The Monster Behind His Mask

The Monster Behind His Mask

Ben Nan

5.0
Comment(s)
6.2K
View
10
Chapters

My husband Declan' s recklessness on a ski slope left me with chronic pain and unable to have children. He played the part of my devoted caretaker, but his perfect facade shattered when a stray cat, abandoned by our new neighbor, purred against his leg with a chilling familiarity. That whisper of betrayal led me to her apartment, where I found his pregnant mistress, Bridgett. She smirked, calling me Declan's "perpetually ill wife" and flaunted the baby I could never give him. When I demanded a divorce, both our families turned on me, calling me hysterical and greedy. Declan dropped to his knees, begging for forgiveness, but his "love" felt like a cage built on my pain and his lies. The truth, however, was far more monstrous. Bridgett later appeared on my doorstep, terrified, revealing Declan had forced her to lose their baby-a twisted "proof of love" meant to win me back. As he pounded on my door, confessing his crime and screaming that I was his, I realized I hadn't just married a cheater. I had married a monster.

Chapter 1

My husband Declan' s recklessness on a ski slope left me with chronic pain and unable to have children. He played the part of my devoted caretaker, but his perfect facade shattered when a stray cat, abandoned by our new neighbor, purred against his leg with a chilling familiarity.

That whisper of betrayal led me to her apartment, where I found his pregnant mistress, Bridgett. She smirked, calling me Declan's "perpetually ill wife" and flaunted the baby I could never give him.

When I demanded a divorce, both our families turned on me, calling me hysterical and greedy. Declan dropped to his knees, begging for forgiveness, but his "love" felt like a cage built on my pain and his lies.

The truth, however, was far more monstrous.

Bridgett later appeared on my doorstep, terrified, revealing Declan had forced her to lose their baby-a twisted "proof of love" meant to win me back.

As he pounded on my door, confessing his crime and screaming that I was his, I realized I hadn't just married a cheater. I had married a monster.

Chapter 1

Elena Santiago POV:

My husband' s perfect facade shattered when a stray cat, abandoned by the woman next door, kept purring against his leg, a secret whisper of betrayal only I seemed to hear.

It started subtly, like most cracks in a foundation do. I was watching Declan through the kitchen window, his profile sharp against the setting sun. He was crouched by the rose bushes, not tending them, but coaxing a scrawny, terrified calico out from under the porch. The cat was a recent addition to our street, a refugee from the apartment next door. Its owner, a new tenant Declan had mentioned briefly, had moved in a few weeks ago and then, without a word, was gone.

The cat had been skittish, avoiding everyone, even me. But with Declan, it was different.

It rubbed its bony head against his outstretched hand, then wound itself around his ankles. It was a picture of trust, of familiarity. A cold dread, sharp and sudden, pierced through my chest, making my chronic pain flare.

"Declan," I called out, my voice flat.

He straightened up, the cat still clinging to his leg, its tail flicking gently. He looked surprised, almost guilty.

"Elena, you're awake." His smile was a practiced thing, charming, but it didn't quite reach his eyes.

"What are you doing?" I asked, walking out onto the porch, hugging my cashmere cardigan tighter against the evening chill. My legs ached, a constant reminder of the accident that had reshaped my life.

"Just feeding the stray," he said, gesturing to a small bowl of kibble near the steps. "Poor thing looks lost."

The cat, as if on cue, let out a soft meow and rubbed its face against Declan' s jeans again. It wasn't just lost. It was attached.

That night, the cat slept on our porch, curled up on the mat by the front door. Declan had insisted. I watched it from my bedroom window, a strange knot forming in my stomach. The cat' s unusual attachment to him, the way Declan stroked its head, almost protectively, triggered something primal inside me. It was too familiar, too intimate.

Days turned into a week. The cat, which I had reluctantly named 'Whisper' because it felt like a secret, became bolder. It would greet Declan at the door, leap onto his lap when he sat on the patio. It ignored me, mostly, a fact that both irked and unnerved me. My husband, the man who claimed to be devoted to my every need after my accident, seemed to have found a new companion. A companion who, unlike me, could chase after his thrill-seeking life.

The suspicion festered, a tiny, poisonous seed. Declan was home less, citing increased workload at his tech startup. His phone was always face down, always on silent. He' d jump when I entered a room. Small things, individually dismissible, but together, they painted a picture I didn't want to see.

