Ju
ffocating. "He saw you. And he confirmed what my mother already suspected. You've been seeing so
a fabricated setup, clear as day. Brenda and Jule, conspir
e. Axel's jealousy, Brenda's manipulation, Jule's treachery. It all click
, my voice cracking. "After all these ye
ey held only suspicion, fueled by the venomous words of his mother. The man I married was gone, replaced by a stra
their way through my tightening throat.
tudio, lingering on the canvases, the paint smears, the tools that were extensions of my very soul. He saw not art,
is voice echoing off the walls. "You think you ca
cry, he ripped it in half, the sound a ragged tear through my heart. Then he started, systematically, methodically, to shatter
to a pile of twisted metal, spilled colors, and torn canvas. My world was falling apart, and the man I loved was doing the dismantling. I couldn't breathe. I couldn't move. I could only watch the
ing my voice amidst the chaos.
er with a frightening pleasure, as if each act of des
a heavy metal easel down onto a half-finished sculpture.
t and paint particles that filled the air. I collapsed to my knees, surrounded by the ruins of my passion, my identit
Dalia, had entered the studio, drawn by the commotion. She stood frozen, her
doing?" she cried,
, hitting her head against a sharp edge of a shattered wooden frame. She cried out, a weak, pained sound, and c
t suffering, of holding my tongue, vanished in a searing flash of fury. He h
mbling towards my mother's stil
it was too late. He had crossed a line. There was no coming back from this. The man I married was truly gone, and in his place was a violent, insecu
handle this. He was a man of integrity and action, calm under
lly this time, clutching my mother's limp
or the first time, he was seeing the woman he had broken, rising from the ashes of h
ammered, taking a hes
her closer. "If you take one more step, I swear to G
s a war zone. And I, his once compliant wife, was looking at him with pure, unadulterated hatred. He turned slowly, his shoulders slumped, and walked out of the
for my mother, for myself. And for the first time in a long time, I felt a flicker of defiance, a spark that ha

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