Current location: Novel nest HOSTILE TAKEOVER: RECLAIMING MY BODY Chapter 4

"HOSTILE TAKEOVER: RECLAIMING MY BODY" Chapter 4

Chapter 4: Locked In Fear

The study door slammed.

The heavy deadbolt slid home with a metallic shriek that vibrated through the floorboards.

Damian didn’t look at the woman in the velvet armchair. He paced toward the wall safe, his movements precise, almost surgical. He punched in the code. The safe hissed open.

He grabbed the leather-bound ledger and tossed it onto the desk.

It landed with a dull, final thud.

"Sit," he barked.

The Imposter stumbled toward the chair. She reached for the armrest, her fingers fumbling, missing, then clawing into the fabric until her knuckles turned white.

"Damian, I... I’m your wife," she whispered. Her voice cracked, hitting a sharp, jagged note that hung in the air.

Damian stopped. He stood over her, his shoulders set like stone. He didn’t reply. Instead, he stared—not at her face, but at the way her hair caught the light, the way her chest heaved. He was dismantling her, piece by piece, looking for the phantom he’d lost.

"Isabella moves with… purpose," he said, his voice dropping into a low, dangerous rumble. "She doesn't flinch when the lights die."

He leaned in. His face was a shadow inches from her own.

"But you? You jumped."

I watched from the dark corners of her mind. I felt the heat rise behind her eyes—a stinging, frantic burn. She was cracking.

"I’m just... I’m tired, okay?" she stammered, her eyes darting toward the door. "The accident—everything, it’s just… it’s changed things."

Damian let out a short, hollow laugh. He walked to the liquor cabinet, the crystal decanter chattering against the glass as he poured a drink.

"The accident didn't make you forget how to hold a pen."

He gestured to the ledger.

"You gripped that thing like you were expecting a knife fight."

"I was nervous!" she snapped, then faltered. She licked her lips, glancing away. "You’re… you’re seeing things, Damian. You’re obsessed."

Damian turned.

He crossed the room in three long, predatory strides. He slammed his hands onto the arms of her chair, caging her, his shadow swallowing her completely.

"Obsession is losing control," he murmured, his breath hot against her skin. "I? I’m in total control."

"Then let me go," she hissed.

"Let you go?"

Damian’s eyes darkened, the slate-grey depths swirling with something sharp. He reached out, his thumb tracing her jawline—a touch that felt like the edge of a blade.

"And let you run off? To keep failing?"

He didn't wait for her to breathe. He pushed off the chair and walked to the door, his hand closing around the brass handle.

"Aris will be here in an hour for the scan."

He paused, his back to her.

"And this time? He’s going to be thorough."

The door clicked shut. The lock groaned.

The Imposter slumped, her body going boneless. The weight of the room, the heavy, suffocating silence—it pressed into her, turning the study into a tomb.

ADVERTISEMENT

I paced the walls of her brain. I felt her terror, a frantic, rhythmic pulse, and I reached for the memories she’d stolen. I grabbed the edges of her false life and started to pull.

She leaned her head back and let out a broken, shivering breath.

"Get out," she whispered to the empty air. "Please… just get out of my head."

I let out a soundless, mocking laugh. I reached into her motor cortex and forced her hand to twitch. Her fingers dug deep, white-knuckled, into the velvet.

"You’re not her," I projected into her static.

She jerked upright, her head snapping toward the dark corners of the room.

"Who’s there?"

She grabbed the heavy brass paperweight from the desk. Her aim was frantic, desperate. She hurled it at the mirror.

The glass shattered.

It exploded into a thousand glittering shards that rained down across the floor.

She stood in the debris, staring at her own fragmented face—dozens of broken reflections, all of them screaming.

The tether was fraying.

"You’re a glitch," I whispered, louder this time. "A parasite wearing stolen skin."

She clutched her head, her nails digging into her scalp. She dropped to her knees, glass digging into her skin, but she didn't seem to feel it.

"Stop it!"

I didn't stop. I yanked the memory of the garden forward—the smell of wet, churning earth; the sound of a shovel biting into rock.

"You’re not her," I echoed.

I used my voice. The voice that belonged in these walls. The voice Damian had been hunting for in the dark.

She scrambled toward the door. She clawed at the wood until her fingers were raw, dripping blood onto the floor.

"Damian!" she shrieked, her voice tearing. "Damian, help me!"

But he wasn't listening. He was out in the hall, waiting for the scan. Waiting to see what was left of the shell.

I leaned back into the void.

I let her scream.

The architect of her collapse was finally ready to take back the house.

ADVERTISEMENT

You May Also Like

Compartilhar Link

Copie o link abaixo para compartilhar com seus amigos: