The Transactional Marriage: Her Bitter Ascent
img img The Transactional Marriage: Her Bitter Ascent img Chapter 5
5
Chapter 7 img
Chapter 8 img
Chapter 9 img
Chapter 10 img
Chapter 11 img
Chapter 12 img
Chapter 13 img
Chapter 14 img
Chapter 15 img
Chapter 16 img
Chapter 17 img
Chapter 18 img
Chapter 19 img
Chapter 20 img
Chapter 21 img
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Chapter 5

The days and nights that followed surgery blurred into a painful haze. I lay in the sterile hospital bed, a landscape of tubes and monitors, my body a battlefield of aches and sutures. The recovery was slow, agonizing. Each breath was a shallow effort, each shift, a jolt of raw pain.

I was alone. Gregory never visited. Kennedy, of course, was absent. My friends, whom I had shielded from the true depravity of my marriage, assumed I was recovering in the privacy of my luxurious home, attended by the best doctors money could buy. They couldn't have imagined me here, in a standard hospital room, abandoned.

The nurses were kind, their faces etched with a quiet pity I found harder to bear than the physical pain. Every bandage change, every injection, felt like an intimate violation, a brutal reminder of how broken I was, how completely alone.

One evening, I overheard two nurses whispering outside my door. Their voices were low, but in the quiet of my room, every word was a thunderclap.

"Can you believe it?" one whispered. "Mrs. Maddox, in here, all alone. And Mr. Henson's new fiancée, in the VIP suite, with him practically living there."

"I know," the other sighed. "He's showering her with gifts, flying in chefs from Paris for her every craving. Meanwhile, Mrs. Maddox was dragged out of emergency surgery for a bowl of chicken soup. It's monstrous."

I squeezed my eyes shut, feigning sleep. The words, though familiar, still twisted a knife in my gut. He was showering her with gifts. Flying in chefs. The irony was a bitter taste in my mouth. I had endured so much, all for a man who could lavish such attention on another, while leaving me for dead. I was numb to it now, a strange, detached acceptance settling over me.

The day of my discharge was as bleak as my mood. A grey, drizzly New York morning. No one came to pick me up. I signed the papers myself, a ghost of a woman, dressed in borrowed clothes. The rain seemed to mirror the emptiness in my soul.

As I stepped out of the hospital, a familiar voice called my name. "Christie! My God, Christie!"

It was Sarah, my best friend from college. And Horacio Potts, another mutual friend, his kind eyes filled with concern. They rushed towards me, their faces etched with worry. I hadn't told them about the incident. I hadn't told anyone.

"We heard," Sarah said, her voice choked with emotion. "About the accident. We've been trying to reach you. Why didn't you call?"

I just shook my head, unable to speak. They enveloped me in a warm hug, a comfort I hadn't realized I desperately needed.

"Let's get you out of here," Horacio said, his voice gentle. "We're taking you somewhere to cheer you up."

They took me to a lively club, a stark contrast to my somber mood. The music was loud, the lights dim. My other friends were there, too, a small gathering of familiar faces. They lavished me with attention, their words a balm to my bruised spirit.

"Good riddance to that cold fish, Gregory!" one friend declared, raising her glass. "You deserve so much better, Christie!"

"He never appreciated you," another added. "You're brilliant, beautiful, and you're finally free."

A fragile smile touched my lips. It was the first genuine smile in what felt like an eternity. For a brief moment, surrounded by their genuine affection, I felt a flicker of my old self.

I excused myself to use the restroom, needing a moment to compose myself. When I returned, the table was empty. My heart seized with a sudden panic.

"Excuse me," I asked a passing waiter, my voice trembling. "My friends, the group at that table? Where did they go?"

He looked uncomfortable, glancing towards a private VIP room at the back. "They... they were taken, ma'am. By Ms. Hewitt. She insisted."

Kennedy. A cold dread settled in my stomach. I knew that gleam in her eye. She was up to something.

I pushed open the door to the VIP room. The sight that greeted me made my blood boil. Kennedy, her face flushed with alcohol, was laughing, her arm slung around Sarah. Sarah looked uncomfortable, her eyes darting towards the door. My other friends were trying to intervene, but Kennedy's bodyguards stood like immovable giants.

"Kennedy, what do you think you're doing?" I demanded, my voice sharp, a protective fury surging through me.

Kennedy turned, her eyes narrowed. "Oh, look who it is," she slurred, her voice dripping with venom. "Mrs. Has-been. Come to reclaim your pathetic circle of friends?"

Just then, the door behind me opened again. Gregory. He stepped into the room, his eyes sweeping over the scene. His gaze instantly found Kennedy, then darted to me, a flicker of irritation in his eyes.

"Kennedy," he said, his voice cold, sharp as ice. "What is this? What have you done?"

Kennedy, surprisingly, snapped back. "What? You think I'm the problem, Gregory? She's the one trying to steal my friends!" She pointed a shaky finger at me. "She's always trying to ruin everything!"

Gregory's assistant, Davies, rushed in after him, looking flustered. "Mr. Henson, Ms. Hewitt, there was a misunderstanding. Mr. Henson was just clarifying his schedule to Ms. Hewitt, and she misinterpreted his call. He was not with another woman."

Kennedy ignored him, her eyes burning with a drunken fury. She lunged at my friend, grabbing Sarah's arm. "You're with me now! Gregory's mine! And so are his friends!"

My patience snapped. "Let go of her, Kennedy!" I shouted, a protective roar tearing from my throat. I moved forward, ready to physically pull her away.

            
            

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