The Marriage I left Behind After My Husband Ruined Me Novel – Chapter 1 I was in the hospital bed, still weak from the miscarriage, when I saw images of my husband, Brandon, kissing a girl. I thought I was imagining things until I caught him in our own house, tangled in bed with his best friend’s sister, Denise. “Ssh, Brandon, be gentle will you?” Denise whispered, her voice breathless and teasing. She ran her hands down his back, her nails digging into his skin. “What if she wakes up and then sees us?” “No, she’s not gonna wake up,” he replied, his voice low and rough. “I knocked her out using the medicine she was drinking,” Brandon said casually, as if he were talking about putting a dog to sleep. “That is why she won’t wake up till morning.” The world tilted on its axis.
Denise paused, her hands stilling on his shoulders. “You’re still doing that? Maybe that medicine was the reason why she got the miscarriage.” My hand flew to my mouth. I bit down on my knuckle to stop the scream that was clawing its way up my throat. Brandon laughed. It was a cold, heartless sound. “Well, I guess so,” he said, shrugging as he settled deeper between her legs. “But who cares about it? I don’t really care about the baby. She was the one who wanted it and kept begging for it. It was annoying.” Annoying. My dead child. My grief. My love. It was all just an annoyance to him. Denise pouted, tracing his jawline. “But do you love her?” “Of course, I love my wife,” Brandon said instantly. The lie rolled off his tongue like honey. “So she cannot know about this. And your brother, my best friend, too? Got it?” And then they kissed again, wet and hungry, devouring each other while I stood in the shadows, shattering into a million jagged pieces. I couldn’t help but laugh.
How could he say he loved me while fucking another woman? I backed away, leaving them to their filth. The next day, I waited until Brandon left for work, kissing my forehead with that same treacherous mouth, telling me to rest, telling me he loved me. I waited until the sound of his car faded down the driveway. Then I dressed. I put on my coat, hiding my trembling hands in my pockets, and walked out the door. I went straight to Mark’s office. Mark was an old friend, a lawyer who knew me before I was Mrs. Brandon Miller. “Draft the divorce papers,” I said. Mark blinked, his pen hovering over his notepad. He looked at me with wide, concerned eyes. “Maureen? You… are you sure? It’s only been a week since the… since the accident.” “It wasn’t an accident,” I said, my voice flat. “Just do it, Mark. Please.” He sighed, leaning back in his chair. He rubbed his temples. “Okay. I’ll keep it a secret for a while.
I won’t file them immediately. But Maureen… think about this.” He gestured to me, to my pale skin, my thin frame. “Where would you go?” he asked gently. “You lost everything now. You quit your job. You sold your apartment. You only have him, remember?” I stared at the floor. He was right. Brandon had slowly stripped me of everything. My independence. My career. My friends. He had made himself my entire world, so that when he decided to destroy it, I would have nowhere to fall. “He used to love you so much,” Mark continued, his voice soft, trying to be the voice of reason. “What happened? I’ve never seen a man more devoted. Remember when you were sick last year? He didn’t leave your side for three days.” I closed my eyes. I remembered. Four years. That’s how long I lived in his lie. I remembered the perfection. The way he looked at me across a crowded room. The way he would drop everything for a whim.
Once, I mentioned I craved a specific chocolate from Belgium. He didn’t just order it. He flew there. He abandoned a million-dollar negotiation to hand-deliver a box of truffles, just to see me smile. He was the husband who carried me when I was tired. The man who swore I was his religion. “I’d burn the world for you, Maureen.” But he didn’t burn the world. He burned me. It was all a performance. A mask to hide the monster. The soup he fed me probably had the same poison in it. The care was just control. The love was just a cage. The image of him laughing about our dead baby flashed in my mind, overriding every sweet memory, turning them into ash. I opened my eyes. The tears I thought I had run out of were threatening to spill, but I wouldn’t let them. Not for him. Not anymore. I stood up, smoothing down my coat. “Just process it, Mark.
I want it in a week,” I said, my voice shaking but resolute. “Because I’m going to move to another country.” I went home. Denise was lounging on the sofa, flipping through a magazine. Her hair was a bird’s nest, lips swollen, looking thoroughly disheveled. Brandon stood nearby, buttoning his cuffs. As he stepped toward me, the scent hit me instantly. Musk. Sweat. Sex. It radiated off him, masking his expensive cologne. “Maureen, baby, where have you been?” He rushed over, grabbing my hands, his face a mask of worry. “I’ve been texting you like crazy. Look.” He gestured to a vase on the table. “I picked these flowers for you. I prepared a dinner date. Just us. Shall we?” I looked at the flowers. Then at Denise, who didn’t even look up.
I forced a smile. It felt like cracking glass. “I’m tired, Brandon. I just want to sleep.” He didn’t argue. He was the picture of the doting husband. He guided me to the bedroom and pressed a glass of warm milk into my hands. “Drink this,” he whispered, kissing my forehead. “It’s for your recovery. You need to rest.” I took it. I nodded. But the moment the door clicked shut, I walked to the bathroom and poured the white liquid down the sink. I didn’t sleep. I lay in the dark, staring at the ceiling. The house was quiet, but the walls were thin. All night, I listened to the muffled, rhythmic sounds of them moaning in the guest room.