A Twisted Love: Betrayal's Bitter Taste

A Twisted Love: Betrayal's Bitter Taste

Gavin

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On my husband Heath's birthday, I sent him a gift: the preserved embryo of the child I had just aborted. It was my revenge. He had framed my father, driving him to prison and my mother to her grave, all for his mistress, Ember. When he stormed into our apartment, his face twisted with rage, he slammed me against the counter. "You monster! How could you destroy our child?" "You forfeited that right the moment you chose Ember over us," I spat back. But my defiance only led to more horror. He had me committed to a mental asylum where Ember, the architect of my family's ruin, tortured me with electroshock therapy, trying to break my mind. I feigned submission, then fought back, throwing both of us out of a third-story window. I survived; she was left in critical condition. Lying in my hospital bed, Heath came to me not with remorse, but with a chilling demand. "Ember needs a tendon graft. You're a match. The surgery is tomorrow." He thought he had me trapped, that he could force me to sacrifice a piece of myself for the woman who destroyed me. But as he left to comfort his mistress, I made a call. The next morning, as he begged me not to go through with the "surgery," I walked away, leaving him in the ruins of the life he had shattered. He didn't know this wasn't a surgery. It was my escape, and the beginning of his end.

Chapter 1

On my husband Heath's birthday, I sent him a gift: the preserved embryo of the child I had just aborted.

It was my revenge. He had framed my father, driving him to prison and my mother to her grave, all for his mistress, Ember.

When he stormed into our apartment, his face twisted with rage, he slammed me against the counter. "You monster! How could you destroy our child?"

"You forfeited that right the moment you chose Ember over us," I spat back.

But my defiance only led to more horror. He had me committed to a mental asylum where Ember, the architect of my family's ruin, tortured me with electroshock therapy, trying to break my mind.

I feigned submission, then fought back, throwing both of us out of a third-story window. I survived; she was left in critical condition.

Lying in my hospital bed, Heath came to me not with remorse, but with a chilling demand. "Ember needs a tendon graft. You're a match. The surgery is tomorrow."

He thought he had me trapped, that he could force me to sacrifice a piece of myself for the woman who destroyed me.

But as he left to comfort his mistress, I made a call. The next morning, as he begged me not to go through with the "surgery," I walked away, leaving him in the ruins of the life he had shattered. He didn't know this wasn't a surgery. It was my escape, and the beginning of his end.

Chapter 1

Blaire Olson POV:

My phone vibrated, an unknown number flashing on the screen. It was Heath's birthday. I looked down at the preserved embryo in the custom-made glass vial, a tiny, translucent speck suspended in amber fluid. This was my gift to him.

I pressed 'accept.'

"Happy Birthday, Heath," I said, my voice flat, devoid of any warmth.

There was a moment of silence on the other end, then a strained, almost breathless sound. Heath. The man who had once been my world. The man who had shattered everything.

"Blaire?" His voice was hoarse, laced with a confusion that was almost comical. He hadn't expected to hear from me. Not today. Not ever again, probably.

"Did you get my gift?" I asked, a cruel smile playing on my lips. It stretched my facial muscles, a feeling I hadn't experienced in years.

Another pause. Longer this time. I could almost hear his mind racing, trying to put the pieces together. The package. The odd shape. The weight.

"What... what is this, Blaire?" His voice was a low growl now, a dangerous edge creeping in.

"It's our child, Heath," I stated, each word a slow, deliberate dagger. "Or what would have been our child. I had it aborted. On your birthday. Just for you."

A strangled cry tore from his throat. It was a sound of pure, unadulterated anguish, a sound I had longed to hear for two long, agonizing years. My heart, a lump of ice in my chest, felt a flicker of something almost akin to satisfaction.

I heard a crash on the other end, glass shattering against what sounded like a marble floor. He must have dropped the vial. Good. Let it break. Let every last shard of our broken reality cut him.

"You... you bitch!" he roared, his voice thick with fury and a pain I knew was real. "You actually did it!"

"Yes, Heath, I did," I confirmed, my voice still eerily calm. "And you know what? It was the easiest decision I've ever made."

He kept shouting, incoherent words of rage and disbelief. I could picture him, his handsome face contorted, his perfect prosecutor's composure finally cracking. It was a beautiful sight, in my mind's eye.

"Why, Blaire? Why would you do this?" he screamed, his voice breaking.

"Why?" I echoed, a cold, hard laugh bubbling up from deep within me. It wasn't a laugh of joy, but of bitter triumph. "You want to know why, Heath? Because I hate you. I hate you more than I have ever loved anything in this world."

The line went dead. He had hung up. Or maybe he had thrown his phone across the room. It didn't matter. The message was delivered. The gift was received.

I closed my eyes, the ghost of a tear tracing a path down my cheek. I quickly wiped it away. No more tears for him. Not ever again.

The apartment felt too quiet, too empty. It was always like this after one of our 'interactions.' A hollow ache settled in my chest, a familiar companion.

Suddenly, the front door burst open, slamming against the wall. Heath. He must have driven like a madman.

