Chapter One
"Sign the papers, Eva, and don't make me ask you a second time," Ken said, his voice flat as he stood by the bed, his hand resting on the shoulder of my best friend, Sarah.
I looked at the bed, my eyes shifting from the tangled sheets to the woman I had trusted for a decade, and then to the man I had been married to for five years.
The anniversary gift I had gone out to pick up for my husband suddenly felt heavy, it was a gold watch I had saved for months to buy, but I let it drop, the metal hitting the floor with a crack.
Sarah just pulled the silk robe tighter around her body, her expression neutral, showing no sign of the friendship we had shared since college.
"You're cheating on me with Sarah?" I asked, my voice cracking as I looked at my husband, searching for any flicker of the man who had promised to love me forever.
"I'm moving on, Eva, and you should too, because this marriage has been dead weight for two years," Ken replied, reaching into his briefcase and pulling out a thick stack of documents, sliding them across the nightstand toward me.
"I've already had the papers drawn up, so just sign on the lines I've marked and pack a bag, I want you out of this house tonight."
"Tonight? It’s a storm outside, Ken, and you’re
telling me to leave our home because you can't keep your pants zipped?" I stepped forward, my chest tight.
"It’s my home, Eva, my name is on the deed, and I don't want to spend another minute looking at your pathetic face," Ken said, his eyes hardening as he stepped closer, looming over me with a cold, predatory energy.
"Sign them, or I’ll ensure you leave with absolutely nothing, not even the clothes on your back."
Sarah finally spoke, her voice light and mocking, "Don't be a martyr, Eva, it's over, just sign and go so we can get back to our night."
I pushed my tears back as I grabbed the pen from the nightstand and scribbled my name across the pages without reading a single word. And as soon as the last letter was formed, I threw the pen at his chest, watching it bounce off his expensive shirt.
"I hope you both rot," I whispered, turning toward the closet and grabbing a duffel bag, throwing in a handful of clothes, my passport, and my wallet, my movements jerky and frantic.
"Is that it? No big speech?" Ken asked, a smug smile tugging at the corners of his mouth as he watched me struggle with the zipper of my bag.
"You aren't worth the breath," I said, swinging the bag over my shoulder and walking out of the bedroom, my heels clicking loudly on the hardwood floor of the hallway I had decorated with so much care.
I pushed the heavy oak door open and was immediately hit by a wall of cold, driving rain, the wind whipping my hair across my face as I ran for my car parked in the driveway.
I got into the car, my hands shaking so hard I could barely get the key into the ignition, the engine roaring to life as I shifted into reverse and tore out of the driveway, the tires throwing up mud and gravel.
The rain was coming down in sheets, blurring the windshield so much that the wipers could barely keep up, but I didn't slow down, I just pushed the gas pedal harder, needing to put distance between myself and the betrayal.
My mind was a chaotic loop of Ken’s cold voice and Sarah’s bored expression, the two of them together in my bed, laughing at me while I was out buying him a gift.
"I hate you," I screamed into the empty car, my voice lost in the roar of the wind.
I reached the main road. I didn't care about the speed or the danger, I only cared about the burning sensation in my chest and the feeling that my entire life had been a lie designed to keep me small and compliant for a man who didn't even like me.
The wind gusted, pushing the car toward the shoulder, and I fought to keep it centered, my eyes straining to see the lines on the road through the torrential downpour. I reached for my phone in the passenger seat, thinking for a split second about calling my mother, but the screen stayed dark, and I realized I didn't want to explain the shame of being thrown out like trash.
I turned onto the bridge that led toward the highway, the metal grating of the road humming under my tires, the river below a churning mass of dark water and debris.
The wind was stronger here, buffeting the side of the car, and as I accelerated to merge, a sudden flash of lightning illuminated the road ahead, revealing a massive branch fallen across the lane.
I slammed on the brakes, the car skidding instantly, the tires losing all traction on the wet metal and sending me into a violent spin. I saw the guardrail coming toward me, a blur of grey steel, and I braced myself, my arms locking as I waited for the impact that felt inevitable.
The car hit the barrier with a deafening screech of metal on metal, the glass of the driver’s side window shattering into a thousand pieces that sprayed across my face and neck.
The vehicle didn't stop, it flipped.
Everything went black for a moment, a heavy, silent void that felt like the end of the world, until the sound of the rain returned, splashing through the broken window and onto my skin. I tried to move, but my legs were pinned under the dashboard, a sharp pain radiating through my hip and shoulder, making it impossible to do more than gasp for air.
I looked out through the cracked windshield, the headlights of the car pointing into the dark woods at the edge of the road, the beams cutting through the rain.
I was trapped, the cold water beginning to pool on the ceiling of the car, and I realized the doors were jammed shut, the frame of the vehicle twisted into a cage.