One evening, after Declan had left for yet another "late meeting," I found myself staring at Whisper, who was curled up on Declan's favorite armchair.

"You know something, don't you?" I whispered to the cat. It blinked slowly at me, then let out a soft, knowing purr.

I grabbed my keys. The neighbor's apartment. The one Bridgett Nash had supposedly moved into and then out of. I had to see. My legs burned with each step down the hall, but the adrenaline was a stronger painkiller.

The door to apartment 1B was ajar. A faint light spilled out, along with the distinct smell of cheap air freshener trying to mask something else. I pushed it open slowly.

The apartment was not empty. It was lived in, albeit sparsely. A half-eaten bowl of cereal sat on a small table. A brightly colored scarf was draped over a chair. And there, on the coffee table, was a photo frame.

It was Declan. Laughing, his arm around a young, pretty woman with an overly bright smile. Bridgett Nash. And on her finger, a ring. Not my ring, but a diamond that shimmered under the dim light.

My breath caught in my throat. My vision blurred. I reached out, my fingers trembling, to touch the photo. It wasn't just a physical ache now; it was a deep, soul-crushing wound.

Then I heard movement from the bedroom. My heart hammered against my ribs. I froze, like a deer caught in headlights.

The bedroom door opened, and Bridgett Nash stepped out. Her hair was disheveled, her eyes wide with sleep. And her stomach... it was undeniably rounded. Swollen.

She saw me, and her eyes narrowed, her expression shifting from sleepy confusion to cold calculation.

"Can I help you?" she asked, her voice saccharine, too sweet.

"You're not gone," I stated, the words tasting like ash in my mouth.

She smirked. "Looks like I'm not. And you're... Elena, isn't it? Declan's perpetually ill wife." The last words were laced with venom.

"You abandoned the cat," I accused, my voice trembling now, not from fear, but from a rage that was beginning to boil.

She shrugged, a careless gesture. "He was getting too clingy. And frankly, a cat isn't exactly ideal with a baby on the way, is it?" She patted her protruding belly, a triumphant, sickening smile spreading across her face.

The world tilted. Baby. Declan. Pregnant.

I stumbled back, my hand flying to my mouth to stifle a scream. The pain in my leg was nothing compared to this. This betrayal. This lie. My infertility, my constant source of guilt and Declan' s endless "understanding," mocked me from her swollen belly.

"You bitch," I hissed, the word tearing from my throat.

Bridgett's smile widened. "Strong words for someone who couldn't even keep her husband interested, let alone give him a child."

The shame, the anger, the sheer agony of it all threatened to consume me. But a sliver of my old self, the architect who built structures that stood against the elements, ignited. I would not crumble. Not here. Not in front of her.

I turned and walked out, my steps echoing unnervingly loud in the silent hallway. My vision was still blurry, but my resolve was crystal clear.

I arrived home just as Declan's car pulled into the driveway. He walked in, whistling a cheerful tune, his briefcase in hand. The scent of a floral perfume, not mine, clung to his expensive suit.

He looked up, saw me standing in the living room, hands clasped, a stack of papers on the coffee table. His smile faltered.

"Elena? What's wrong? You look pale." He took a step towards me, his gaze scanning my face.

"Don't," I said, my voice dangerously calm. "Don't you dare pretend."

He stopped, a flicker of irritation crossing his features. "Pretend what? I just got back from a brutal meeting."

I pointed to the papers on the table. "These are the divorce papers, Declan."

His eyes widened, then narrowed. He laughed, a short, dismissive sound. "What is this, Elena? Are you having one of your episodes again? We talked about this. You need to manage your stress better."

"I saw her, Declan," I said, my voice rising, losing its careful calm. "I saw Bridgett. And her baby bump."

The color drained from his face. His briefcase clattered to the floor. The cheerful whistling died. He looked utterly, completely blindsided. A cornered animal.

"Elena, listen to me," he started, his voice suddenly desperate. "It's not what you think. She's... she's disturbed. She's obsessed with me. She's lying."

"Lying? About the apartment next door? About the photo? About the ring? About being pregnant?" I felt a hysterical laugh bubble up in my chest. "You called me 'perpetually ill,' Declan. While you were building a family with her."

