Chapter 6

Amanda POV:

Brody used to flood his social media feeds with pictures of us, of Eben, of our life. His captions were always the same: "My everything," "Blessed," "Forever." He'd post about my achievements, my small victories, as if they were his own. He was proud. Obsessively proud. Then, slowly, the posts became less frequent. Then they stopped altogether. I know now, that was when he started making his choice.

He had chosen. Long before I' d crawled back to him. I was simply too blind, too desperate, to see it. All my fighting, all my enduring, all for this. To be tossed aside like trash. It was a joke. A cruel, cosmic joke.

Brody was still there, leaning against the wall, scrolling through his phone. A soft smile touched his lips, a gentle curving of his mouth I hadn't seen directed at me in days. I knew who he was talking to. I knew the look. I counted the seconds. Three. Two. One.

He looked up, his mild pleasantness instantly replaced by a scowl when his eyes met mine. "Look," he said, his voice sharp, devoid of the earlier tenderness. "Don't get any ideas. I'm letting you stay here, in this hospital, only because a public scene would be bad for business. But you need to understand your place. Don't cause trouble. And don't expect anything from me. If you try to interfere with my life, with my family, I'll make sure you end up on the streets. Permanently."

He didn't wait for a reply. He spun on his heel, striding out of the room, his phone pressed to his ear. I heard his voice, softer now, distant. "Carla, sweetheart? Yes, I'm almost done. Just dealing with some... loose ends. I love you too."

His words faded down the corridor, taking with them any residual flicker of emotion within me. My heart was a stone, cold and unfeeling. The anger, the pain, the despair-all of it had receded, leaving behind a vast, echoing emptiness.

I started counting. Not seconds, not minutes. Days. Hours. I knew the CIA would come for me. Clark, my handler, promised. He always kept his promises. I just needed to survive this long enough.

I had rushed back, heart pounding, adrenaline fueling my every step, believing I was racing towards love, towards redemption. Now, all I wanted was to run further away than I'd ever been. To sever every single tie. My survival no longer rested on the hope of their love, but on the cold, hard logic of the Agency.

My phone, the burner I'd bought, vibrated. A single text message. From an unknown number.

Carla Watkins. Cain Glass. Tonight. Warehouse District.

My pupils dilated. Cain Glass. The name was a fresh scar, burning crimson into my consciousness. The ruthless international arms dealer. The man who had captured me, tortured me, kept me in that hellhole for four years. The man I' d thought was dead, killed in the CIA raid that eventually freed me.

My hands trembled, clutching the phone. He was alive. And Carla was with him? A cold dread seeped into my bones. I remembered the screams, the endless nights in that dark cell, the faces of my comrades, broken and silenced. My mission, the reason I'd gone deep undercover, had been to expose Glass. He was a ghost, a myth, until I found him. And he found me.

He had promised me death, a slow, agonizing one. But then I had been pulled out unexpectedly. Not by a rescue mission, but by a sudden, chaotic shift in his operation. I used his distraction, his fleeting moment of carelessness, to escape. Now, the past was reaching out, its icy fingers tightening around my throat.

This wasn't just about my broken family anymore. This was about something far bigger. And far more dangerous. If Carla was involved with Glass, if she was feeding him information, then my family – and perhaps the entire agency – was in grave danger. This was my chance. My chance to finish what I started. My chance to finally bring down Cain Glass.

My decision was swift and ruthless. I would go back. Not for love, not for family. For vengeance. For justice.

I pulled out my old wedding photo from my hospital bag. It was crumpled, but their smiling faces still shone. I took a quick photo, then sent it to Brody's personal number, along with a single, chilling message: "Divorce papers, or I expose everything. Your choice."

My phone vibrated almost instantly. Brody. He was calling. I let it ring. Once. Twice. Then I hit "decline."

Another text came through. Just a period. "."

A cold, mirthless laugh escaped me. A period. The perfect punctuation for our story. My husband. The man I had loved. The man I had fought to return to. We used to talk for hours, about everything and nothing. Now, all that remained was a single, curt punctuation mark. I tossed the phone onto my bed, a piece of useless scrap metal.

