Monday, December 15, 2025

Episode 38: The Unmasking

 



🌹  

## Episode 38: The Unmasking

**Scene 1: Cindy's Twisted Calculus**

Cindy drove back to her new apartment, the interior of the car thick with the steam of her barely contained fury.

The image of Allyson and Ted kissing—a kiss Ted had clearly initiated—was a betrayal that sliced through her narcissistic ego. *They share a deep bond. They still believe in their pathetic, pure little love story.* That phrase tasted like bile in her throat. Her elaborate plans to cause division were not working the way she had designed; she had secured Ted's proximity, but Allyson was a tenacious, unforeseen problem, a constant, annoying reminder of genuine affection.

**Cindy's Thoughts and Emotions:** Her hands gripped the steering wheel, knuckles white. *Allyson is not the meek mouse I expected. That late-night stunt, showing off Ted's clothes, was a calculated act of war, not desperation.* Her pride was wounded. She briefly considered driving back and causing a scene, but her survival instinct—the cold, calculating part of her mind—pulled her back. *I cannot push too hard. Ted is emotionally fragile right now, and if I appear unhinged, I lose the credibility of the 'wounded friend.' I need him to believe I am his safe harbor, not a raging shrew.* She knew she had to proceed with subtlety to disrupt their date tomorrow. It must be a public interruption, one that made Allyson seem jealous or possessive, without Cindy appearing directly responsible. *I will break them by proving they can't have a normal day without me present. I'll make the shoe drop on their fantasy before they even leave the parking lot.*

**Scene 2: The Dorm Warning**

Ted returned to his dorm. The confusion from the day—Cindy’s kindness mixed with the guilt of Allyson’s tears—left him feeling emotionally wrung out. Marco, his steady, sensible roommate, was just reading a book.

“Hey, good to see you back, Ted. Now you can pick up some slack,” Marco said, attempting a joke before his face settled into seriousness. He closed his book. “Ted, we need to talk. Although I joke with you, I need you to listen: watch out for Cindy. I believe, in my gut, she pushed you. Things were going great with Allyson; I don't think you would discard that romance for a fun evening on a cliff. Remember she's done that take-off-clothes thing before.”

“I hear you, Marco, I'm being cautious. I have a date with Allyson tomorrow that I'm genuinely excited about! I need that,” Ted replied, the mention of the date a necessary anchor against the sinking feeling Marco’s words brought.

“Ted, do me a favor: if you hang out with Cindy again, no drinking, no cliffs. And this may seem paranoid, Ted, but watch your drinks. I wouldn't put it past Cindy to maybe drug you to control the narrative.”

The suggestion was chilling, hitting Ted with a jolt of alarm he couldn't ignore. “I will be careful, even though I desperately want to believe she would not go that far,” Ted promised, though he felt a cold fear trace down his spine.

**Ted's Thoughts:** *Marco speaks with conviction, and he knows Cindy's history better than I remember. Why is it so hard to believe? Because when I'm with her, she makes me feel like a hero, not a victim. But when I'm with Allyson, I feel cleansed, like I'm finally home. Marco sees the dangerous truth—is he being a paranoid friend, or am I being willfully blind because I'm exhausted and vulnerable? I owe Allyson clarity, and I owe myself the truth.*

**Marco's Thoughts:** *Ted is walking wounded. He's trying to rationalize Cindy's manipulative kindness because he can't recall the painful truth. He's too decent to suspect her fully. Cindy is a disease, and Allyson is the only cure. I need to keep watching that lunatic, because my friend’s life is at stake.*

**Scene 3: Sarah and Allyson's Truth Exchange**

The next day, the sun was bright, contrasting with the simmering emotional tension. Ted spent the morning running errands and setting up the perfect picnic basket, excited for his dedicated time with Allyson. He needed to prove to her—and himself—where his heart belonged.

Allyson was able to leave work early, giving her time to run an errand, shower, and get dressed up for Ted. She ran out of feminine hygiene products and headed to the local convenience store, Mariner's Market.

Alone in the aisle, searching, she suddenly heard a crisp, upper-class English accent ask the clerk where they kept the biscuits. She instantly knew the voice. She rounded the corner, and there was Sarah, alone.

“Sarah, how are you doing?” Allyson asked cautiously. “Oh, is Andrew here? If he is, I will leave immediately,” she said, respectful of Sarah's pain.

Sarah smiled faintly, a tired expression of gratitude. “No, he’s at the home with the baby. I really appreciate that you are so considerate, Allyson. Thank you.”

“So, Sarah, it's okay for me to ask how things are going?” Allyson inquired gently.

“Well, things are going good. We're repairing our stuff. But then I came back one day, and this black-haired woman in a bikini, Kate, had to go to the bathroom and then took a shower, and then her top broke, and she had to wear a towel to go wherever she went.”

The hairs on Allyson's neck prickled with a dreadful certainty. The story was identical to Cindy's past manipulations. “I know it’s none of my business, Sarah, but what was the name of that woman who was laying on the beach?”

Sarah confirmed, “I think her name was Kate,” and described the woman's physical appearance precisely.

Allyson felt a surge of painful realization mixed with protective urgency. She grabbed Sarah's arm, her eyes wide. “Sarah, I know I need to tell you something. Andrew may not have been at fault that day. That woman’s real name is Cindy. Cindy Kate. She's the one I know pushed Ted off the cliff. She's back in town and trying to weasel between me and Ted. She is doing a good job of it.”

Allyson leaned in, her voice low and desperate. “Sarah, I have to tell you, Cindy is dangerous. I think she set up that whole bikini scene between Andrew and her to try to break up your marriage. She's trying to dismantle any happy relationship she encounters. Be careful. And please, go easy on Andrew. He was set up. She timed it for maximum shock value.”

Allyson looked at her watch, her heart aching for Ted and Sarah simultaneously. “I have to go now. I have my first actual date with Ted, and he explicitly told me he still has strong feelings for me. I’m not gonna let Cindy destroy anything else.”

