Three days had passed since that devastating phone call, three days of numbness punctuated only by meetings with divorce lawyers and the mechanical process of dismantling a life I'd thought was real. I was packing the last of my jewelry supplies when my phone rang with an unknown number.
"Katherine Davis?" The voice was electronically distorted, sending ice through my veins.
"Who is this?"
"Listen carefully. You and Macy O'Brien have both been taken. Your husband has one hour to choose who lives and who dies. He can only save one of you."
My blood turned to water. This couldn't be real. "What are you talking about?"
"Warehouse District, 1247 Industrial Boulevard for you. 892 Harbor Street for his precious Macy. One hour, Mrs. Reynolds. Let's see who he really loves."
The line went dead. My hands shook so violently I nearly dropped the phone. This was insane—who would do such a thing? But even as terror flooded my system, a sick realization crept in. The timing, the theatrical cruelty of it all. Macy.
Before I could process it fully, rough hands grabbed me from behind. A cloth pressed over my mouth, chemical-sweet and suffocating. The world tilted, colors bleeding together as consciousness slipped away.
I awoke to the stench of rust and motor oil, my head pounding like a drum. Concrete pressed cold against my cheek. As my vision cleared, I found myself in a cavernous warehouse, shadows dancing between towering shelves and abandoned machinery. Three men stood nearby, their faces hidden behind ski masks.
"She's awake," one of them said, his voice carrying a cruel satisfaction that made my skin crawl.
I tried to move but found my hands zip-tied behind my back, the plastic cutting into my wrists. "Please," I whispered, my voice hoarse. "I don't understand what's happening."
"Oh, you will soon enough." The tallest one crouched beside me, and I caught a whiff of cigarettes and cheap cologne. "Your husband's got a choice to make. Wonder which one of you he'll pick?"
The mockery in his tone confirmed what I already knew in my breaking heart. This wasn't random. Macy had orchestrated this twisted game, and these men were her pawns. But why? What could she possibly gain from this?
My phone, lying discarded nearby, suddenly buzzed with a text. One of the men picked it up, reading aloud with obvious amusement: "On my way to Harbor Street. Hold on, baby."
The words hit me like physical blows. Harbor Street. Macy's location. He'd chosen her without a moment's hesitation, just like he had every day for five years. Even faced with life and death, I wasn't worth considering.
"Well, well," the man laughed, showing the message to his companions. "Looks like hubby's made his choice. Boss lady's gonna be real pleased."
Tears burned my eyes, but they weren't just from fear anymore. They were from the final, devastating confirmation of my worthlessness in Damien's world. Even when my life hung in the balance, I was still just the disposable wife.
"What happens now?" I managed to ask.
"Now?" The tallest one pulled something from his jacket—a pair of industrial pliers, their metal surface gleaming dully in the warehouse's dim light. "Now we make sure you can never cause problems for Miss O'Brien again."
Horror flooded through me as understanding dawned. This wasn't just about making Damien choose. This was about eliminating me permanently, making sure I could never interfere with their perfect little affair.
"Please," I begged, struggling against my restraints. "I'll disappear. I'll never bother them again. I swear—"
"Too late for that, sweetheart." He knelt beside me, grabbing my bound hands. "Boss wants to send a message. Something permanent."
The first plier closed around my ring finger's nail. White-hot agony exploded through my hand as he wrenched it away from the nail bed, tearing flesh and nerve endings. My scream echoed off the warehouse walls, raw and animalistic.
"That's one," he said conversationally, as if discussing the weather. "Two more to go."
I thrashed wildly, but the other men held me down as he moved to my middle finger. The pain was beyond description, beyond human endurance. Each nail that came away took part of my soul with it, leaving me broken in ways that went far deeper than flesh.
By the time they finished, I was barely conscious, my hand a mangled mess of blood and exposed nerve endings. They cut my zip ties and left me there, sobbing and shattered on the cold concrete floor.
"Tell your husband we said hi," one called back mockingly as they walked away.
I don't know how long I lay there, drifting in and out of consciousness. Eventually, survival instinct kicked in. I had to get help. Had to get out.
Using my uninjured hand, I pulled myself upright and stumbled toward what looked like an exit. Each step sent fresh waves of agony through my mutilated fingers, but I kept moving. I had to keep moving.
The warehouse door opened onto an empty street. In the distance, I could see the lights of the city, civilization, help. I stumbled forward, leaving drops of blood on the pavement like breadcrumbs marking my path to survival.
A passing taxi stopped, the driver's face going white when he saw my condition. "Hospital," I gasped. "Please."
