The Monster Behind His Mask

Elena Santiago POV:

Declan roared, a sound of raw, unadulterated fury that vibrated through the room.

"You hit her? You hit a pregnant woman, Elena?" He shoved me back, his hands shaking with rage. His eyes, usually so calculating, were wild, filled with hatred. I stumbled, catching myself on the edge of the coffee table. The pain in my wrist, then my legs, was a dull ache compared to the sharp sting of his betrayal.

He immediately turned to Bridgett, his demeanor softening. "Bridgett, darling, are you alright? Oh, God, your cheek." He cradled her face in his hands, his thumbs gently brushing the red mark I' d left. His concern for her was sickeningly genuine.

Bridgett, ever the actress, dissolved into real tears this time. "She... she just went crazy, Declan. I was just trying to apologize, to make peace for your sake. And she attacked me. I don't know what I did wrong." She buried her face in his shoulder, her sobs racking her slender frame. "I just wanted everyone to be happy."

Declan pulled her into a tight embrace, glaring at me over her head. The look in his eyes was one I' d never seen directed at me before: absolute, venomous disgust.

"Apologize to her, Elena," he commanded, his voice low and dangerous. "Now."

I stared at him, my blood running cold, then boiling. "Apologize? For calling out her lies? For defending myself against her slander? She deserved it. Every single stinging bit of it."

He recoiled, his face contorting. "You're sick, Elena. Truly sick." He let go of Bridgett, stepping towards me. "What has gotten into you? This isn't you. This is some deranged, spiteful woman."

Then, incredibly, he raised his own hand and slapped himself, hard, across the face. The sharp crack echoed in the stunned silence. My parents gasped. Eleanor and Richard stared, horrified.

"There," Declan choked out, his voice thick with self-loathing, or perhaps, cunning. "I've hurt myself, Elena. Are you satisfied? Will you stop this madness now? Please, darling, stop. I don't know what's going on with you, but I'll get you help. We can go to therapy, get you back on your medication. Just... please, stop punishing us all. Stop punishing me."

He looked at me, his eyes pleading, brimming with tears. "I love you, Elena. I swear, I do. Whatever this is, we can fix it. I'll send Bridgett away. I'll do anything. Just please, don't leave me. Don't throw away everything we've built." His desperation was palpable, but it felt like a performance. A desperate, manipulative performance.

"No," I said, my voice barely a whisper, yet it felt like a roar. "No, Declan. I'm done. I'm utterly, irrevocably done." I looked at him, my gaze unwavering. "I don't love you. I hate you. I feel suffocated by your lies, by your control, by your very presence. I can't breathe in the same room as you."

My parents looked at me in horror, their faces pale. Eleanor and Richard exchanged shocked glances. Their perfect son, humiliated. Their perfect life, shattered.

Eleanor, her face a mask of aristocratic fury, grabbed Richard's arm. "Richard, we're leaving. I cannot tolerate this display of... vulgarity. Declan, you handle this. We will discuss this later." She shot me a look of pure loathing. "You will regret this, Elena. You will be left with nothing but your spite." With that, she stalked out, Richard following, his expression grim.

My own parents hung back, their faces etched with disappointment. "Elena," my mother whispered, her voice laced with despair. "You've gone too far. You're going to be all alone. You'll regret this, mark my words."

My father just shook his head, his shoulders slumped. "Such a shame. Such a waste." They, too, left, their footsteps heavy, leaving me alone with Declan and his mistress.

They don't understand. I didn't want their pity. I didn't want their protection. I just wanted freedom. Freedom from the lies, from the suffocating pretense of a perfect life that was built on my broken body and his broken vows.

I knew, with a chilling certainty, that this would be a war. And I needed to be prepared.

Later that day, after I had convinced Declan to leave, using the threat of a restraining order, I retreated to my study. The quiet hum of the computer was a balm to my frayed nerves. I had spent the last few days, in the wake of discovering Bridgett's presence, secretly installing tiny cameras in discreet locations around the house, and more importantly, in Declan's office at home, where he thought his files were secure.

I had also contacted a private investigator, a former colleague from my architecture firm who had transitioned into security consulting. He was discreet, efficient, and owed me a favor. He had been quietly digging into Declan's finances, his company's records, and, most importantly, his movements.

The laptop screen glowed, displaying a folder marked "Evidence." Inside were photos, screenshots of bank transfers, and location data. The private investigator was thorough. My fingers flew across the keyboard, organizing, cross-referencing. This was my new architecture. Building a case.

Suddenly, the door creaked open. I jumped, slamming the laptop shut, my heart hammering against my ribs. Declan stood there, his eyes bloodshot, his face pale.

"What are you doing?" he asked, his voice rough.

"None of your business," I replied, my voice sharper than I intended. I tried to look calm, but my hands were shaking.

He walked further into the room, his gaze sweeping over the books, the old blueprints, the design sketches. He stopped by my drawing board, where an unfinished rendering of a new city park lay under a protective sheet.

"Why are you doing this, Elena?" he asked, his voice softer now, almost pleading. "Why are you trying to destroy me? Our life?" He turned to face me, his eyes filled with a familiar sorrow that used to twist my gut with guilt. "Is it because you can't have children? Is that why you're so angry?"

The words were like a physical slap. They always were. He knew my deepest wound, and he wielded it like a weapon.

"Is that why you did this, Declan?" I countered, my voice tight with suppressed rage. "Because I can't give you a child? Tell me, Declan, how exactly did that happen again? My infertility. Remind me."

He flinched, his eyes dropping to the floor. The memory of the accident, the black diamond slope, his insistent pushes for me to go faster, more daring, despite my pleas for caution. The sickening crunch of snow, the searing pain, the long, endless months of recovery. The doctors' grim faces, telling us that the internal injuries were too severe, that I would never carry a child.

He mumbled something unintelligible. His guilt, usually buried deep beneath layers of charm and self-pity, surfaced for a fleeting moment.

Just then, my laptop, which I had only shut, not locked, let out a soft ping. A notification. Too late.

Declan' s head snapped up. His eyes, quick and predatory, fixed on the screen. The small, glowing icon indicated a new audio file.

He moved faster than I expected, lunging for the laptop. I shoved him, but he was stronger, fueled by panic. His fingers fumbled with the trackpad, clicking on the notification.

The room filled with sound. Not just any sound, but his voice. Low, intimate, laced with desire.

"No, baby, don't tell Elena. She's too fragile. And besides, she wouldn't understand. She's just... not like you. You're so alive, so wild. She's broken, Bridgett. After the accident, she just... became a different person. Not the woman I fell in love with."

Then, Bridgett's voice, husky and satisfied. "And you still love her, Declan? Really? Because your kisses tell a different story."

Declan' s voice again, a low chuckle. "She's got nothing on you, love. Nothing. She just doesn't excite me anymore. She's a burden. But you... you're my escape. My adrenaline. My future."

The words hung in the air, a grotesque testament to his betrayal. Each syllable was a hammer blow to my heart, to my very being. He had called me broken. A burden. Not the woman he fell in love with.

Declan froze, his face ashen, the color draining from it as if he had just seen a ghost. The recording continued, his voice, so intimate, so loving, to another woman. The woman who was carrying his child. It was a vicious, brutal symphony of lies.

He tried to shut the laptop, his fingers trembling, but I was faster. I snatched it from him, pulling it close to my chest.

"A burden, am I?" I whispered, my voice devoid of emotion, a cold, empty echo in the room. "Broken? Not the woman you fell in love with?" I looked at him, truly looked at him, and saw the monster beneath the charming facade. "You are truly a work of art, Declan Harris. A masterpiece of deceit."

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