**Scene 4: A Mocha and An Apology**

Sarah watched Allyson rush out of the store. The weight of Allyson's confession settled over her. *He was set up. Her goal was to disrupt the marriage.* A fierce wave of anger toward Cindy washed over her, but it was quickly replaced by profound relief for Andrew. Sarah's mind eased knowing that Andrew’s encounter was orchestrated. What he did was wrong, but he walked into a calculated performance. He was a victim of his own weakness and her malice.

**Sarah's Thoughts:** *Cindy engineered the entire thing to prove Andrew was weak and to destroy us. She used his two failed marriages, his deepest fear, as a weapon. This doesn't excuse him letting her into the house, but it changes everything about my approach. My husband was betrayed just as much as I was. I need to be his safe place, his partner, not his judge.*

She completed her purchase, making sure to grab Andrew’s favorite mocha coffee.

She got back home and set her items down. Andrew was in the living room, playing with Alice, making her "do airplane," eliciting delighted baby giggles. Sarah’s heart warmed profoundly, watching the tender, authentic connection between father and daughter.

Andrew set the baby down in her bouncy toy. “Sarah, I think the baby is tired. Can you—”

She stopped him mid-sentence, handing him the mocha. “I got this for you, sweetie. Don’t worry about the baby for a moment.”

Andrew took the coffee, his brow furrowed in confusion. The shift. She had left serious and angry, and returned with his favorite coffee and a strange softness. He wondered what significant event could have transpired in the last hour to change her mood so completely.

> **SARAH:** (Walking up to him, gently cupping his cheek) “Sweetheart, put the mocha down for a second. I ran into someone at the market. Allyson, Ted Miller's girlfriend? She told me everything. Andrew, that woman on the beach… the one who called herself Kate… her real name is Cindy. The same Cindy who tried to push Ted off a cliff.”

> **ANDREW:** (His eyes widening, breath catching in shock) “Cindy? Miller’s ex? Are you serious?”

> **SARAH:** “Yes. Allyson confirmed it. She described the whole scene with the bikini top breaking. Andrew, I think you were completely set up. Cindy is a dangerous, narcissistic woman. Allyson says she's back in town, trying to destroy her and Ted's relationship. I believe she orchestrated that entire scene to break us.”

> **ANDREW:** (Reaching up to cover her hand with his, his gaze intense) “Set up... My God, Sarah. I never wanted to betray you. I love you more than anything. But knowing it was planned—knowing she was trying to prove I was weak...” He shook his head, the crushing weight of guilt replaced by horror. “She’s a psychopath, isn’t she? That's why she pushed Miller off the cliff. She’s out to destroy everything good.”

> **SARAH:** (Leaning into his distress, her voice firm but tender) “She is. And that doesn't excuse you letting her into our home, Andrew. You still opened the door to temptation. But everything was truly against you from the start. I know your heart wasn't trying to leave me; your heart was simply terrified of failing me. I forgive you for being human and falling into her trap.”

> **ANDREW:** (His hands gripping her arms gently) “Maybe I'm being paranoid, but how far will she go? Are we in danger?” he asked her, his voice low with sudden dread.

> **SARAH:** “I don't know, Andrew. I really don't know,” she replied, her voice catching with shared fear. Fear swept over both of them at that point, settling deep in their bones. “We just have to stay aware. We have to be united against her now.”

Andrew pulled her into a fierce, relieved hug, burying his face in her hair. The news had lifted a thousand pounds of individual guilt and replaced it with a united focus on protecting their family from an external, dangerous threat.

“I love you, Sarah. We will shut her out. I promise.”


Sunday, December 14, 2025

Episode 37: The Gauntlet

 




💔 Episode 37: The Gauntlet 

Scene 1: Andrew and Sarah's Shattered Sanctuary

Sarah took Alice downtown, economically investing in her own calm. She picked up a warm cup of herbal tea and bought another small, plush toy for Alice. She spent the core of the day focused entirely on her daughter, then returned to the beach house and put the baby down for a long nap.

Andrew found her sitting on the sofa, staring out at the turbulent, slate-gray ocean. The silence in the room was not peaceful; it was a heavy, pressurized atmosphere, thick with unspoken accusation and lingering shame.

“Sarah,” he began, sitting tentatively near her. “How long was the baby down for?”

“A while. We can talk now.” Her voice was measured, utterly devoid of the usual warmth he cherished, replaced by a steely, professional seriousness.

Andrew took a deep breath, his confession weighted with palpable self-disgust. He reached for her hand, his touch pleading. She allowed him to take it, but her grip was passive, not reciprocating.

> “I keep telling myself that what we have… this thing that is so magical, so perfect in my mind… it simply cannot be true,” he whispered, his voice cracking with the admission. “I want this marriage to work, Sarah. I want it with all my heart. But I’ve failed twice before. Twice. And every time something goes wrong, I look at the beautiful life we’ve built, and I get scared. With my history, my luck… I’m still terrified that I’m the flaw, and that I’ll be the one who makes this shoe drop, too.” He added quickly, “I do love you. You truly are the best thing that ever happened to me.”

Sarah took a deep, steadying breath. She gently placed her free hand on his cheek, her thumb tracing the line of his jaw. The touch was warm, but her gaze remained unwavering.

> “Oh, sweetheart, I know your history terrifies you,” she whispered, her voice layered with genuine sorrow for his pain. “But you are not your past failures, Andrew. I know how badly you want this, and that’s why I’m here. That’s why I’m fighting. But you have to see this clearly: The shoe already dropped, and it wasn’t fate, it was a choice. A choice you made when you valued a fleeting image of desire over the sanctuary of your home. You looked at our life and you tested it.”

> She leaned closer, her eyes glittering with profound, painful resolve. “The magic isn’t that we’re perfect. The magic is that we have the strength to survive this. But you have to choose to be stronger than your fear. If we are going to rebuild, you need to understand that my love is not the fragile fantasy that will shatter; it is the absolute foundation that caught you when you fell.”