As we drove through the night, I stared at my ruined hand and felt something inside me crystallize into diamond-hard resolve. Damien had made his choice. Now I would make mine.
I was done being Katherine Reynolds, the perfect fool. It was time for Katherine Davis to disappear entirely—and take every trace of the woman who'd loved him with her.
The manila envelope felt heavier than it should have as I sealed it shut. Inside were the divorce papers, signed and notarized, along with something that would ensure Damien never came looking for me—a death certificate bearing my name. Katherine Reynolds was about to die, officially and permanently.
My bandaged hand throbbed as I wrote the address on the envelope: Reynolds & Associates, attention Damien Reynolds. Let him open it in front of Macy. Let them both see what their cruelty had accomplished.
"Are you sure about this, sweetheart?" Dad asked from the doorway, his weathered face creased with worry. He'd aged years in the past week, watching me stumble through the house like a ghost.
"Katherine Reynolds needs to be dead," I whispered, my voice still raw from screaming. "She was weak. She was a fool. I won't be her anymore."
Dad drove me to the courier service, his silence heavy with unspoken concern. As I handed over the envelope, I felt something inside me break free—or maybe break apart entirely. Either way, it was done.
The flight to Seattle passed in a haze of pain medication and exhaustion. Dad's house looked exactly as I remembered from childhood visits—the blue shutters, the garden Mom had planted before she died, the porch swing where I'd dreamed of my future. How naive those dreams seemed now.
I collapsed into my old bedroom and didn't emerge for three weeks.
The days blurred together in a fog of grief and trauma. Dad brought me meals I barely touched, changed my bandages with gentle hands, and never once said 'I told you so' about Damien. Sometimes I caught him standing in my doorway, just watching me breathe, as if afraid I might stop.
My hand was healing, but slowly. Three fingernails gone, the nail beds raw and tender. The doctor said they might grow back, but they'd never look the same. Like me, I supposed. Some damage was permanent.
Meanwhile, in another part of the city, Macy was celebrating her victory.
I learned about it later, through a private investigator Dad had hired to monitor the situation. The photos arrived via encrypted email: my beloved studio, Firefly, reduced to rubble and ash. My jewelry-making equipment smashed beyond recognition. Sketches and designs I'd worked on for years—the only remnants of who I'd been before Damien—burned to nothing.
The investigator's report was clinical: "Subject Macy O'Brien broke into the premises at approximately 2 AM. Security footage shows her destroying equipment with a baseball bat before dousing the space with gasoline. Fire department responded to the blaze at 2:47 AM. Total loss."
Attached were screenshots of text messages she'd sent to Damien: "Thought you'd like to see what happens to obstacles in our path. Katherine got what she deserved. Now there's nothing left of her pathetic little dreams. We're free, baby."
I stared at the photos until my eyes burned. Every tool I'd saved for, every sketch that represented hours of creative passion, every piece of equipment that had helped me feel like myself—all of it reduced to smoke and memory. She hadn't just destroyed my studio. She'd tried to erase every trace of who I'd been before I became Damien's wife.
But she'd made one crucial mistake. She thought destroying my past would eliminate my future. Instead, it crystallized something inside me—a determination I hadn't felt in years.
"Dad," I called out one morning, my voice stronger than it had been since the warehouse. "I think I need help. Professional help."
He appeared in my doorway instantly, hope flickering across his features. "There's someone I'd like you to meet. A psychologist. I've known him for years—actually wanted to introduce you to him once, before... well, before Damien."
Dr. Collin Smith's office was nothing like I'd expected. Instead of sterile white walls and intimidating diplomas, it felt warm and lived-in. Books lined the shelves, plants thrived in the windows, and soft jazz played quietly in the background. The man himself was younger than I'd anticipated, with kind eyes behind wire-rimmed glasses and an easy smile that didn't feel forced.
"Katherine," he said gently, gesturing to a comfortable armchair. "Your father's told me a little about what you've been through. But I'd like to hear it from you, in your own words and your own time."
I sat down, my bandaged hand hidden in my lap, and tried to speak. The words stuck in my throat like broken glass. How could I explain the depth of the betrayal? The physical agony? The way I'd lost myself so completely that I didn't even know who I was anymore?
"I..." I started, then stopped. Tears I thought I'd exhausted began flowing again. "I don't know where to begin."
"Begin wherever feels right," Collin said softly. "We have all the time you need."
For the first time in weeks, I felt like maybe—just maybe—there was a path forward through the darkness.