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My Awakening: His World Falls Apart Novel Cover

My Awakening: His World Falls Apart

For years, Hudson kept his wife Cora in a medicated fog, claiming she was unstable. The discovery of another woman's hair clip shatters her chemical haze, revealing her husband as a manipulative monster. Once a talented architect, Cora begins faking her sedation to plot her escape. When a former intern confirms the abuse, Cora transforms her suppressed rage into a cold, calculating revenge. The game has changed, and she will ensure Hudson pays for his cruelty.
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Chapter 1

My husband Hudson had kept me a medicated ghost for three years, convinced I was unstable. But a cheap pink hair clip, tangled with golden blonde hair in his car, ripped through the chemical haze. The bitter pill he forced me to take wouldn't numb the burning truth, only fuel my awakening.

I was an architect once, but now I was just Cora, a docile wife trapped in his suffocating world. When he saw my shock, his concern was sickeningly sweet as he offered another Xanax. I pretended to swallow the poison, letting it dissolve under my tongue, a constant reminder of my awakening.

Back at the mansion, his massive car deliberately blocked mine, a crude barricade confirming his control. Then, a message from an old intern confirmed my darkest fears: this was domestic abuse. He urged me to check Hudson’s closet, to record everything.

I knew then I was living with a dangerous monster, and my denial shattered. The anger burned, fueled by the bitter taste of that undissolved pill.

That night, Hudson walked in, wearing a hideous, sloppily tied red polka-dot tie. It was a clear, undeniable sign of another woman. My architect’s mind was awake, cold and calculating. "Game on, Hudson." I would make him taste this bitterness back a thousand times.

Chapter 1

Cora POV:

The windshield wipers slashed back and forth across the glass, a frantic, monotonous scraping sound that did nothing to drown out the pounding rain of the Seattle night. I sat in the passenger seat of Hudson’s black Mercedes, staring blankly at the blurred streetlights streaking past. The heavy scent of expensive leather and his cedar cologne filled the tight cabin. It was suffocating. I hated enclosed spaces. When I was seven, my foster brother locked me in the trunk of an abandoned car for six hours. Hudson knew that. Yet, he always kept the child locks engaged on my door. For my safety, he claimed.

My mind felt thick, wrapped in the familiar, heavy fog of the medication I had been taking for three years. The streetlights bled into long yellow ribbons.

Hudson drove with one hand on the steering wheel. His other hand reached across the console and settled heavily over mine. It was a gesture that looked like comfort to the outside world. To me, it was a leash. The weight of his palm felt like ice against my skin. My body reacted before my medicated brain could stop it. I flinched, pulling my hand away under the pretense of smoothing down the hem of my skirt.

My fingers slid off the edge of the plush leather seat and dropped into the narrow, dark gap between the cushion and the heavy car door. As an architect, my brain was wired to notice dead space. It was a habit I couldn't shake, even now.

My fingertips brushed against something cold. Something hard. It had small, jagged plastic teeth.

For a second, the fog in my head whispered that it was just another tactile hallucination. The doctors warned me about those. But the cold, sharp edges digging into my skin were too real. I drew a slow, shallow breath, pinching the object between my index finger and thumb, and slowly pulled it up from the darkness.

A passing streetlight flooded the cabin with a brief, harsh yellow glow. I looked down at my lap.

It was a cheap, bright pink plastic butterfly hair clip. Tangled in its jagged teeth was a single, long strand of golden blonde hair.

I have black hair. Pitch black.

The cognitive barrier that had kept me docile for three years shattered in a fraction of a second. My pupils dilated so fast the streetlights outside became blinding stars. It felt as if a massive, invisible hand had reached into my chest and crushed my lungs. I couldn't breathe. The sheer terror of betrayal—the physical proof of it—flooded my veins, burning away the chemical haze of the drugs.

I snapped my head toward Hudson. My lips trembled, parting as the urge to scream clawed at my throat.

Hudson caught my sudden movement in his peripheral vision. He turned his head, taking his eyes off the road for a second. His gaze was impossibly gentle, dripping with a sickeningly sweet concern. He was the apex predator, completely at ease while his prey thrashed in the trap.

"Are you feeling unwell, sweetheart?" he asked softly. His eyes flicked down, expertly catching the way my fist was clenched tight against my thigh. He didn't see the pink plastic hidden in my palm, but he saw the tension. He always saw the tension.

A strangled, broken gasp ripped out of my throat. It was the exact sound I always made right before a panic attack hit. My body had been conditioned to react this way after years of his psychological conditioning.

Hudson let out a heavy, long-suffering sigh. His brows pulled together, creating a perfect mask of exhausted heartache. He was a master of the gaslight. He reached over with his right hand, popped open the center console, and pulled out the familiar orange prescription bottle. He always kept it within arm's reach.

Using only his thumb, he popped the child-proof cap off and shook a single, small white Xanax pill into his palm.

He held the pill up to my lips. His voice was a low, magnetic rumble. "Be a good girl, Cora. You've had a long day, and Dr. Evans said we cannot skip a dose. You know what happens when you skip."

He used the doctor's name like a weapon. A reminder of the authority that kept me caged.

I stared at the white pill hovering inches from my mouth. My stomach heaved, a violent wave of nausea rolling through my gut. My body instinctively rejected the poison. I wanted to take the pink butterfly clip and drag the plastic teeth across his perfect, handsome face.

But then, a blinding flash of pure, cold logic struck my brain. The architect inside me—the woman who used to design skyscrapers before she was reduced to a medicated ghost—woke up. If I screamed now, locked in a moving car with him, he would just double the dose. He would drag me back to the clinic.

I slowly loosened my white-knuckled grip. I let the pink hair clip slip from my fingers, letting it fall silently back into the dark gap between the seats.

I parted my lips and leaned forward, obediently taking the pill from his fingers.

Hudson smiled. It was a terrifyingly satisfied curve of his mouth. He picked up an open bottle of water from the cupholder and handed it to me.

I took a massive gulp of the cold water. I tilted my head back, forcing my throat to bob in an exaggerated swallowing motion.

Satisfied, Hudson took the water bottle back, placed both hands on the steering wheel, and returned his attention to the slick, rainy road ahead. The crisis, in his mind, was averted.

I leaned my head back against the leather headrest and closed my eyes. I forced my chest to rise and fall in a slow, even rhythm. Underneath my tongue, pressed hard against the floor of my mouth, the white pill began to dissolve in my saliva. The chalky, intensely bitter chemical taste flooded my tastebuds. It was vile. It made my throat burn. But I didn't twitch a single muscle in my face. The pain of the bitterness was a tether keeping me awake.

The Mercedes slowed down, the tires hissing over the wet pavement as we turned into the long driveway of our Seattle mansion. We were back to the cage. But the prisoner was awake.

"This bitterness, I'll make you taste it back a thousand times."

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