Sarah’s Internal Thoughts: He needs my compassion, but he also needs the truth. If I let him off the hook, he’ll never trust the strength of our foundation. I can be angry at his actions and still love the man underneath. That love is what gives me the strength to demand more of him.

They talked until about one in the morning, their voices low and honest, two exhausted architects trying to mend a structure they both still needed. Then, they cuddled the night away, clinging to each other in a desperate attempt to restore the sacred, safe space their bedroom once was.

Scene 2: Allyson's Heartbreak

The day passed quickly, soon it was time for Ted to be back at the conference grounds. It was the day of Ted’s return.

Allyson was so happy, just bursting to see her Ted again. She had to work until 8 PM. As soon as she signed off at eight p.m., she went looking for Ted, eager to give him a hug, maybe a kiss, and tell him how much she missed him.

Eight o'clock came. Allyson went to his dorm room and knocked, but no one came out. She asked one of her fellow workers if Ted had come home. The worker replied, “Yes, I welcomed him back, and then I think he took off with Cindy.”

Allyson’s heart plummeted. She wanted to cry, her internal thoughts a painful loop: I've waited for him, I've hoped for him, and now the first thing he does is go with Cindy? She had no clue where Cindy lived now, and no one seemed to know her new address in town.

Upset and helpless, Allyson crumbled and sank back to the girls' dorm.

Scene 3: Cindy's Calculated Invasion

Meanwhile, the day of Ted's return, Cindy was already at work. When he arrived, Ted loved being back and was excited to see all his coworkers. By now, Cindy had made sure her version of what happened—the "passionate mistake" and her panic—had spread through the grapevine. Some believed the story had been pushed by Cindy, and others believed Cindy's story. Others simply weren't interested.

After he got settled in and said hi to everyone, Cindy found him.

“Ted!” she exclaimed, her voice bright and warm. “I missed you! Say, you want to see my new apartment? I just got it set up,” she told Ted.

“Hey, Cindy! It’s good to see you. Got an apartment? Sure, lead the way,” he said.

Cindy grabbed his hand. "Let me show you." She made a point of everyone seeing them go off hand-in-hand. Then, in the eye sight of everyone, she gave him a brief, intimate kiss on the cheek—just for the sake of the people mentioning it to Allyson.

They then walked and talked all the way to her apartment. She opened the door.

“Can I get you anything?” she asked.

“Pop, maybe?” he said.

“Sure.” She handed him a can of soda. They sat down on her bed, which was all part of her plan. “My couch hasn’t come in yet. Sorry about having to sit on my bed,” she told him, feigning mild embarrassment.

They laughed and joked. She had completely fooled Ted for the moment. Her goal was, if Ted didn't remember what happened by then, she would have already destroyed Allyson and any possible relationship with Ted.

She bumped his soda intentionally, making it appear as an accident.

“Oh, I’m sorry, Ted!” she said, rushing to grab a towel. “Give me the shirt, and I’ll hand-wash the stain and hang it up to dry. It should be dry by the time you go home.”

“Ted, would you mind if I get a picture? I don’t have many pictures of you.”

“Sure,” Ted said. “But don’t you want to wait till my shirt is dry?” he asked.

“Oh, it’s fine. I want to have a memory forever,” she told him.

She took the picture with her phone and posted it on her Facebook with the tag: Best friends together again.

“Oh, Ted, I’m sorry I didn’t ask if it was okay to post it. I can erase it if you want,” she said with her manipulated, caring tone, which Ted was totally oblivious to.

“Oh, that’s fine. I’m really not on social media. I don’t even know if my account is still active,” he told her. Ted wasn't a social media person; he preferred face-to-face contact.

They laughed and joked about when they first went to the beach for work. A few moments later, a pizza arrived. “Ted, I forgot I had ordered this. I normally get a pizza once a week. I thought if you came by, it’d be a nice surprise,” she told him. Nothing she did was an accident; everything was pre-planned. She knew that posting that picture would get back to Allyson.

She then took another picture of them on the bed, her hand resting innocently on his bare chest. “Oh, thank you, Ted. I just wanted that other picture in case the original one didn’t turn out,” she lied. She then posted the second picture to her Facebook saying: Friends reuniting.

They talked and joked the day away into early night. They then began to kiss softly.

“That felt good,” she said to Ted.

“I liked it, too,” said Ted.

Scene 4: Allyson's Pain and Ted's Conflict

Meanwhile, at her dorm, Allyson was still friends with Cindy on Facebook. A notification popped up that someone posted something new. Allyson looked at her phone and saw the pictures of Ted and Cindy at her apartment—him shirtless in one pose, and in the next, with Cindy’s hand on his chest. She was angry, concerned, and really sad all at once.

Allyson now knew that Cindy was really trying to edge Ted out from the start.

A knock came on her door. It was her roommate, Maria.

“Allyson? I saw the photo on Facebook. She honestly has him convinced that she is not the bad guy,” Maria told her.

“Well, are people actually believing her story?” Allyson asked her roommate.

“Some believe her, some don't, because it was just the two of them up there, and he can’t remember anything,” Maria told her.

Allyson started to cry. “I thought I had lost him when he was saved from the ocean. I thought we could make everything the way it was. I didn’t know Cindy was capable of this evil manipulation.” With that, she cried on Maria’s shoulder.

Scene 5: The Late-Night Confession

Cindy and Ted about wrapped up the first day. Ted put on his shirt and said, “I really need to get some sleep.” Ted then left and walked back home.

As he walked, he had a lot to think about. He reflected on how nice Cindy was being to him. He racked his brain trying to prove or disprove the story that Cindy had told. True, Cindy had lied to him before, but she said that it was only because she had feelings for him and didn't know how to express it—at least that's what she told him while they were talking. So far, she hadn't done anything to arouse suspicion. He would just have to wait to see what happened.

