The broken
img img The broken img Chapter 2 The truth unfold
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Chapter 6 From birth img
Chapter 7 Under the weight img
Chapter 8 The secret is out img
Chapter 9 No secret img
Chapter 10 This time,they are watching img
Chapter 11 The sound of stillness img
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Chapter 2 The truth unfold

Samantha needed air. She stepped outside for the first time in days, drawn by the quiet elegance of the garden behind the house. Manicured hedges, a koi pond, and a winding stone path-it was beautiful, yet unnervingly perfect. As she sat on a bench beneath a willow tree, she saw him. Mason. In his wheelchair, alone, slowly navigating the path from the other end of the garden.

She hadn't been told he ever left the house.

He looked stronger. Not healed-but definitely more alert than he had been that first day. He paused when he saw her, unsure if he should continue. Then, with a small shrug, he rolled forward. They sat in silence for several minutes. Eventually, he broke it. "You come out here often?" She smiled faintly. "First time." He nodded, eyes scanning the pond. "It used to be my favorite place. Before I got sick. Before the silence swallowed everything."

His voice cracked, but he didn't apologize. She didn't pity him either. Instead, she whispered, "Then maybe it's time to talk louder than the silence." And for the first time, Mason looked at her-not just glanced, but truly looked. And something in his expression softened.

That evening, Samantha found the pill organizer on Mason's nightstand almost untouched. Days marked, pills still in their compartments. She stared at it, confused. "You haven't been taking these," she said gently. Mason didn't deny it. "They make me sicker," he said simply. "They always did."

She picked up the small prescription bottle, reading the label. Expired. Months ago. Her brows furrowed. "These are supposed to help you, Mason. Not poison you." He leaned back against the headboard. "I stopped trusting doctors when they stopped looking me in the eye. Everyone just accepted I was dying. No one ever asked if I agreed."

Samantha said nothing, but her thoughts raced. If the pills weren't helping-and he was improving without them-what was really going on here? Later that night, she searched the drawers in the guest room where she stayed and found a locked folder labeled "Living Will – M.C.". It wasn't hers. It must have been placed there by mistake... or not.

Samantha stared at the folder long after midnight.

"Living Will – M.C."

She knew she shouldn't open it-but something about finding it in her room felt intentional. With shaking hands, she peeled it open. Inside were documents, some typed, some handwritten. The top page was a declaration: Mason Carter willingly agreed to palliative care at home, refusing all further treatment. It was signed. Dated. Witnessed by his mother.

But the second page was different.

It was a letter. Dated six months earlier. Written by Mason himself-but with a very different tone.

"I'm not ready to give up," it said. "I need help. Real help. I think I'm getting worse because of the house, not the illness. Something is off. Please-if anything happens to me, don't believe the story they tell."

Samantha sat back, her heart racing. It was all wrong. The paperwork, the pills, the quiet isolation-it wasn't care. It was control. And now, she was part of it.

The next morning, Samantha walked into the kitchen where Elaine was sipping her usual black coffee. For once, Samantha didn't wait to be addressed. "Why was Mason's living will in my room?" she asked. Elaine didn't even flinch. "I placed it there," she said casually. "I wanted you to understand your place in all this. You're not his savior, Samantha. You're just his comfort."

Samantha's jaw tightened. "He wrote a letter. He doesn't want to die." Elaine's eyes darkened. "That letter was written in a moment of weakness. You don't know the months of suffering that came after it. You sits. The will is legal. Final."

"But he's getting better." Samantha's voice was low but firm. "And that's not what you want, is it?"

Elaine stood slowly, her heels clicking against the marble floor. "You were paid to keep him calm. Quiet. Not to give him hope. Hope is dangerous, dear. Hope delays closure." She walked away, leaving Samantha trembling. For the first time, she realized: she hadn't been hired to be a wife. She had been hired to help bury him.

Samantha waited until late that night.

Mason was half-asleep when she entered his room. She closed the door gently, then pulled the chair beside his bed. "I read your letter," she whispered. His eyes fluttered open. He didn't speak. He didn't need to. She saw the flicker of fear-then relief-in them.

"I believe you," she said.

Mason nodded weakly. "They don't want me alive," he murmured. "They want closure. An inheritance split. And a memory polished enough to be mourned." He paused, breathing shallow. "But I'm still here. I'm still fighting."

Samantha leaned forward. "Then let's fight properly. You need real help. Real doctors. You need out of this house."

For the first time, Mason looked alive. Really alive. "They'll never let me leave," he said.

"Then we don't ask," she replied. "We plan. We disappear."

That night, they whispered under a blanket of shadows, laying the first stones of their secret escape. The sick man wasn't ready to die. And the girl forced to marry him? She was about to become the reason he lived.

It was raining again. Not the soft kind, but heavy, angry drops that struck the windows like fists. Elaine was out for a meeting, the housekeeper conveniently absent. Samantha stood by Mason's side as he gripped the metal arms of his wheelchair, teeth clenched. "Are you sure?" she asked softly.

He didn't answer. He just pushed.

It was shaky, unsteady, painful to watch-but he rose. For the first time in nearly a year, Mason Carter stood on his own feet. Samantha rushed forward to steady him, but he lifted a hand, stopping her. "I need to do it," he said through gritted teeth. He took one step. Then another. By the time he reached the window, he was shaking-but he was standing. Alive. Defiant.

Tears spilled from Samantha's eyes. "You're not dying," she whispered. "You're not even close."

Behind them, the security camera blinked red. Recording.

Elaine returned home just before sunset.

The housekeeper scurried ahead of her, as always, and Samantha pretended nothing had changed. But later that evening, Elaine summoned her to the living room. The screen on the wall was paused mid-frame-Mason, standing at the window. Caught. Documented. And paused like a threat.

Elaine didn't speak for a while. She just stared at the screen with a stony expression. Then finally, she said, "So... he walks now." Her voice was flat, her tone unreadable. Samantha stayed quiet.

"I underestimated you," Elaine said, turning slowly. "I thought you'd be quiet. Grateful. But you... you've stirred something that was meant to settle. That's dangerous, Samantha."

Samantha stood tall. "What's dangerous is pretending he's still dying when he's not."

Elaine smiled, thin and sharp. "And what do you plan to do with that truth? Because truth without power is just noise."

That night, Samantha didn't sleep. And neither did Mason. Because now, the game had changed-and the house had declared war.

Samantha spent the next two days quietly preparing.

She ordered supplies under a fake account-medical files, burner phone, prepaid rideshares. She knew Elaine had eyes everywhere, so she kept her movements subtle. Mason, meanwhile, continued to stand and walk in small bursts, regaining strength little by little-but always behind closed doors.

One evening, Samantha mapped out the plan in whispers beside his bed. "We leave next Wednesday. I booked a clinic out of state. Private. No questions. They can run real tests. You'll be safe."

Mason smiled faintly. "Safe. I forgot what that word feels like."

Suddenly, a soft creak interrupted them. A shadow passed the hallway light. Samantha shot up and peeked through the door. Nothing. Just silence.

But something felt wrong. Someone had heard them. And in a house built on secrets, that meant everything was about to shift.

The next morning, Samantha found her phone missing.

She checked her bags, drawers, even the kitchen counter. Gone. Her heart pounded. Then she saw the note-folded neatly and placed on her pillow.

"You've been given a life. Don't throw it away chasing someone else's death."

No name. No handwriting she recognized. Just cold warning. She rushed to Mason's room. He was asleep-or pretending to be-but his door was now unlocked. Another silent message. They knew. Elaine knew. The house had ears.

            
            

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