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Second Chance, Deadly Trap

Chapter 2 

Word Count: 637    |    Released on: 07/07/2025

hout him had been h

trickled and then stopped completely. His calls became less frequent, then they ceas

fogging in the air. I took on extra work, mending clothes for people in town and selling jams and preserves at the local market. Mr. Johnson, despite his bad bac

d. Every dollar was counted, every expense debated. There were no new clothes, no movies, no small luxur

le, a tiny nest egg hidden away in a coffee can. The farm, which had been struggling, was now stable. It was ours, bought and

I remembered

led into the present, painting our hard-

ts breaking for the story he told. He claimed his startup had failed, that he'd been cheated by partners,

s all

ed another woman, Chloe. He lived a life of parties and expensive dinners while we were here freezing and starving. He only came

s "poor, country family," sell our assets

money. They didn't care that we were victims too. They took what they wanted. Mr. Johnson tried to stop them, and they beat him so badly he never walked

longer just a memory, it was a warning. A promise of what would happen if I let my guard down, if I all

g woman from my past life stood besi

l do i

d not

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Second Chance, Deadly Trap
Second Chance, Deadly Trap
“One moment, I was just Sarah, pulling weeds from my tomato patch under the hot Nebraska sun, living the quiet farm life I' d painstakingly built. The next, a chilling wave of memory, raw and horrifying, washed over me – memories of another life, a past I' d lived and died. And with that horrific clarity, I saw him again: Mark, my husband, the man who disappeared seven years ago, now limping up our driveway, playing the pathetic, broken-down prodigal son. My heart didn't leap; it solidified into a cold, hard stone, because I remembered everything he'd done in that other life. I remembered how we' d welcomed him in, how my in-laws had drained their life savings, how I'd sold my mother's last keepsakes, all out of love and misguided pity. I remembered how he' d squandered every penny on his secret city wife and her gambling debts, then, when the money ran out, tried to sell our farm out from under us. I remembered the barn burning, the livestock screaming, the loan sharks he brought to our door, leaving us with nothing but ashes, debt, and the bitter taste of his laughter as he drove away. None of us survived that first time. Now, he was back, with the same tattered clothes and the same practiced look of sorrow, mouthing the same fake emotions: "Sarah, I finally made it home." My blood ran cold with the memory of starving in the winter, of seeing my mother-in-law cry, of the life he had so casually incinerated. I would not let it happen again. This time, I would not be the same naive country wife; I would make sure he walked into a trap of his own making, a trap from which he would never escape.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10