He was thinking about Allyson. He hadn't forgotten her; he was looking forward to seeing her tomorrow. He also had very strong feelings for Allyson. He missed her, too, and he knew that Cindy was going to be possessive. Some might think that having two girls interested in and pursuing them would be a dream come true. But he thought, It's a very volatile situation. I want to love one woman and pursue a future with one woman. Now I have to sort through two women. How did I get into this mess?

As he got onto the conference grounds, he went and knocked on the window of the girls' dorm, which was basically like a small house. Allyson’s roommate, Maria, answered the door.

“Can you tell her I’m here?” Ted asked.

“Yes.” Maria went up and got Allyson. “Allyson, Ted’s outside and wants to see you.”

“I’m a mess,” she responded, but she didn’t want him to go away. So, in her men’s boxers and oversized white T-shirt, she came outside.

“Allyson, aren’t you cold?” he said to her.

“I don’t care. I’ve been waiting so long to see you.” She began to tear up. “I was waiting for you to come home, but apparently you went to Cindy’s apartment.”

“Hey, yeah, those are the boxers you gave me—you had them custom fit,” she sheepishly said. “It makes me feel close to you. And this is your shirt. So it’s like I always have you with me.”

Ted thought how special she took those gifts. He also thought how sexy she looked. His breath quickened.

Before she could say anything, Ted just leaned in and kissed her—a big, long kiss. “I was waiting to do that, Allyson.” Then, she kissed him back, a longer, more passionate kiss.

“I did miss you, Allyson. You’re my first thought upon waking up, beyond the fact I’m still really in pain. I wondered how worried you’d be,” Ted said.

“Allyson, tomorrow I will meet you after you’re done with your work, and we’ll spend the rest of the day together. I promise.”

They kissed again. Every kiss, Ted thought, stirred something in him.

Ted’s Internal Thoughts: This is it. This is home. Cindy is fun, she’s exciting, and she feels like a high-stakes distraction. But Allyson… she’s my sanctuary. She's the honest peace I came here searching for. When I kiss her, I feel cleansed. When I see her wearing my clothes, I don't just feel desire; I feel owned, in the best possible way. The choice shouldn't be hard, but why is Cindy’s pull so insistent? I love Allyson, I need to choose her. But I owe Cindy a chance to prove her story is true.

Then, she went back up to her dorm room, and he went on to his dorm room, smiling and thinking about Allyson.

Allyson returned to her dorm room and told Maria, her roommate, all about the encounter.

> MARIA: “Okay, spill! You went out there in nothing but his boxers and a t-shirt—the audacity! The beautiful, beautiful audacity! What did he say when he saw you?”

> ALLYSON: (Sighing happily, clutching her chest) “He just looked at me. He asked if I was cold, and I told him I didn’t care. But Maria, when he saw me in his boxers... he got this look. You know, that quickened breath thing? I told him that wearing his clothes makes me feel like I always have him with me.”

> MARIA: “I bet! That was a power move, especially after that photo Cindy posted. You reminded him of home, Allyson. Did you guys just talk about Cindy, or did you get any action?”

> ALLYSON: “Oh, Maria! He leaned in, just like that, and kissed me. A long one! He said he’d been waiting to do that, and I kissed him back even harder. He promised we’ll spend the whole day together tomorrow, just us. He said I was his first thought when he woke up.”

> MARIA: “See? Cindy can post all the fake 'best friends' pictures she wants. That kiss means everything. He didn't just see Allyson; he saw his woman, wearing his things. You’ve still got his heart, sweetie. Now, let's figure out what you’re wearing tomorrow.”

Meanwhile, Cindy, from a distance in the shadows, watched all this go down. She could hear what they said. She was infuriated because Ted had given Allyson more physical attention than her. Cindy did not expect Allyson to fight so hard for Ted. She had underestimated the love that those two have. That only made it more of a challenge for her to sow division between the two of them.

Now it's just a bit tougher because Allyson is bringing her A-game.


Friday, December 12, 2025

Episode 36: The Destabilization

 


💔  

## Episode 36: The Destabilization

### Scene 1: Cindy's Calculated Joy

Cindy sat on the floor of her new, still-bare apartment in Cannon Beach, surrounded by boxes but feeling a quiet, fierce satisfaction. She replayed the scene in the hospital: Ted's confused eyes and the intimate lie of their "kiss." *I have him,* she thought, a slow, triumphant smile curving her lips. Her heart felt the pure, cold thrill of total control.

She paused, looking at the plush, unused sheets. "How far do I really want to take it? A little fun? Or the full experience?" The answer was simple: whatever would inflict the deepest, most permanent scar on Allyson's heart.

### Scene 2: The Beach Reconnaissance

Cindy’s online contact confirmed Sarah's morning run, leaving Andrew alone. The information was a perfect weak point to exploit.

The next morning, the air was crisp. Cindy donned her weapon: a micro-bikini, bright yellow, a color of dominance. She walked slowly, deliberately, until she was directly in front of Andrew and Sarah's beach house. She waited until she saw Andrew in the window.

### Scene 3: The Invasive Encounter

Cindy knocked, not with urgency, but with a sudden, breathless desperation. When Andrew opened the door, his eyes widened slightly at the sight of the scantily clad woman.

"Excuse me," she breathed, performing genuine need. "I am so terribly sorry, but I really have to use a restroom. Can I come in?"

Andrew hesitated, but his decency won out. "Come on in, but please be quiet. The baby is sleeping."

Cindy flashed him a grateful, lingering smile. **"You’re a lifesaver, Andrew. Honestly, I thought I’d have to run into the ocean just to hide my embarrassment. You’re far too kind to a total stranger."**

"I’m Andrew," he muttered, already feeling the weight of the intrusion.

"Hi, Andrew! Please excuse me!" she said, rushing off toward the bathroom.

### Scene 4: The Ultimate, Naked Confrontation

Andrew nervously placed the towel on the vanity. To his surprise, the shower started running. He stood frozen in the hall. Then, the water went silent.

