
Suddenly, there was a sharp blow—so powerful that the frail partition shuddered like it had been struck by a sledgehammer. In the next instant, the wall caved in, plaster splintering and raining down in jagged pieces.
Claire Donovan screamed, stumbling backward as dust filled the room. She dropped to the floor, arms over her head, while bits of broken wood and plaster scattered across her shoulders and tangled in her hair.
When she dared to lift her eyes, a figure stood framed in the doorway.
A man.
Dressed head to toe in black, hood pulled over his head, his face swallowed in shadow.
He stepped forward slowly, and in the dim light from the hallway, Claire could only make out his silhouette—tall, broad, deliberate.
Her chest tightened. “Who are you?!” she shouted, her voice shaking. “What do you want?!”
The man lunged without warning. His hand clamped down on her shoulder, shoving her hard against the floorboards. Her phone lay just inches away, the screen glowing faintly. She reached out desperately—but his boot knocked it across the room, skidding into darkness.
Panic surged. Claire twisted, clawing at his arms, kicking wildly. She sank her nails into flesh, bit his wrist, but his strength was overwhelming.
And then the light shifted, spilling just enough across his face for her to see.
Her blood ran cold.
It wasn’t a stranger.
It was David Donovan—her husband.
The man she had once loved. The man she had fled from.
“I told you,” he hissed, his voice dripping with venom, “you can’t run from me.” His grip tightened cruelly as he yanked her head back by her hair. Claire gasped in pain.
“I found you,” David whispered, his eyes burning with hatred. “And now… you’ll do exactly what I say.”
Her scream tore through the abandoned house, echoing against cracked walls and broken beams. But no neighbors came. No footsteps approached. This street had long been forgotten, the houses left empty, the people unwilling to get involved in problems that weren’t their own.
Claire realized in that terrifying instant: no one would save her.
She would have to save herself.
Claire felt David’s hot breath against her ear, his grip tightening until her scalp burned. The stench of mildew in the abandoned house mixed with the smell of sweat and violence, choking her. But in that moment of despair, her survival instinct roared to life.
She remembered the shard of glass from the broken picture frame lying nearby when the wall had collapsed. Summoning every ounce of strength, Claire let her body go limp, pretending to give in. David leaned down to pin her tighter—and in that instant, she seized the shard and slashed across his arm.
He roared in pain, loosening his grip for a fraction of a second. Claire didn’t hesitate. She rolled away, blood from a cut on her forehead trickling down her cheek, but her eyes now burned with determination. She scrambled toward the hallway, legs trembling, heart pounding wildly.
David cursed behind her, his heavy footsteps thundering closer. Claire nearly tripped over a broken floorboard, but then she saw the old window, already blown open by the wind. Without thinking, she hurled herself through it, her body crashing hard onto the ground outside. Pain shot through her bones, but she was free.
Through sheer adrenaline, Claire pushed herself up, sprinting across the overgrown weeds, David’s furious shouts fading behind her. She ran and ran, never daring to look back, until the faint glow of a streetlight appeared in the distance and the hum of a car engine reached her ears.
Gasping, battered, and bruised, she stumbled onto the road, waving desperately. The car screeched to a halt. A door swung open, and a worried voice called out:
— “Are you okay?”
Tears welled in Claire’s eyes as she nodded, torn between despair and fragile hope.
That night, in the suffocating darkness of the abandoned house, David had believed she would remain his prey forever. But Claire knew one thing with absolute certainty: she would never allow herself to be a victim again.