He Married Me Without Touching Me—Then I Found a Hidden Room With Another Woman/th
Episode 2
Her eyes were wide open now—haunted, hollow, and familiar. My breath caught in my throat as I stepped backward, heart pounding. She was awake. She spoke. Her voice was cracked like someone who hadn’t spoken in months… or years. “Did he marry you too?” she repeated, slower this time, eyes locked onto mine like she was staring into a mirror of her past.
I didn’t know what to say. My lips parted, but nothing came out.
Her gaze dropped to the ring on my finger. Then, with what strength she could gather, she tried to sit up. Tubes tugged at her arm. A sharp pain crossed her face. “He always brings us here,” she whispered. “One by one.”
I blinked. Us?
“There were others before me,” she said. “Maybe… after me too. What year is it?”
I nearly choked on my answer. “2025.”
Her mouth trembled. She closed her eyes. “I’ve been in this room since 2020.”
I wanted to run. Scream. Call someone. But the house was too quiet, the air too thick. I looked at her—really looked—and I noticed a thin scar on her temple, the kind you don’t get from accidents. Her skin was pale, but not unhealthy. She wasn’t being tortured. She was being kept.
“Why?” I finally asked, my voice shaking.
She let out a dry laugh, but there was no joy in it. “Because he doesn’t love. He collects.”
I stared at her.
“Women like us. Quiet. Soft. Malleable. He finds us. Studies us. Marries us. Then… isolates us. First with silence. Then with secrets. Then with fear.” She looked around the room. “This is his gallery. His private collection of obedience.”
My knees buckled, and I sat on the cold floor. Everything made sense now. The wedding with no intimacy. The locked door. The strange trips. The distant eyes. The chilling calm.
She reached under the pillow beside her and pulled out a torn page—an old photograph. There were four women in it. All wearing identical navy blue gowns. All with the same haunted look in their eyes. One of them was her. Another was me.
“I found this before he put me to sleep,” she said. “You weren’t the first. But maybe… maybe you’ll be the last.”
That’s when I heard it.
The front door.
Footsteps.
Heavy, slow, deliberate.
He was home.
I jumped up, heart in my mouth. The woman—whose name I still didn’t know—grabbed my wrist. “Don’t confront him,” she said urgently. “He has cameras. He watches. That’s how he knows when we’ve disobeyed.”
I whispered, “Then how do I leave?”
She said, “You don’t. Not through the front door.”
Then she looked toward the far wall behind her bed. There, behind the curtain, was a narrow ventilation shaft. Barely wide enough for me to crawl through. She gave me a weak nod.
I had no time to think.
I heard his footsteps on the stairs.
I dropped the keys and ran to the shaft. Crawled in. My dress tore. My arm scraped against rusted metal. But I kept going. His voice echoed behind me. Calm. Confident.
“I told you never to open that room, my love.”
Then I heard it—a loud bang.
I didn’t know if it was the door… or a gun.
But I kept crawling.
Toward the light.
Toward the truth.
Toward freedom.
Episode 3
The metal tore at my arms as I crawled through the ventilation shaft, every movement echoing behind me like thunder. The air was thick with dust, cobwebs brushed my face, but I didn’t stop. I didn’t look back. I couldn’t. Behind me was the man I thought I loved—now revealed as something else entirely. A monster with vows instead of chains.
The shaft led to a small exit vent hidden behind a cluster of bushes beside the garage. I stumbled out into the daylight, scratched and breathless, my legs trembling under me. My dress was torn, my hands filthy, but I was free.
For a moment, I just stood there, staring at the house. His house. My prison. Somewhere inside it, that woman—the one who had been hidden for five years—was still lying on that bed, trapped.
I didn’t run.
I walked to the gate, opened it, and flagged down a bike. My voice cracked as I gave the address of the nearest police station. The rider looked at me strangely, but didn’t ask questions. Good. I had no strength left for lies.
At the station, I handed them the photos I’d taken. I told them everything—his name, his company, the locked room, the IV drips, the scar on the woman’s head. At first, they looked at me like I was mad. But one of the officers recognized the name. “You mean Mr. Makinwa? The one with all those charity projects?”
“Yes,” I said through clenched teeth. “The same one who keeps women like property.”
It took hours. Calls were made. A warrant was issued. By sunset, five police vans and a team of officers stormed the mansion.
They found her.
Alive.
Weak.
And exactly as I had described.
They also found two other rooms, locked. One held medical supplies. The other? Empty, but with a mattress, a mirror, and women’s shoes—five pairs. Different sizes.
He wasn’t just collecting wives.
He was building a private world. A silent harem.
They arrested him in his study. Calm. Smiling.
When he saw me, he said softly, “You broke the rules.”
I stepped forward. “You broke lives.”
He didn’t resist. He didn’t argue. He just stared like he was memorizing my face.
Three weeks later, the news broke. “Prominent Philanthropist Arrested in Shocking Human Captivity Case.” The world was stunned. His charities collapsed. His family disappeared. Sponsors pulled out. Trials began.
I testified in court.
So did the woman from the hidden room—her name was Lydia. She had been twenty-two when she met him. Like me, she thought he was kind. Safe.
We were both wrong.
He was sentenced to life in prison without parole.
Lydia now lives in a trauma recovery center. I visit her sometimes. We don’t talk much. We don’t have to. Some wounds speak in silence.
As for me?
I moved away. Changed my name. Started a nonprofit for women escaping abusive relationships. I never married again.
But sometimes at night, I still wake up gasping—thinking I hear a voice whisper in the dark:
“I told you never to open that room…”
And every time, I remind myself:
I did.
And I survived.
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