"Andrew," she called out, her voice tight with artificial distress. "Could you come here?"

Before he could respond, the shower door swung wide. Cindy stepped out fully naked. She was glistening with water droplets, her body a flawless sculpture. Andrew gasped, stumbling back. He saw everything.

**"Andrew, relax,"** she said, enjoying his panic. She held up a small, broken piece of elastic. "The strap on my top snapped when I was rinsing the sand off. I can't walk across the beach like this." She stepped closer, letting the silence hang. "I need a shirt. Do you have anything at all I can borrow? I promise to bring it back."

His eyes were fixed on the floor. "Y-yes. I have one. Stay there!" he stammered, bolting out of the bathroom. He raced down the hall, grabbing one of his large, white T-shirts, and blindly shoved it around the edge of the door.

### Scene 5: The Fragile Truce and Sarah’s Fury

The moment she was clothed, the front door opened. Sarah's footsteps sounded on the wooden floor.

Cindy stepped out, wearing the T-shirt. She gave Andrew a quick, intimate kiss on the cheek, while deliberately placing her hand flat against his chest—a final, brazen gesture of possession.

Then Cindy turned to Sarah. "Oh! This must be your lovely wife," she said, her eyes meeting Sarah's in an icy challenge. She leaned in slightly as she passed Sarah, murmuring just loud enough for her to hear: **"It’s a bit snug, but it smells just like him. Thank you both again."**

Sarah stood motionless. The sight of the voluptuous woman in Andrew’s oversized, white T-shirt was a physical slap. Because of the woman's figure, the thin cotton stretched taut and visibly strained across her chest, molding to her form in a way that was a brazen insult.

"Andrew, why was a half-naked woman in our home? And why did she leave wearing your T-shirt?" Sarah's voice was low, trembling.

Andrew launched into his edited account. *I have to lie to save my marriage.* "I trust you," Sarah finally said, her words heavy. "But that is a new rule: don't let any female in again. Did you think she was attractive?"

"Honey, not half as attractive as you. You know I'm into redheads."

Her protective instincts kicked in. "Well, I'm going to shower after the run," she said, pulling him into the shower for a fierce, protective ritual.

### Scene 6: Sarah's Cleansing Fury and Collapse

Andrew left the shower to attend to the baby. Sarah scrubbed her skin, the hot water disguising the inevitable collapse.

*Andrew saw her naked, and he lied to me about it.* The tears came then, hot and silent. "I will not let her win," she choked out. When she stepped out, she was Sarah the Protector: calm, composed, replaced by a quiet, steely resolve.

### Scene 7: The Confession and The Setback

Andrew was changing the baby, consumed by shame. Sarah came in, her hair wrapped high in a towel.

"Sarah," he began, his voice a rasp. "I tried to lie to you. But I can't. It felt vile inside. I found her attractive, yes. And she stepped out of the shower naked. I stared at her way too long. I don't have a defense, sweetheart. Will you forgive me?"

Sarah watched him, her relief at his honesty clashing with the pain of the truth.

"I love you, Andrew," she said, her voice clear. **"But you let her use the shower? Not just the toilet? You stood outside a closed door while a stranger washed herself in our home?"** Her voice hardened. "I'm profoundly angry. That moment of hesitation was a deep violation, and it's totally on you. I want to work this out, but this choice, darling... it has set us back a few steps."

She rose, moving toward the baby. "I'm going now with the baby. I need some mama-baby time. Please just think about what you did. You chose this path. You need to find out why, when push came to shove, I'm not enough for you."


Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Episode 35: The Poisoned Table

 





💔 Episode 35: The Poisoned Table 


Cindy sat in her small, anonymous hotel room, the hum of the city a dull counterpoint to the sharp calculations in her head. She watched the video of the kiss again, a slow, triumphant smile curving her lips.

Cindy’s Thoughts: It’s started. This isn't revenge; this is punishment. They think they can ruin my life? No. They will pay. Every moment of happiness Ted and Allyson thought was precious—I'm going to destroy it all, starting with her.

She reviewed her notes, guiding the situation for maximum damage without arousing suspicion. She secured her new place in Cannon Beach, ensuring she would be a constant presence. She visited Ted for two days, establishing a rapport and cementing her false narrative.

The day arrived. Allyson got on the road to Portland. Cindy, informed of Allyson’s arrival, timed her final hospital visit perfectly.

Scene 4: The Unusually Cold Question

Allyson found Ted’s room and opened the door. Her world stopped. There was Cindy, sitting inches from Ted, laughing with him.

The shock made Allyson go instantly pale. What is Cindy doing here? Why are they being friendly? What has Cindy said to Ted?

ALLYSON: “Oh, Cindy. I see they released you from jail,” she said, her voice dangerously even.

Cindy looked at Allyson and flashed the wickedest, most triumphant smile.

CINDY: “Well, hello, Allyson. So I hear that Ted broke up with you. How are you doing?”

ALLYSON: “That’s between me and Ted.”

CINDY: “Well, I have to go, Ted. I have to move into my new place in Cannon Beach. Oh yeah, Allyson, I’ll be sticking around,” she said, directing the final line straight at Allyson, a clear declaration of war.

Cindy gave Ted a quick peck on the cheek and left.

Allyson walked over, tears already streaming down her face, and sat beside Ted.

ALLYSON: “Ted, you look better. I want to work things out. I love you, sweetie. I want us to get back together.”

Ted looked at her, his eyes distant.

TED: “Cindy came right up and spent several days with me. She says we went up the cliff to talk, she admitted her love for me, things got hot and heavy, and I tripped on my own pants and fell. She panicked and ran. Do you have any proof that that was a lie? Any real proof, beyond feelings?”

Allyson’s Thoughts: He is listening to her! She spun this terrible lie, and he is entertaining it. This isn’t my Ted. My heart is breaking.

ALLYSON: “No, I don’t have any proof. But I know how she is. You know how manipulative she is, Ted.”

