LOGINFor five long years, Gwen believed she was living a life of love, marriage, and family. But her reality was a carefully constructed lie, manipulated by a cruel narcissist and a vengeful enemy. Forced to embrace false memories, she married Mason Burkely, a man whose obsession and violence left her bruised, both in body and soul. Even her daughter, Kayla, suffered at the hands of the very man she was supposed to call “dad.” When Adrian Salvador, the love Gwen thought she had lost forever, reenters her life, the truth begins to surface. With the help of the wise and enigmatic Doctor Liang, Gwen starts reclaiming memories stolen from her, uncovering the horrors she endured and the manipulations that defined her supposed life. But remembering comes at a cost. Gwen is haunted by betrayal, abuse, and the knowledge of the child she carried and lost because of Mason. As darkness and fear threaten to consume her, she must confront her trauma, face her abuser, and navigate the complex emotions of love, trust, and desire, especially with the man who truly belongs in her heart. A Kiss For Every Bruise is a story of survival, resilience, and reclamation. A journey through pain, lies, and heartbreak toward healing, justice, and the rediscovery of love that was never truly lost.
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"Daddy please don't hurt mummy, please! Please daddy, I'm begging you, alright? Waaaah, daddy, mummy can't breath anymore!" I could barely hear my four year old daughter, Kayla, pleading for her dad to stop strangling me. The dararkness was slowly engulfing me, dragging me into its cold embrace. Then suddenly, a rush of air bombarded my lungs, almost choking me as I greedily inhaled it. The grim reaper wasn't interested in my miserable life anymore, I suppose. My coughing subsided, but my chest still heaved as though I had sprinted through a marathon. Gradually, my vision cleared and I looked up, only to see my mother-in-law sneering and my husband glaring at me. Kayla was a sobbing mess, the maid was cowering in a corner, shivering as if she's standing in the North Pole. "Come here baby," I extended my trembling hands, and my little girl threw herself into my arms. But my voice sounded like rusty metals grinding together. Thanks to my dear husband's strangulation. Kayla trembled and bit her lip so hard that it bled. Even at four years old, she wasn’t allowed to cry, or she’d have it from her father. I tried to hum a lullaby as I rocked her, but my throat refused to cooperate. The brute had nearly rearranged all the bones in my neck. I gave up on singing and kept rocking Kayla whilst shushing her quietly. What no one knew was, I was rocking myself to sleep as well. It looked like I was comforting my daughter, but only I knew that I was deriving warmth from the little bundle curled in my embrace, shivering like a scared rabbit. "See, what you made me do, now, Gwen! Are you happy to see our daughter scared like this?" Mason bellowed, whilst pointing a trembling finger at my forehead. "I'm sorry... I will not do it again." I tried to speak but it was just a barely audible hoarse whisper. But I guess he understood, the pleading in my eyes. "Yeah, right. Never make me angry again. You know I love you, babe, but sometimes I hate it when you try to control me." There it was again, his favorite excuse. It was always me who made him hurt me. I just shook my head and kept my thoughts to myself, suppressing the nausea threatening to rise. “Oh, Mason darling, let her be,” his mother sneered. “She’s ungrateful and doesn’t understand what it means to be a woman. She thinks that just because she’s pregnant she can be willful? As Mason’s mother, I never ask him why he comes home late. But you, a housewife, dare to question my son? You even took your sweet time unlocking the gate? Serves you right. No woman can control my son!” That was my dear mother-in-law spitting her daily venom. Kayla eventually fell asleep but she was whimpering even in her dreams. I wanted to take her to her room but my "gentle husband" carried her instead. "Let me carry her, babe. You're pregnant and can't tire yourself." I forced a smile that was worse than a scowl. Now he knows that I'm pregnant, huh? I mused but kept a straight face. He disappeared upstairs with her, and I followed slowly, my steps echoing my pain. "Goodnight, Mama." I whispered as I forced myself to stand up from the lounge floor heading upstairs to our bedroom. “You’d better keep what happened to yourself,” my mother-in-law warned coldly. “You know what awaits you if you dare talk. You’re just an orphan, rescued from waiting tables by my kind-hearted son. Know your place!” I grimaced inwardly but forced a small nod and obedient smile. I had no choice. If I went against either Mason or his mother, there would be no peace for me. Each step toward the bedroom was a battle of will. Sheer determination drove me forward, though every bruise screamed in protest. I swallowed my pain and kept walking. It’s true, I was an orphan, or rather, abandoned at the gates of an orphanage. I started waiting tables at sixteen, and by eighteen, when the orphanage could no longer keep me, I moved out. Mason saved me from a brothel and married me. Even now, I don’t know whether I was grateful or in love. Maybe I confused the two. "Careful, babe. Let me help you up." I numbly extended my hand as Mason pulled me up and led me to our bedroom. My breathing was erratic and my whole body was hurting, but I could not tell him or he would snap again. After every beating, I had to suck it up and smile through the pain or I would suffer another round of unrestrained beatings. At times, I could not tell which Mason I was married to, the lover or the monster.” He helped me out of my torn dress, and I heard him suck in a sharp breath. Then, in an almost broken voice, he said, “I’m sorry, Kitty. You shouldn’t make me mad. See? Your body’s all blue and black now, because you upset me. You know that when you’re good, I’d never lay a hand on you. Here, let me help you put on your nightdress.” And he did, tenderly, as if I were porcelain. I knew what would follow: his long monologue about how much he loved me, how much he regretted that I made him so angry. Then he would shower me with kisses and force himself on me, claiming that was proof of his