He lunged for the papers, his face twisted in a mask of fury. "You can't do this, Elena! We're married! I've given you everything! After the accident, who stood by you? Who paid for everything? Who made sure you were comfortable?"

"You stood by me because you caused it!" I screamed, the words tearing from me, raw and unfiltered. "You pushed me to take that black diamond run, even after I said I wasn't ready! You wanted the thrill, and I paid the price!"

He froze, his hand hovering over the divorce papers. The truth, ugly and undeniable, hung in the air between us.

"This is madness!" he roared, sweeping a vase of fresh flowers off the table. It shattered against the wall, ceramic shards and water scattering across the polished wood floor. He looked at me, his eyes blazing with a mixture of rage and terror. "You're not thinking straight. You're upset. You're confused."

"I am clearer than I've ever been," I countered, my voice shaking but firm. "Sign them, Declan. Or I'll take every single thing you own."

He stared at me, his jaw clenched, his handsome face contorted. He knew I meant it. He knew I was no longer the fragile, quiet woman he' d gaslighted for years.

The commotion brought our families. Declan' s parents, the impeccably dressed Harris seniors, burst through the front door, their faces a mixture of confusion and disapproval. My own parents, more hesitant, followed behind them, their expressions worried.

"What in God's name is going on here?" Declan's mother, Eleanor, demanded, her eyes sweeping over the shattered vase and the divorce papers.

"Elena is being hysterical," Declan said, his voice regaining some of its usual charm, albeit strained. He shot me a venomous look. "She's upset about something trivial."

"Trivial?" I scoffed. "Your son has a pregnant mistress living next door, and you call it trivial, Eleanor?"

Eleanor gasped, her hand flying to her chest. My mother let out a small, terrified whimper. My father looked like he wanted to disappear.

"Declan, is this true?" his father, Richard, asked, his voice low and dangerous.

Declan squirmed, avoiding their gazes. "It's a misunderstanding. A crazy woman trying to cause trouble."

"This crazy woman is carrying your child, Declan!" I spat, the venom satisfying on my tongue. "And she's not disturbed; she's simply ambitious."

The room descended into chaos. Eleanor started to berate Declan, while Richard tried to calm her. My own parents, mortified, tried to pull me aside.

"Elena, darling, you must calm down," my mother pleaded, her hand clutching my arm. "Think of the scandal. Your reputation."

"My reputation?" I yanked my arm away. "What about his reputation? The man who cheated on his infertile wife, the wife he crippled on a ski slope?"

Declan, seeing his carefully constructed world crumbling, turned to me, his eyes suddenly glistening with tears. "Elena, please. Don't do this. I love you. It was a mistake. A moment of weakness. I swear, I will end it with her. Just... don't divorce me." He dropped to his knees, clutching my hand. "Please, darling. I can't live without you. I need you. You're my rock."

His words, once so potent, now rang hollow, a desperate plea from a drowning man. He looked up at me, his face pleading, but all I saw was the smug face of Bridgett Nash, her triumphant pat on her belly.

"I need you too, Elena," my mother added, her voice soft but insistent. "You know how hard it is for a woman alone, especially with your condition. Declan provides for you so well."

"He's a good man, Elena," my father chimed in, his eyes wide with fear. "He's always taken care of you. Don't throw all that away over a... mistake."

"A mistake?" I pulled my hand away from Declan's grasp. "My entire life with him was a mistake. This isn't about me being 'upset' or 'confused.' It's about me being done." My voice was a steel wire, thin but unbreakable. "I want a divorce. And I won't be swayed by crocodile tears or empty promises."

Declan's face hardened. His pleading expression vanished, replaced by seething resentment. "You'll regret this, Elena. You'll be nothing without me."

"I'd rather be nothing than live another moment in your lie," I said, turning my back on him. I picked up the divorce papers, a symbol of my freedom. "I'll be seeing you in court."

I walked towards the door, my legs aching, but my resolve burning bright. Behind me, I heard the frantic whispers of our parents, Declan's choked sounds of frustration, and the distant wail of a siren. As I stepped out, a blur of calico fur darted past my feet, Whisper, the stray cat, disappearing into the night.

The next morning, the world felt lighter, despite the crushing weight of what had happened. I needed coffee. My usual cafe was bustling. I sat at a small outdoor table, watching the city wake up, trying to absorb the new reality.