TED: “So you don’t think she’s feeling guilty? You don’t think she’s just trying to be a better person? Allyson, do you think Cindy can't change?”

ALLYSON: “Ted, I know her. She lied to you before. I’ve never lied to you. I only have love for you.”

TED: “So you only have eyes for me, Allyson? You have been waiting for me and never wanted to be with anyone else?”

Scene 5: The Video Evidence and Confession

TED: “Let me show you a video, somebody forwarded me.”

He played the video. Allyson instantly recognized the motel security footage showing her and Andrew kissing and embracing in the hot tub. Her face crumpled.

ALLYSON: (Sobbing) “I can explain, Ted! You had rejected me, and I was feeling alone. The man is Andrew. He and his wife, Sarah, had already decided to work out their marriage two days before our encounter, and he said I should try to get back together with you. We went to that motel, and yes, we were in the hot tub. We just sat and talked in the hotel room after. That’s it! That’s what happened.”

Ted listened, the coldness in his eyes softening slightly.

TED: “Did you make love to him, Allyson?”

ALLYSON: (Crying) “No! We didn’t make love. Only kissing.”

Ted wiped his eyes, feeling the sting of the lie of omission. She lied, he thought.

TED: “Can you answer this for me? Did you want to have sex with him? If he hadn’t called it off, would you have had sex with him?”

Allyson’s Internal Thoughts: Answering truthfully would make it incredibly hard to ever get back together, but he wouldn't respect me if I didn't answer truthfully.

She took a deep, shuddering breath.

ALLYSON: “Yes. I wanted to. My world had collapsed when you broke up with me. I was broken and emotionally vulnerable. Yes, if he had called it off, I would have had sex with him. I am so sorry, Ted.”

Scene 6: The Uncomfortable Truce

TED: “I won’t close the door on possibly getting back together. But Cindy has expressed she wants to also pursue something with me.”

TED: “I also kissed Cindy.”

Allyson’s Internal Thoughts and Feelings: Her soul collapsed. The kiss she just shared felt colder now. She understood why. Cindy was already nestled deep in Ted’s mind. She was disturbed, thinking of how precise and deliberate Cindy was.

Ted grabbed her hands. “I still have feelings for you. Deep feelings, confusing feelings. But right now, I’m still angry. And you have to allow me to get over that before there’s a possibility of anything beyond friendship. I’m coming back to Cannon Beach in a week. I’ll be friends with both of you, and I will choose eventually. Are you okay with that?”

Allyson’s Feelings: She was glad he was coming back, but the fact that she would have to compete with Cindy infuriated her. She knew the truth, and she prayed he would remember it.

ALLYSON: “Okay, I will go back to Cannon Beach and wait your return. I really want to work this out, Ted. I miss your love.”

TED: “I love you, too.”

She left the hospital room and got on the road back to the beach.







Tuesday, December 9, 2025

Episode 34: The Calculated Kiss

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Episode 34: The Calculated Kiss

Scene 1: An Anchor in Portland


The chill air of the Portland hospital clung to **Allyson’s** coat as she confirmed her travel plans.


 She had taken Andrew’s advice and secured four days off to be with Ted. Four days to be a constant, stable presence against the chaos of his injuries. 

Portland was hours away, a world removed from the coastal resort, but the distance felt trivial. She needed to be his anchor.

As she zipped her bag, a sudden, unexplained shiver traced down Allyson’s** spine. She paused, looking at a small photo of Ted she kept in her wallet. For a fleeting second, he looked like a stranger, or perhaps like someone slipping behind a curtain she couldn’t reach. She pushed the dread aside, chalking it up to exhaustion, but the feeling lingered like a cold draft in an empty room.

Meanwhile, in Ted’s room, a different drama was unfolding.

### Scene 2: The Predator's Visit

Ted sat propped up in the sterile, white hospital bed, the faint beeping of monitors his only companion. 


His head ached with a dull, persistent throb—a physical manifestation of the empty space where his memory of the fall should be. Every time he tried to reach for the memory of the cliff, a strobe light of pain flashed behind his eyes.


A soft knock came at the door.

“Come in,” Ted called out, his voice slightly rough.

The door eased open, and a figure stood there, looking fragile and overwhelmed.

Ted, it’s me... Cindy,” she whispered, her eyes already shining with a theatrical film of tears. She had practiced this moment in the mirror, calibrating the exact amount of distress to ensure he saw a victim, not a villain.

*Cindy’s Thoughts: Playback starting. Project the image of the victim. Look broken, look lost. He won’t remember the rage, only the vulnerability I choose to show him.*

“Can I come in?” she asked, her voice trembling just enough.

Cindy, come in,” Ted said, genuinely surprised. He gestured weakly to the chair beside the bed.

Cindy glided to the bedside, collapsing onto the chair, burying her face in her hands as a soft, well-rehearsed sob escaped her. “Ted, please, hear me out,” she pleaded. She leaned in, her proximity instantly intense, invading the sterile air of the room with her perfume.

“I’m so glad you’re okay,” she started, her voice laced with manufactured sincerity. “I was so scared. They say... you can’t remember anything?”

Ted nodded, running a hand through his stiff hair. “The cliff... it’s all blank after we were talking.”

Cindy seized the opening. She reached for his hand, her touch cool and deliberate.

Ted, we went there together,” she began, her tone soft and regretful. “You told me... you understood why I acted the way I did. I was jealous of **Allyson**. And I professed my love for you.” She paused, letting the lie settle. “You cried, I remember. And I hugged you.”

*Cindy’s Thoughts: Weave the truth into the lie. He remembers the crying, the intensity. Make the new memory fit the feeling of the night.*

“We started kissing,” she continued, her breathing hitching. “It was... passionate. And you took off my dress. You removed my thong.”

A sharp, dizzying flash hit Ted’s mind: The sight of a yellow thong snagged on the brush. The glimpse of her nude body against the dark sky. The surgical staples in his scalp seemed to throb in time with the memory. It was disjointed, but the visuals felt real.

