I never thought the day my hearing came back would feel like a curse.
One second, there was silence—the kind of hollow quiet I had lived in for five years, where everything was just shapes and gestures, where my husband's lips moved but never reached my soul. Then, like a glass shattering, sound rushed in. My breath, the hum of the air conditioner, the sharp laugh of another woman.
Melissa,
I froze in the doorway of the sitting room, my heart pounding so loud I could hear it for the first time in years. She was straddling Nathan's lap, her arms wrapped around his neck, her head thrown back as she laughed.
And then, I heard his voice.
"I love you."
It was like the earth cracked beneath me. My knees weakened. My eyes burned with tears I hadn't expected, tears that clouded my vision as the first words I'd heard in five years stabbed me deeper than any bullet ever could.
I wanted to scream, Nathan! I can hear again! I wanted to throw myself into his arms and tell him that a miracle had happened. That his wife, the woman who had taken a bullet for him, could finally speak and laugh with him again. But the miracle turned to poison.
The first thing I heard was my husband loving another woman.
Melissa shifted, turning her head. Her eyes landed on me. She smirked, lips curling like a knife. "Oh, look. She's here again."
Melissa tilted her head. "She's crying again," she murmured to him, though she still moved her hands cruelly in my direction. "Poor thing. She probably thinks you're hers."
Nathan chuckled soft, deep, and so familiar it cut me in half. "She knows where she stands."
Nathan followed her gaze, his arm still resting lazily on her waist. He didn't even flinch. Didn't even look guilty. Instead, he lifted his hand and moved his fingers in sharp, dismissive signs
Why are you here? Can't you see I'm busy? Get out.
Melissa laughed, her voice sharp in my ears. "Poor thing. She doesn't even understand, does she? I'm just standing there like a fool. Deaf and dumb, as always."
Her words were knives. Every syllable dripped with mockery.
And the worst part? She didn't know I could hear them now.
Something inside me cracked. For five years, I had been silent, enduring humiliation, enduring his coldness, enduring her taunts. For five years, I had believed my sacrifice meant something that taking that bullet, losing my hearing, becoming less than whole - would bind us tighter.
Instead, it left me abandoned in my own marriage.
I forced a smile, though tears blurred my vision. My hands trembled, but I signed back to Nathan: Sorry. I'll leave.
Melissa snorted. "She's apologizing. Can you believe it? I'm still begging for scraps like a dog."
I turned away before they saw the rage behind my tears. My body moved on its own, carrying me down the hall to our bedroom, the one place that had once felt safe.
But even here, memories clawed at me.
I remembered the night everything changed.
The gunshot. The chaos. Nathan was standing frozen as the man pulled the trigger. I stepped forward, shielding him, feeling the bullet tear through my flesh, searing pain, then nothing but ringing silence. I had collapsed in his arms, smiling through blood, whispering, I saved you.
When I woke up in the hospital, I couldn't hear. Nathan had held my hand at first. He had signed clumsily and kissed my forehead. But slowly, day by day, his warmth vanished.How Melissa began appearing at the house more often, pretending to help me with chores, pretending to be my friend.
How stupid I had been. His touches grew cold. His words when he bothered to sign were clipped, cruel. And Melissa… Melissa filled the void I could no longer reach.
Five years.
Five years of enduring all this trash of a marriage.
And tonight, the first words I heard were not his love for me but for her.
By the time I reached my room, my tears had dried, leaving only a hollow ache.
I slammed the door shut and pressed my back against it, breathing hard. I wasn't going to cry anymore.
My chest heaved with betrayal. But then… I noticed it.
His desk.
Always immaculate. Every file in place, every pen aligned. Except tonight, one drawer hung open, just slightly.
Curiosity pulled me forward. My fingers trembled as I pulled it open and found a neat stack of papers clipped together.
My fingers trembled as I lifted them. I expected business contracts, maybe financial reports. But as I flipped through page after page, my stomach dropped.
These weren't contracts. They were transfers.
Bank statements. Property deeds. Stock portfolios. All signed away. All under Melissa's name. Not mine. Not his wife's. but for Hers.
My chest constricted. Every sacrifice I made, every year I endured, every tear I swallowed—it all led to this. Nathan was erasing me. Erasing us. Replacing me with her.
At the bottom of the stack, his bold signature sealed the betrayal.
My hands shook so badly that I almost dropped the papers. A sob tore out of me before I could stop it, muffled against my palm.
Everything I had given, everything I had lost, was for nothing.Every sacrifice I made. Every scar I carried. Every lonely, silent night. All of it, and he was giving our life away to her.
I pressed a shaking hand to my mouth to stop the sob that wanted to escape. My knees buckled, and I sank onto the chair in front of the desk, staring at the pages like they were knives stabbing me over and over again.
And I stood there, chest heaving, my fingers gripping the hidden papers so tight they crumpled.
My silence had been my prison. But tonight, my silence became my weapon.
Because they didn't know
I could hear now.
And I would make them both pay.
This was the moment. The moment Rachel, the silent wife, died.
Someone colder. Stronger. More dangerous
"You'll regret this, Nathan. Both of you."
And for the first time since the bullet stole my hearing, I wasn't afraid anymore.
The door creaked.
I shot up, panicked, shoving the papers under my nightgown, pressing them against my ribs, heart hammering.
Melissa stepped inside, her heels clicking against the floor. Her eyes flicked to me, and she tilted her head with a smile that was pure venom.
"Well, well," she purred, walking closer. "Still lurking around?"
I forced my face to stay blank, terrified she could see the tremble in my hands.
She stopped in front of me, leaned down so her perfume smothered me, and whispered softly, "Very soon, all of this sweet life will belong to me. Too bad you can't hear me."
Then she laughed, loud and sharp, before straightening. She lifted her hands and signed mockingly: Go prepare dinner. He likes it hot.
I bit down on my tongue so hard I tasted blood.
Melissa smirked as if I were a dog obeying her commands. She turned toward the door, her heels clicking like a countdown to my breaking point.
But just before leaving, she glanced over her shoulder, her eyes glinting with wicked delight.
"Anyone who tries to stop me," she whispered coldly, "will end up like you." Rusbbish, looks like getting you deaf was not enough. Just wait and see you freak.