Then, I saw her. Bridgett Nash. She was walking down the street, looking a little rumpled, but still carrying that air of smug confidence. And she was holding Whisper, the calico cat, by the scruff of its neck.

My stomach clenched. The cat, my unwitting messenger of truth, was back with its original owner.

Bridgett stopped by a dumpster, her face twisted in disgust. "Useless creature," she muttered, and with a jarring lack of hesitation, she flung the cat into the dumpster. The animal let out a pained yowl as the lid crashed down.

My blood ran cold. The callousness, the cruelty. It was beyond what I could have imagined. I stood up, my chair scraping loudly against the pavement.

"What are you doing?" I demanded, my voice sharp.

Bridgett turned, startled, her eyes widening when she saw me. A flicker of fear, then defiance. "It's my cat. I can do what I want with it."

"You abandoned it once," I countered, marching towards the dumpster. "Now you're throwing it away again?"

"It keeps coming back!" she shrieked, her voice high and shrill. "It's a nuisance! And it's disgusting."

I pulled the lid open. Whisper was curled in a corner, shivering, cowering away from me. I reached in, my hand extended gently.

"Come here, little one."

The cat hissed, then, to my shock, it lunged, its tiny claws raking across my wrist. A thin line of blood welled up.

I pulled my hand back, stunned. Even the cat, it seemed, had chosen its side.

Bridgett laughed, a harsh, triumphant sound. "See? Even it doesn't want you. Some things are just meant to be thrown away, Elena. Like old, broken toys." She looked pointedly at my injured wrist, then down at my still-aching legs. "You just can't keep a man like Declan satisfied. He needs someone vibrant, full of life, someone who can give him everything." She patted her belly again, a sickeningly familiar gesture. "Like me."

My gaze hardened. "You think you're getting everything, Bridgett? You're just another stray he'll eventually throw away when he's done playing." I met her gaze, unflinching. "He might have found you shiny and new for a while, but Declan's boredom is a chronic condition. It's only a matter of time before he tires of your pathetic attempts to cling to him, just like you tired of that cat."

Her face went from smug to furious. She raised her hand, as if to strike me.

"What the hell is going on here?"

Declan's voice cut through the tension. He stood a few feet away, his eyes blazing, having seemingly arrived in a rush. He took in the scene: Bridgett, infuriated; me, bleeding slightly from the wrist; the open dumpster.

Without hesitation, his eyes landed on me, full of accusation. "Elena! What have you done to her now? Can't you leave her alone for five minutes?" He rushed to Bridgett's side, putting a protective arm around her.

"Declan, she attacked me!" Bridgett cried, burying her face into his chest, her voice muffled but perfectly audible. "She was screaming at me, trying to hurt the baby!"

Declan held Bridgett tighter, his gaze on me cold, filled with something akin to hatred. "You're truly losing it, Elena. You're attacking an innocent pregnant woman now? This madness has to stop."

I stared at him, a bitter, humorless laugh bubbling up. His "love" for me, or what I thought was love, had not just died. It had transformed into a grotesque, twisted thing, protecting his new obsession. My stomach churned. This wasn't the man I married. This was a stranger, a monster.

"You've truly made your choice, Declan," I said, my voice barely a whisper, yet it felt like a thunderclap in the sudden silence. "And you know what? I'm relieved."

I turned my back on them, the throbbing in my wrist a small price for the clarity I now possessed.