*Ted’s Thoughts: I saw her naked... I remember that. Did I do that? Was I so drunk? The memory is gone, but the feeling that I crossed a line... it’s suffocating.*

“We were exploring each other’s bodies,” Cindy whispered. She took Ted’s limp, pale hand in hers and, with a slow, deliberate crawl, she guided his fingers upward, pressing his palm firmly against the curve of her breast.

"You remember this, don't you?" she breathed. "You couldn't keep your hands off me, Ted. You told me she was a saint, but I was the one you wanted."

Ted’s fingers instinctively twitched against the fabric of her dress. He felt the heat of her skin, and the physical contact felt like a gruesome confirmation of her story.

“Then I unbuttoned your jeans,” she continued, her eyes locked on his. “I rose up to kiss your neck, and you tried to get your jeans undone, but you stumbled. It caused you to trip.”

She dramatically buried her face in her hands again. “I was so scared, Ted. I panicked. I put my dress back on and ran towards the ocean to find you, but I couldn’t see anything. Then I just... took off. The police, they thought I did it.”

The confusion in Ted’s heart warred with a sudden rush of protective shame. He felt a profound sense of responsibility for her distress. If he had been the aggressor, if he had been the one stripping her on a cliffside, he was no longer the man **Allyson** loved. He was a monster who had nearly died in the middle of a betrayal.

“Hey, come here,” Ted murmured, pulling her into an embrace. She cried into his gown, a theatrical performance of release.

*Cindy’s Thoughts: Perfect. He feels responsible. This is where I secure the anchor.*

She lifted her face, wiping away the fabricated tears. “That’s all we were going to try,” she said softly, suggesting a mutual, consensual moment that he had ruined with his clumsiness.

Ted was thoroughly disoriented. He thought about **Allyson**—the faith and grace she offered. But this vivid, physical reality Cindy had forced upon him felt like a truth he couldn't escape.

Cindy leaned in, her lips finding his. It was a single, manipulative, practiced kiss. Ted didn't pull away. He kissed her back, a single act born of guilt, confusion, and the belief that he had already destroyed his future with **Allyson**.

She pulled back slowly. “I’m staying in town, Ted. Can I see you again?”

“Sure,” Ted said, the word heavy with exhaustion and defeat.

### Scene 3: The Evidence

As soon as the hospital door swung shut behind her, Cindy’s demeanor snapped. She walked toward the privacy of the waiting room restroom, her footsteps light and confident.

She pulled out her phone and stopped the video recording she had discreetly started from the bedside table. She hit play, skipping to the end. The footage was perfect: the tearful plea, Ted’s hand pressed firmly against her chest, and the defining moment of the kiss.

Cindy watched the playback with a critic’s eye, a cold smirk spreading across her face.

*Cindy’s Thoughts: The plan is coming together. The past is erased, replaced with my version. He thinks he cheated, he thinks he caused the fall, and he thinks he can't trust his memory. **Allyson** is the only truth in his life, and now... I have the footage to burn that down.*

She looked at the frame where Ted’s hand was on her and whispered to the screen, “You really should be more careful where you put those hands, Ted. It looks so... incriminating.”

Armed with proof and a renewed sense of control, Cindy left the hospital. She was free, financially secure for the moment, and back in the game.


Thursday, December 4, 2025

Episode 33: The Alibi and The Release




Episode 33: The Alibi and The Release (Updated)

**Scene 1: The Poker Face**

The air in the small, grey interrogation room was cold and smelled of stale coffee. Cindy, meticulously dressed in a borrowed jacket, sat across from Detective Hayes. She was the picture of cool, polite concern.

"Ms. Davis, let’s talk about the cliff," Detective Hayes began, pushing the evidence bag—containing the gummy bear pen and the yellow fabric—across the table.

Cindy didn't flinch. She glanced at the objects, managing a tiny, weary sigh. "Poor **Ted Lawson**. It’s absolutely shocking, Detective. I’ve been trying to process it all."

"We believe you were there that night, Ms. Davis. We know about the tumultuous relationship you had with Mr. Lawson. We found these items exactly where he went over. Is this your underwear?"

Cindy met her gaze, utterly devoid of guilt. "It is," she admitted easily. "I was there earlier that week with a date, near the rocks. It must have come off then. It’s just a piece of laundry, Detective. Surely you have more pressing matters than my discarded silk? Unless, of course, the precinct is struggling for leads this month."

"And your sudden flight to Astoria?"

"The constant gossip was unbearable," Cindy replied. "My reputation was being destroyed. I needed to get away, and I paid for the hotel with my own credit card. I wasn't running, I was seeking peace. It looks suspicious, I grant you, but nothing I did was illegal."

Detective Hayes pressed for two agonizing hours, but Cindy simply smiled, repeating her script. Without a witness, the case against her was thin ice.

**Scene 2: The Silence and The Truth**

Later that day, Detective Hayes stood at **Ted Lawson’s** bedside. He had been moved out of the ICU, but the man looked like a ghost. **Allyson** sat close, her face etched with exhaustion. Ted could communicate only by writing, his grip on the pen painfully tight.

The detective wrote the single, crucial question: *"Did Cindy push you?"*

Ted's eyes squeezed shut in immense effort. He concentrated, his hand trembling as he forced the pen against the paper. He started to write, but after two agonizing minutes, he simply shook his head, tears of frustration streaming down his temples.

**Allyson** wiped his face. "Honey, what is it?"

Ted took the pen again, the tip dragging across the paper like a jagged scar: *"I... don't... remember. The cliff... nothing."*

**Allyson** gasped, a hand flying to her mouth. The head trauma had wiped the critical moments from his memory. Detective Hayes looked at the note, her face hardening into a grim mask of defeat. Without Ted’s memory, Cindy was untouchable.

**Scene 3: The Cold Walk to Freedom**

The next morning, Cindy’s silver-haired attorney stood at the precinct counter. "As you can see, Detective, there is no evidence of a crime. We are grateful you recognized the lack of probable cause."