He stood in the doorway, his chest heaving, his eyes wild and bloodshot. The remains of the vial lay scattered on the floor, glittering like malevolent jewels. He pointed a trembling finger at me.

"You... you monster!" he choked out, his voice barely a whisper, yet laced with venom.

I simply stared back, my face a carefully constructed mask of indifference. Let him call me names. They meant nothing to me anymore.

He lunged, grabbing my arm with bruising force. His grip was tight, his fingers digging into my flesh. I didn't flinch. I was used to it.

He dragged me across the polished marble floor, past the shattered glass, and shoved me against the cold, unforgiving surface of the kitchen counter. My head hit the edge with a dull thud, sparks dancing behind my eyes. I tasted blood.

"How could you, Blaire?" he snarled, his face inches from mine, his breath hot against my skin. "How could you destroy our child?"

"Our child?" I spat, the words dripping with contempt. "You forfeited the right to call it 'our child' the moment you destroyed my family. The moment you chose Ember over us."

His eyes narrowed, a flicker of something unreadable passing through them. Guilt? Regret? I didn't care.

"You think this is justice?" he roared, his voice deafening in the confined space. "You think this makes us even?"

"No," I whispered, a chilling smile returning to my lips. "This is just the beginning, Heath. This is just my first gift to you."

He slammed his fist against the counter, narrowly missing my head. The force of the blow shook the entire kitchen.

"You're insane, Blaire," he hissed, his voice trembling with a mixture of rage and something else. Fear, perhaps? I hoped so.

"Maybe," I conceded, my gaze unwavering. "But who made me this way, Heath? Who twisted me into this monster?"

He stared at me, his eyes searching, desperate. But there was nothing left to find. The vibrant, loving woman he had married was long gone, replaced by a cold, empty shell.

He grabbed my chin, forcing me to look at him. His thumb brushed against my lower lip, where the impact had split the skin. It was a gesture of unexpected tenderness, a ghost of the man he once was.

"You're still my wife, Blaire," he said, his voice softer now, almost pleading. "We can fix this. We can start over."

I laughed, a harsh, humorless sound. "Fix this? Start over? You really think so?" My eyes darted to the shattered glass on the floor, then back to his face. "There's nothing left to fix, Heath. You burned it all to the ground."

His jaw tightened. The tenderness vanished, replaced by the familiar mask of controlled fury.

"You brought this upon yourself, Blaire," he said, his voice cold and cutting. "You chose this path."

"No, Heath," I corrected him, my voice just as cold. "You chose it for me. You chose it the day you sided with Ember, the day you put my father behind bars, the day you watched my mother die."

His face paled, the mention of my mother clearly hitting a nerve. But it was too late for remorse. Far too late.

He gripped my upper arms, his fingers digging deep. His eyes burned into mine, a desperate fire raging within them.

"You think I enjoyed watching your family collapse?" he snarled, his voice raw. "You think I wanted any of this?"

"You championed it, Heath," I reminded him, my voice unwavering. "You called it 'justice.' You called it 'responsibility.' You conveniently forgot about the Olssons' 'responsibility' in raising you, in giving you everything you have."

His breath hitched. The words struck a chord, a deep-seated insecurity he always tried to hide.

He closed his eyes for a moment, a painful grimace twisting his features. When he opened them again, they were hard and unforgiving.

"I tried to protect you, Blaire," he said, his voice low and dangerous. "I tried to keep you out of it. But you wouldn't listen. You always had to fight me."

"Fight you?" I scoffed, a bitter laugh escaping my lips. "I fought for my family, Heath. I fought for the truth. Something you seem to have forgotten."

He pushed himself away from me, running a hand through his disheveled hair. He looked tired, defeated. But I knew it was a performance. A carefully crafted facade.

"You're a lost cause, Blaire," he muttered, shaking his head. "You're just like your father."

The words stung, a venomous dart aimed straight at my deepest wound. But I refused to let him see it.

"And you, Heath," I retorted, my voice sharp and clear, "you're just like Ember. A manipulative, calculating opportunist, willing to step on anyone to get what you want."

His eyes flashed with anger. He hated being compared to her, even though they were two sides of the same coin.

He took a step back, his gaze sweeping over the wreckage of the kitchen, then settling on me. A chilling calm descended upon his face.

"Fine," he said, his voice devoid of emotion. "If that's the game you want to play, Blaire, then let's play."

He turned and walked away, his footsteps echoing in the silence. I watched him go, my body trembling, not from fear, but from a cold, simmering rage.

He stopped at the doorway, turning back to face me. "Just remember, Blaire," he warned, his eyes like chips of ice, "you started this."

He left, the door clicking shut behind him. I slumped against the counter, the adrenaline slowly draining from my body. The tears, once again, threatened to spill.

But I wouldn't let them. Not now. Not ever again. I had a war to fight. And Heath David had just given me all the motivation I needed.

My phone buzzed. It was a message from an unknown number. "Deal's on. Be ready."

It was Jack. My childhood rival. My unlikely ally. The only one who could help me burn Heath's world down.

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