Chapter 7

Amanda POV:

Brody and Carla arrived, their faces tight with barely suppressed fury. They were dressed in formal evening wear, clearly pulled away from some glamorous event. My text had struck a nerve. Good.

"What do you want, Amanda?" Brody demanded, his voice low and dangerous, his eyes burning with resentment. "Haven't you done enough?"

"Oh, I'm just getting started," I replied, my voice a calm, chilling monotone. The words felt foreign on my tongue, but they also felt right. There was no emotion behind them, only a cold, calculated intent. "I want a divorce. And half of everything. Or, I come home. As your wife."

Brody's jaw clenched. He laughed, a short, bitter sound. "My wife? You want to be my wife? The woman who ran off with another man, leaving her family behind? You have some nerve!"

My blood ran cold. "Ran off? What are you talking about?"

He smirked, a cruel, triumphant glint in his eyes. He pulled a thick stack of glossy photographs from his jacket and flung them onto my hospital bed. They scattered, revealing images of me. Me, in a series of intimate poses with Cain Glass. Me, laughing with him, holding his hand, even kissing him. The clothes were mine, the settings were familiar from my undercover days, but the emotions on my face were a lie. A fabrication.

My fingers trembled as I picked one up, my mind reeling. These weren't real. These were doctored. Or, worse, manipulated. Glass was a master of psychological warfare. He knew how to break a person. He knew how to make them believe things that weren't true.

"Carla told me," Brody continued, his voice dripping with accusation. "She said you' d always had a wild streak, that you were probably having an affair. But I didn't believe her. Not at first." He walked closer, his eyes boring into mine, filled with a hatred that chilled me to the bone. "Then I found these. I took these, Amanda. I followed you for weeks, trying to understand. Trying to find out what was happening. And this is what I found. My wife, in the arms of another man."

My head felt like it would explode. He took these? He was there? He was close enough to see? And he just… watched? He didn't try to save me? He didn't try to understand? He simply confirmed his worst fears, fueled by Carla' s insidious whispers. He hadn' t investigated, he hadn' t sought the truth. He' d simply believed the worst. The chilling realization settled over me: Brody hadn' t been a victim of circumstances; he' d been a willing participant in my downfall, blinded by his own pride and Carla' s poison. And the pictures… they confirmed my worst fear about Carla' s connection to Glass.

My eyes fell. "I wasn't... I wasn't willing," I whispered, the words tasting like ash. "It wasn't what it looked like."

He scoffed, a harsh, dismissive sound. "I don't care what it 'looked like,' Amanda. Or what the 'truth' is. It doesn't matter anymore. I've found someone who actually deserves my love, someone who didn't abandon me and our son for a cheap thrill." His gaze was as cold as granite. "So, let's play your game. You pretend you're dead. I move on. We get a clean slate. That's what you wanted, isn't it?"

My face felt numb. He wanted me to stay dead. For him. For his new life. And then Eben, my son, stepped forward, his small face hardened, almost a miniature version of Brody's disdain.

"I'll let you visit me sometimes," he said, his voice hesitant but firm, "if you're good. But Carla is my mom now. You can't take Daddy away from her." His small hand, which used to fit so perfectly in mine, now rested firmly in Carla's.

My heart, or what was left of it, twisted. My son. My beautiful boy. He was lost to me.

"No," I said, my voice gaining strength, each word a hammer blow against their carefully constructed facade. "I' m not going anywhere. You can either divorce me and give me what is legally mine, or I stay. Your choice, Brody. I hold all the cards now. Or do you want the world to know the truth? About the pictures. About Carla. About everything."

Brody's breath hitched, his eyes blazing with fury. He stared at me, his chest heaving, his face contorted with rage.

I met his gaze, my expression blank, devoid of any fear. I had nothing left to fear.

He let out a frustrated growl. "Fine," he bit out, the word dripping with venom. "You want to play this game? You want to come back? Then come back. But don't expect anything from me. You'll regret this, Amanda." He turned, his arm snaking around Carla's waist. His face softened as he looked at her, a sickeningly tender expression. "Let's go, darling. This... unpleasantness is over."

