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Her Husband's Cruel Indifference

Chapter 3 

Word Count: 714    |    Released on: 07/07/2025

attered. A sound, a guttural, w

body trembled, her gaze locked on an unseeing David. "Ethan is dead! Don' t you understand? He'

m to see the horror he had created,

it wasn' t with grief or und

the opportunity. She let out a small, frightened gasp

ly against him. "She' s scaring me. What i

s grief to Lisa' s feigned fragility. He wrapped his arm more tightly around

d, his voice low and menacing. "You' re ups

r voice incredulous. "My son is dead, a

step toward her. "Stop lying. You' re just

"I' m sorry, Sarah," she said, her voice trembling. "I know this must be hard... I can'

rical, vengeful ex-wife. She was positioning herself, and her unborn child, as the priority

bought it

a. "She is trying to be understanding, and you a

o twisted, that for a moment Sarah coul

ered. "You murdered our son, and you w

two workers in the corner flinch. "He was weak! And you will not speak to

ysical size and his powerful presence to intimidate her, to domina

own," he commanded,

ned away all her old fear of him. "No," she said, her

the final

d he slapped her, ha

m. Sarah' s head snapped to the side, her cheek

er eyes wide with shock a

e contorted with rage. "Always playing your little games to ge

pulative woman that he could kill his own child and then strike his grieving wife for daring to speak the t

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Her Husband's Cruel Indifference
Her Husband's Cruel Indifference
“It was my son Ethan' s fifth birthday, a day meant for celebration. His small hand clutched mine, his eyes wide with the innocent wish to visit the city aquarium. But then, my husband David, a man as imposing as the military jacket he wore, declared his plans had changed, dismissing our son' s hopes with chilling indifference. "The aquarium is for common people." he sneered, his true priority a mistress, Lisa Johnson, and their sordid affair. When I begged for just a few hours, David' s face hardened into a mask of cruel indifference. Ethan, sensing the tension, began to cry softly. "Crying? Over something so trivial?" he scoffed, before scooping Ethan into his arms. My son' s cries turned to shrieks as David strode towards our private lake. "I' m teaching him a lesson," he calmly stated. Before I could react, he tossed our five-year-old son into the dark, cold water. The splash was horribly loud, and Ethan' s small body disappeared, then reappeared, flailing, gasping for air. David stood motionless, watching him drown, "If he' s my son, he' ll survive." I screamed, fighting to reach Ethan, but David' s steel grip held me back, forcing me to watch as my son' s struggles grew weaker, his head bobbing, his small hands slapping the water with less and less force. His eyes, wide with terror, locked on me, a desperate, silent plea. Then his head went under. It didn' t come back up. "He failed," David stated, as I collapsed onto the ground, my life shattered. I returned home to find Ethan' s room being dismantled, his world erased, replaced by a nursery for Lisa' s unborn child. They stood there, smiling, planning their future on the ashes of my son' s life. "Ethan doesn' t need a room anymore, Sarah," David said, his voice laced with that same chilling indifference. "He' s dead!" I shrieked, "You killed him!" His response was a dismissive sigh, and Lisa, cunningly feigning distress for her baby, manipulated David into striking me. His slap echoed in the empty room, stinging my cheek, and in that horrifying moment, I saw the monster he truly was. This wasn' t just indifference; it was pure evil. With his father' s help, I held a small memorial for Ethan, a vigil that David and Lisa callously ignored, even sharing a triumphant kiss in front of our son' s symbolic casket. My heart turned to ice. Then David, in a fit of rage, smashed Ethan' s last photograph and burned his beloved teddy bear, extinguishing the last tangible pieces of my son, and with them, any lingering attachment I had to him. Later, I discovered David was sterile, meaning Lisa' s baby wasn' t his. This wasn' t just betrayal; it was a calculated scheme. Clutching the charred remains of Ethan' s teddy bear' s eye, a searing physical anchor to my unimaginable loss, I walked out of that house and that life with a quiet, resolute dignity. I was done.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10