An hour later, Cindy walked out of the police precinct. She stepped into the daylight, adjusted her sunglasses, and took a slow, deep breath of the salt air. She didn't look like a suspect; she looked like a woman who had just successfully closed a business deal. Her eyes were cold, hard, and utterly victorious.

**Scene 4: The Final Threat and The Payoff**

Standing on the sidewalk next to her packed bags, Cindy dialed the Head of HR, Ms. Eleanor Vance.

"Ms. Davis, I understand you received the notification," Ms. Vance began, her voice clipped. "Your employment is terminated effective immediately."

Cindy smiled, a predatory curve of her lips. "Misconduct? Ms. Vance, let me correct you. I was not charged. I have committed no crime. You are firing me based on gossip, resulting in wrongful termination. Think of this as a 'severance for your silence.' I’m sure the board would much rather lose three thousand dollars than three million in a PR nightmare."

Ms. Vance sighed, a sound of heavy, frustrated defeat. "The payment will be wired to your account by the end of the day. Send the paperwork to your lawyer."

Cindy laughed—a short, chilling sound. "That is acceptable. Goodbye."

She hung up, dropping the phone into her purse. With three thousand dollars secured, she checked her phone for apartment listings. She wasn't running; she was settling in. She began looking for a one-bedroom in Cannon Beach. She wanted to be the ghost that haunted Ted and **Allyson’s** happy ending. She was free, she was lethal, and she was furious.

He is **Ted Lawson** now and forever. I’ve got it sorted, darling. Shall we see what happens when she starts hunting for that apartment in Cannon Beach?


Episode 32: The Predator's Fall and The Bitter End

 





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## Episode 32: The Performance of a Lifetime

The air in the interrogation room was thick with the smell of stale coffee and the hum of the overhead lights. Cindy sat huddled in the hard plastic chair, looking remarkably small. She had pulled her cardigan tight around her shoulders, her hands trembling just enough to be noticed.

When Detective Vance and his partner, Detective Russo, stepped inside, Cindy let out a soft, ragged gasp, her eyes wide and swimming with unshed tears.

**CINDY:** "I... I already told the officers at the scene. I don’t know if I can say it again. It’s like a nightmare I can’t wake up from."

**DETECTIVE VANCE:** "We just need to go over the sequence of events one more time, Cindy. Tell us about the cliffside."

Cindy buried her face in a crumpled tissue, her shoulders shaking.

**CINDY:** "We were just... talking. Looking at the horizon. He stepped closer to the edge to see the treeline, and the gravel... it just gave way. I screamed his name. I reached out, I swear I did, but my fingers just brushed his sleeve..."

She broke into a fit of frantic, gasping sobs, the kind that made it look like she was struggling for oxygen.

**CINDY:** "I panicked! I saw him disappear and I just—I lost my mind. I knew how it would look. I’m not stupid, I knew people would think I did it on purpose! So I ran. I just drove and drove because I was terrified no one would believe me."

She looked directly at Vance, her lower lip trembling.

**CINDY:** "It was a horrible, tragic accident. Please... you have to believe me."

Vance sighed, exchanging a weary look with his partner. They stepped out for a moment, but returned ten minutes later with a recorder and a stack of forms. This was where Cindy shifted gears. She knew the "sobbing mess" had opened the door, but "the confused victim" would lock it.

**DETECTIVE RUSSO:** "Cindy, we have some inconsistencies regarding the tire tracks where you turned around. It looks like you sat there for quite a while before driving off."

Cindy tilted her head, her expression blanking into one of pure, childlike confusion. She blinked slowly, as if the word 'inconsistencies' was a foreign language.

**CINDY:** "Tire... tracks? I don't... I don't know about tracks. I just remember the car felt so big and the road was so narrow. I think I stalled it? Or maybe I just couldn't see through the crying. Is that important? I'm so sorry, I'm just so confused by all these questions."

**DETECTIVE VANCE:** "It’s very important, Cindy. It goes to your state of mind. If it was an accident, why didn't you call 911 immediately?"

**CINDY:** "911? Oh, God, I wish I had! But my phone... I couldn't find it in my purse, and I thought—I thought I could drive to find help faster. Does that mean I'm in trouble? Am I going to jail because I'm bad at emergencies? I'm not a smart person like you detectives. I just... I just loved him."

She let a single, perfect tear roll down her cheek. She looked so helpless, so utterly incapable of a calculated murder, that Russo actually lowered his voice, his posture softening.

**DETECTIVE RUSSO:** "No one is saying you're in trouble yet, Cindy. We just need to understand."

**CINDY:** "I want to help! Truly. But my head just feels like it's full of cotton. Can I go home soon? I need to go to church and pray for him. I don't think I can handle any more big words today."

Vance sighed, defeated by the wall of "dumb" she had built around herself.

**DETECTIVE VANCE:** "Alright. Just sit tight. We’re going to confer with the DA's office. They're going to have a hard time pinning intent on... this."

The two men stood up and exited, the heavy steel door swinging shut with a definitive, mechanical *click*.

The moment the lock engaged, the transformation was instantaneous.

Cindy’s shoulders dropped. The trembling in her hands ceased as if a switch had been flipped. She sat up straight, her face smoothing out into a mask of chilling, porcelain stillness. She took the tissue, and instead of sobbing into it, she used a dry corner to meticulously dab a spot of mascara from under her eye with the precision of a surgeon.

She didn't look like a woman who had just lost a companion. She looked like a woman who had just won a difficult game of chess. She knew the DA wouldn't touch a "confused, grieving girl" without a smoking gun, and she had made sure there wasn't one.

A slow, grand grin spread across her lips—dark, cold, and entirely triumphant. She stared at the blank grey wall, her eyes sharp with the thrill of the kill and the even greater thrill of the lie. She wasn't sorry. She was bored with the theatrics and ready for her next move.