Eben, still clutching Carla's hand, followed them. He didn' t look back. Carla, however, paused at the door. Her eyes, filled with cold, calculating malice, flickered over me one last time. A silent promise of war.

Chapter 8

Amanda POV:

I hadn't expected Brody and Eben to return. Not after that brutal confrontation. I thought their contempt would keep them away. I was wrong.

The next morning, Eben appeared in my hospital room, clutching a brightly colored thermos. His small frame was rigid, his gaze darting around the room, avoiding my eyes. He looked uncomfortable, almost guilty.

"Mom?" he whispered, the word a hesitant question, a faint echo of the past.

My heart, the cold stone in my chest, didn't stir. I simply watched him, a detached observer. This was my son, born of my flesh, loved with every fiber of my being. The boy I' d endured hell for. Now, he was a stranger, a weapon in Carla's arsenal.

I noticed the slight tremor in his hands, the nervous twitch of his lips. He was conflicted. A part of him, perhaps, still remembered. Still yearned for the mother he' d lost. I allowed myself a fleeting, dangerous thought: Maybe there's still a spark.

He placed the thermos on the bedside table, fumbling with the clasp. A rich, sweet aroma, vaguely familiar, wafted from the container. It was almond jello, my specialty. The one he loved.

He scooped a spoonful, his hand shaking slightly, and held it out to me. "Carla made it for you," he mumbled, his eyes wide and uncertain. "She said you need strength."

I looked at the wobbly, pale dessert, then at Eben' s anxious face. My mind, now a finely tuned analytical machine, processed the scene. Carla. Almond jello. Eben' s nervousness. The sudden shift in their demeanor. It clicked. A test. A trap.

Yet, a tiny, almost imperceptible flicker of my old self, the mother, stirred. He was still my son. My blood. I took the spoon from his hand. This was the last time I would allow myself to trust. The very last time.

I swallowed the jello. It was sweet, cloying. And then, a wave of dizziness slammed into me, making the room spin. My body swayed, my hand clutching the thermos, almost dropping it. This wasn't just jello. This was drugged.

A bitter, mocking laugh caught in my throat. Of course. Another betrayal. From my son. The ultimate cut.

But my body, hardened by years of surviving Glass's chemical experiments and interrogations, reacted differently. The sedative was potent, but not enough to completely incapacitate me. My mind remained sharp, alert, observing everything through a hazy veil.

Eben' s voice, thick with tears, reached me through the fog. It was a strange mix of childish resentment and genuine fear. "Why did you come back? You ruined everything! Daddy and Mommy Carla were happy! I was happy!" He sounded genuinely distressed. "I don't want you here. I want Carla to be my mom. You just make Daddy sad. You can't take him away from her!"

My heart, the numb stone, remained unmoved. He was a child, manipulated and poisoned. A pawn.

Then, a cold, metallic touch against my cheek. I opened my eyes, struggling to focus. It was a knife. A small, gleaming blade.

My heart didn't clench. It simply… sank. Deeper into the abyss of unfeeling.

A searing pain, sharp and immediate. A thin line of blood welled up, tracing a path across my cheekbone. Eben. He' d done it. My son. He' d cut me.

He stared at the knife in his hand, then at the blood on my face, his own face contorted in horror. His eyes widened, his small frame trembling. He dropped the knife with a clatter and bolted, a tiny, terrified shadow fleeing the room.

A moment later, Brody appeared. He stood by my bed, his gaze fixed on my face, on the fresh wound. He didn't speak. Just watched.

"He didn't finish the job, did he?" Brody murmured, his voice low, almost a whisper, but laced with a chilling undertone. "Too soft. Just like his mother." He reached out, his fingers brushing against the cut. I flinched, but he held me firm. "I'll finish it for him. Make sure you don't forget what happens when you try to mess with my family."

He picked up the knife. The world blurred. Pain. So much pain. Then, darkness consumed me.

I woke with a gasp, my body aching, my face throbbing. The antiseptic smell was gone, replaced by the familiar scent of expensive wood and fresh linen. I was in Brody's house. My house. In a guest bedroom. He' d brought me back. A cruel irony.

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