love. Tonight was no different. After his speech came the kisses. He kissed every bruise, looking utterly miserable. “A kiss for every bruise,” he whispered, his breath warm against my skin. “Baby, I want you. You know I’ve got the hots for you, and I can never get it up for anyone else.” What did I do? I went through the motions, groaning in pain while he mistook it for pleasure. You might wonder why I did not refuse. How could I? I had refused before, back when his violence first showed. I paid dearly for it. Two days of torture taught me never to say no again. Refusing him meant I must be cheating. So, I stopped daring and allowed him to toss me around to his heart's content. My chest felt tight. I couldn’t breathe. I tried calling his name, but he thought I was moaning for more. I patted his back weakly, but he only groaned, “Yes, Kitty... I know you feel me. I feel you too, baby.” I gave up trying. And when the darkness came for me again, I didn’t fight it. Everything became still, no sound, no pain, no light. As the darkness swallowed me whole, I wondered if this was death at last, or just another reprieve.GwenThe moment Adrian said Camilla's name, the library seemed to lose all warmth. I stared at him. Neither of us moved. Neither of us spoke. The notebook rested heavily in my lap. For the first time since finding it, I wasn't afraid of what it might reveal about me.I was afraid of what it might reveal about her. Because despite everything we had uncovered, there were still gaps. Still questions. Still moments where logic required assumptions. We knew Camilla wanted me gone. We knew she benefited from my disappearance. We knew she manipulated my family. We knew she worked with Kai.Yet wanting something and orchestrating something were not always the same. The notebook threatened to erase that distinction completely. My voice felt strangely distant when I finally spoke. "What did it say?" Adrian didn't answer immediately.His gaze dropped briefly to the black notebook. Then returned to me. "I think you should read it yourself." Normally, I would have argued. Today I understood. Some
GwenThe library felt smaller after that. Not physically, psychologically. As though the walls themselves had shifted closer.For months, every road had seemed to lead toward Marcus Voss. Every discovery, every document and every hidden connection. Marcus had become the center of the web. Now the notebook was suggesting something entirely different. Someone stood above him. Someone powerful enough that even a man like Marcus Voss answered to them.I closed the notebook and rested it carefully on my lap. My hands had started trembling again. Adrian noticed immediately. Without a word, he reached for the glass of water sitting on the side table and handed it to me. I accepted it gratefully. The cold helped a little. My thoughts were racing too quickly. "Do you believe it?"The question left my mouth before I could stop it. Adrian leaned back slightly. "What?" "The notebook." I looked down at the worn black cover. "The woman who wrote this was me, but she was also living through unimagin
GwenFor a long moment, neither Adrian nor I spoke. The words seemed to hang between us. They took her son. Not a vague fear or a confused statement. It was a specific claim. A child and a mother. Another victim.The realization sent a chill through me. Because until now, despite everything we had uncovered, part of me still viewed the farmhouse as something built around me. A place created for my disappearance. A prison designed for my destruction. Now that assumption was beginning to crumble.If there had been another woman, then there could have been others. The possibility felt enormous and terrifying. I lowered my gaze back to the notebook. My fingers trembled slightly against the paper. The entry continued beneath the sentence.'She cries at night.' I swallowed, hard. 'The walls are thin. Sometimes I hear her calling a name. Sometimes she sounds angry. Sometimes she sounds broken. Today she begged them to let her see her son.' My chest tightened painfully. The words felt intima
GwenBy the time breakfast ended, nobody had much of an appetite left. The atmosphere inside the villa had changed completely. A few days ago, we were chasing suspicions. Now we had evidence. Not enough to expose everyone. Not enough to understand the full scope of what happened. But enough to know that the missing years contained far more darkness than we originally believed.The notebook sat at the center of all of it. A simple black notebook. Nothing remarkable about it. Yet everyone seemed to orbit around its existence. Because it represented something precious. The truth. Or at least a piece of it.Adrian spent most of the morning coordinating with his people. My father disappeared into his study. Sebastian began reviewing old family records and correspondence. Matteo practically turned the security office into his second home. Meanwhile, Miguel remained close to Kayla.The arrangement felt natural now. For six months, he had become one of the safest people in her world. A consta
GwenNobody said anything for several moments after Miguel's revelation. The dining room seemed unusually quiet despite the presence of so many people. Even the rain outside had softened into a distant murmur, leaving behind a silence that felt almost oppressive.I stared at the table without reall
GwenThe reaction came so quickly that it caught everyone's attention. Miguel had always been difficult to surprise. Years of working in medicine had trained him to remain calm during emergencies, tragedies, and situations that would send most people into panic.Yet the moment Adrian said the name
GwenThe following morning arrived beneath a sky the color of wet steel. I barely slept. Every time I closed my eyes, I saw the photograph. The message written on the back. And behind all of it lingered a question that refused to leave me alone. Who had been watching that day? Not because of curios
GwenNobody spoke for several seconds after Adrian read the words aloud. The silence that followed felt different from the others that had filled the villa throughout the evening. This one was heavier and sharper. It carried intent because Camilla had not sent a gift. She had sent a warning.My mot












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