Continue Reading

Other books by Ben Nan

More
The Painter's Unending Haunt

The Painter's Unending Haunt

Horror

5.0

My best friend, Noah, had my hands broken. He did it so I could never paint again. Then he told my wife, Olivia, that I had lost my mind and needed to be sent away for "rehabilitation." They sent me to what was essentially a prison, where I was starved, beaten, and eventually died alone on a cold floor. Now, I'm a ghost, haunting Noah's lavish party, a celebration of his stolen success. He' s exhibiting paintings that are eerily like my lost collection, while everyone praises him as an art mogul. Olivia, my wife, is there too, looking beautiful but with a shadow in her eyes. Noah's assistant, the one who helped break my hands, even lies to her face, saying I'm still "adjusting" at the center. The arrogance is breathtaking. Olivia stands in the house my stolen art paid for, listening to the lies of the man who killed me. He even fakes an injury to garner her sympathy. It was shocking when a call came through, revealing I' d been secretly flying every six weeks for a year to donate blood for Olivia's rare condition, saving her life. Then the news broke: the "rehabilitation" center I was sent to was a network of abusive prisons where patients died. No one heard my silent screams. My wife even refused to believe the truth, preferring to cling to Noah' s comforting lies, even as she tried to salvage my shredded art from the attic. But then my real parents, billionaires who had been searching for me for decades, showed up. And Noah, my murderer, embraced them, pretending to be their long-lost son. He wanted to steal my inheritance, too. "Mom? Dad?" he said, holding out the locket my birth mother gave me. My wife's refusal of Noah's marriage proposal was a small flicker of hope, soon extinguished by his manipulative feigned heart attack. But then the funeral home called, asking Olivia to pick up my remains. My ashes scattered on the floor after Noah fumbled the urn, and my mother-in-law suddenly revealed I' d donated my kidney to Olivia. That was the moment. She called 911, reporting a murder. My murder.

He Said No, She Found Love

He Said No, She Found Love

Romance

5.0

The last thing I remembered was the cold. It was the kind of cold that seeped into your bones, mocking the thin dress you wore. I was dying in a dark, abandoned warehouse, our son Leo trembling beside me. Then, his voice. Over the kidnapper' s phone, Harrison Hayes, the man I' d loved for years, flatly declared: "Wrong number. I don' t know them." He didn' t know me. He didn' t know Leo. Five years of a miserable marriage dissolved into one brutal truth: he resented me, seeing my existence as the ruin of his life. My death, simply a convenient erasure. And then, nothing. A profound, silent void. Until, a voice, warm and familiar, broke through the darkness: "Ava? Happy birthday." My eyes snapped open. I wasn't in a warehouse. I was at my 21st birthday dinner, staring at a younger Harrison, before the resentment carved lines around his mouth. This was the night it all began, the night I confessed my desperate love. But this time, the memory of his callous "Wrong number" burned. The phantom ache of my son' s absence was a hollow void in my chest. I would not make the same mistake. I would not confess. I would let him go. I would let him have his perfect life with his perfect Charlotte. When Charlotte Evans, his first love, walked in, I didn't fight. I left. I walked out into the cool night, hailing a cab, for the naive girl I had been, for the son who would now never exist. The pain was immense. But underneath it, a fragile seed of freedom took root. I wouldn' t be a victim. I would save myself. My first call was to my parents' lawyer. I was activating a forgotten betrothal agreement. I was going to Daniel Thorne.

Too Late, Mother: I Am Reborn

Too Late, Mother: I Am Reborn

Sci-fi

5.0

My eighteenth birthday was supposed to be a fresh start, "Lottery Day" for the Life Path Augmentation (LPA) program. My toxic mother, Susan, was desperate for me to get the Support Role Optimization (SRO) LPA, reducing me to the compliant trophy wife I was in my first life before it all ended in tragedy. But then, my older sister, Jessica, whose insatiable greed for an "easy life" was legend, bizarrely elbowed her way forward, only to be ironically assigned the very SRO meant for me. As I stepped up, the machine hummed, then announced its shocking verdict: I received the High-Potential Innovator (HPI) LPA, the burden that had led to Jessica' s ruin in our previous timeline. My mother' s carefully constructed world imploded; Jessica' s triumphant smirk dissolved into furious disbelief. They immediately launched their counter-attack, determined to crush this "dangerous" potential. My Caltech scholarship, my lifeline to a real future, was brutally yanked away, deemed a distraction from my "duty" to support Jessica's floundering attempts at social climbing. Every penny I earned from grueling dead-end jobs was siphoned into their bottomless pit of familial exploitation. "Family comes first," my father would drone, a chilling echo of their manipulation from a past I desperately sought to rewrite. This was it – the same old cage, just with new bars. But they fundamentally misunderstood. Their betrayal only fueled the quiet revolution brewing within me. As their carefully laid plans crumbled around Jessica, I wasn't just enduring; I was processing, learning, plotting. And soon, the architect of their downfall wouldn' t just be a thought, but a force.

You'll also like

Chapters
Read Now
Download Book