SABRINA ULTRA
ites: scrambled eggs with chives, perfectly crispy bacon, and freshly squeezed orange juice. It was her silent way of showing Benedict she cared, desp
itter, cruel mocking tone. "I don't need you to try and make me happy. And I don't need you trying to play house like some devoted little wife. Just stay out of my way." Sabrina's chest ached, but she forced herself to keep her head up, to maintain her composure. "I'm your wife, Benedict," she said, her voice small but resolute. "This is my responsibility, whether you accept it or not." He leaned forward, his eyes hard and unyielding. "Don't delude yourself, Sabrina. You're nothing more than a nuisance, a daily reminder of a mistake I was forced into." The words hit her like a physical blow, but she fought to keep her expression neutral, her eyes cast downward to avoid the venom in his gaze. "I don't want to be a burden to you, Benedict," she said quietly. "But I won't give up, not on this marriage." He scoffed, picking up a fork and stabbing at his food with clear disinterest. "It's funny how you still believe this is a marriage. We're barely even housemates.". Don't think it is more than that. Sabrina's heart fractured a little more at the harshness of his words
r, gazing blankly at the dishes of food she had put out to prepare, that breakfast that once, on a gl
plates echoed in the stillness. With every clink, it
nedict stood before her with his icy stare piercing through. Her br
itation, as if her being made him uncomfortable, annoyed him. "Have you not r
white. She struggled to keep her voice steady. "I'm just trying to ma
you think that all the cooking and cleaning makes up for what you did? That somehow these
even deeper into her heart. "I... I don't think I manipulated a thing. I n
na? My love? My loyalty?My money? Well, you have neither." His voice dropped to a lo
that threatened to spill over. "I just... I t
fall at your feet, and love you? Come on, Sabrina, grow up. This Isn't one of your
e could see that. "I know it's not a fairy tale," she said, small and shaking, her voice barely big enough to chop through t
ere spark of love flickered beneath the burning wounds of hurt and anger, for one cannot let such precious life die. She needed him to underst
tions bubbling inside her.There was a glimmer of love that never really died. She wanted him to u
to marriage, using every trick in the book to get her way. But let me be clear..." He leaned in low and harsh. "I
looked at her like a stranger. "So stop playing the
eaving Sabrina alone in the suffocating silence of the dining ro