Guilty by a Ruby Necklace

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Chapter 1

I just bought my daughter a ruby choker. But the moment I fastened it around her neck, my world came crashing down.

The shopkeeper called me a sick freak. My loving husband demanded an instant divorce. My best friend called me a monster.

Why? It’s just a piece of jewelry... right?

——

"It's beautiful," I said.

The antique shop smelled of dust and old wood. Maeve stood before the vanity mirror, her fair skin contrasting against the dark velvet of her dress.

I fastened the ruby choker around her neck. The deep red stone rested perfectly at the hollow of her throat.

The shop owner, who had been chatting with me moments ago about the weather, paused at the register. He looked up.

The polite retail smile fell from his face.

He snatched the receipt from the printer, crumbled it into a ball, and threw it on the counter.

"Get out."

I stared at him. "Excuse me?"

He marched around the glass display, grabbing my arm and shoving me toward the door.

"Get out of my store. You sick, twisted freak."

"Don't touch me!" I pulled Maeve close, my heart hammering against my ribs.

He shoved us onto the pavement and slammed the door.

Through the glass, he stared at me with unadulterated disgust.

I locked the car doors the second we got inside. My hands gripped the steering wheel tight enough to make my knuckles ache as I pulled into traffic.

"Don't be mad, Mommy."

Maeve's soft voice drifted from the back seat. I glanced in the rearview mirror. She wasn’t scared at all. Instead, her tiny fingers were gently tracing the silver clasp of the ruby choker.

"I'm not mad, sweetie." I forced a shaky breath, trying to loosen my grip on the wheel. "That man was just... very rude."

"It's okay." She tilted her fragile chin up, letting the afternoon sun hit the deep red stone.

"I love it so much. Thank you for putting it on me." She looked straight into the mirror, her eyes full of innocent joy. "It makes me look pretty. Right?"

Seeing her like this, the panic in my chest finally melted away. I smiled back.

"You look beautiful, princess," I whispered, focusing back on the road.

Desmond was in the kitchen pouring a glass of water when we walked in. He wore his usual crisp button-down, the perfect picture of a loving husband.

"You won't believe the psycho I just dealt with," I told him, throwing my keys onto the counter.

Desmond turned to hand me the water. He stopped. His eyes bypassed my face and locked onto Maeve’s neck.

"I bought a ruby choker——"

The glass slipped through his fingers. It shattered loudly against the tile. Water splashed over his shoes.

"Desmond?"

He didn't clean it up. He didn't look at me. He walked slowly toward Maeve, staring at the ruby.

"Did you put that on her?"

"Yes, it's an early birthday pres—"

"Did you do it 'yourself'?" he interrupted, cutting off the space between us. The warmth I had known for ten years was gone. Replaced by a stranger.

"Of course I did. I fastened the clasp directly."

Desmond backed away from me. He looked at me as if I were carrying a disease.

"Pack your things," he said. "We are getting a divorce. Today."

My breath hitched. "What? Desmond, are you out of your mind?"

I reached out to grab his arm, desperate to snap him out of whatever trance this was. 

He recoiled violently, smacking my hand away. 

"Don't," he spat. His chest was heaving. "Don't you ever touch me again."

Before I could process the sting on my hand, he grabbed Maeve's wrist. Not gently. 

"Go to your room," he ordered, dragging her toward the stairs. 

"Mommy!" Maeve whimpered, stumbling behind him, her tiny fingers instinctively clutching the red stone at her throat. 

"Desmond, stop it! You're hurting her!" I chased them to the bottom of the landing, my voice breaking. "A divorce? Over a necklace? Just talk to me!"

He paused on the second step, looking down at me.

"You make my skin crawl," he whispered. 

He pulled Maeve up the stairs and out of sight. 

I stood paralyzed in the hallway, my legs shaking so badly I had to grip the banister to stay upright.

This isn't real. The antique dealer was a crazy stranger, but Desmond? My husband of ten years? 

My chest tightened. The walls felt like they were closing in. I needed someone to tell me I wasn't losing my grip on reality.

I stumbled into the bathroom and shoved the door shut, locking it. My fingers slipped on the phone screen to dial my best friend, Valerie.

She picked up on the second ring. "Rosalind? You sound awful."

I sank onto the cold bathmat. "Everyone is going crazy. The antique dealer just physically threw me out, and now Desmond is talking about a divorce."

"Whoa, slow down," Valerie said. "Divorce? Over what?"

"A necklace. A ruby choker I bought for Maeve."

"That’s insane. Send me a picture."

I quickly texted her a photo I had snapped of Maeve in the shop.

There was a pause on the line. I heard her breath catch.

"Valerie? It's just jewelry, right?"

"It's a necklace," she said, her voice tight and clipped. "Rosalind, listen to me very carefully. That choker... did you put it on her yourself?"

The question again. The exact same phrasing. A phantom grip tightened around my chest.

"Yes," I whispered. "I put it on her."

Silence hung over the receiver.

"Valerie?"

"I wish I never met you." The sheer venom in her tone made me flinch. "I don't even want to hear your voice. You are a disgusting, sick monster."

"Valerie, wait—"

The call ended. I tapped her name to call back. It went straight to voicemail.

I scrambled off the floor and threw the bathroom door open. I practically ran down the hall to the main room.

Desmond was yanking my clothes from the dresser, aggressively stuffing them into a duffel bag.

"Desmond, stop!" I grabbed his arm. "Tell me what I did! Tell me why a piece of jewelry—"

He whipped around and backhanded me.

My head cracked against the doorframe. The sharp, metallic taste of blood filled my mouth.

Before I could process the shock, he lunged forward and grabbed me by the throat. He slammed me against the wall. His free hand snaked into the side pocket of the open duffel bag on the bed.

Cold steel pressed directly under my jaw.

I gasped, clawing at his thick fingers, choking on my own breath.

"Don't play the victim, Rosalind," he hissed. The strong scent of sanitizing alcohol rolled off his collar, invading my nose. "You know exactly what you did."

"I don't! I swear to God!"

He pressed the blade deeper. A warm trickle of blood slid down my neck.

"Even the most deranged animals protect their young. But you?" He stared into my eyes with unfiltered hatred. "You're not even human."

He ripped his hand away and snatched the packed duffel bag from the bed. He shoved me down the hallway and kicked the attic door open. 

I stumbled over the threshold and fell hard onto the dusty floorboards. 

Before I could push myself up, the heavy bag of my clothes flew through the darkness and slammed roughly into my ribs. 

Desmond didn't hesitate. He grabbed the handle and pulled the heavy door shut. 

The deadbolt clicked.

Complete darkness swallowed me whole. 

I scrambled to the door, tripping over my own clothes, and threw my weight against the wood. I beat my fists against it until my knuckles split open.

Through the floorboards, I heard Desmond's voice downstairs. Gentle again. Soothing.

"It's okay, Maeve. Daddy's here. I won't let her hurt you."

I slid down the rough wood, pulling my knees to my chest. The suffocating silence of the attic pressed into my ears, amplifying the beat of my own terrified heart.

"Why?" I screamed out into the pitch black. "If you're going to kill me, at least tell me why!"

No one answered.

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