The Therapist: Chapter 2
The grand Adebayo mansion, perched in the heart of Ikoyi, Lagos, gleamed under the morning sun. It was an architectural marvel of glass and marble, surrounded by perfectly manicured gardens. Inside, the air hummed with the quiet efficiency of a well-oiled machine—maids moving silently, a chef preparing breakfast, and the distant hum of Victor Adebayo’s favorite classical music playing through hidden speakers.
Claire Adebayo sat at the dining table, a half-eaten slice of toast on her plate. She barely registered the taste of the imported jam spread thinly on her bread or the fresh-squeezed orange juice in the crystal glass. Her mind was elsewhere, far removed from the luxury surrounding her.
Her gaze wandered to the floor-to-ceiling windows that overlooked the garden, where the roses bloomed in neat rows. The perfection of it all felt stifling, as though the house itself conspired with Victor to keep her caged.
Victor strode into the room, his presence commanding as always. Dressed in a tailored navy-blue suit, he exuded the confidence and authority of a man who had carved his way to the top. He paused briefly at the mirror near the door, adjusting his tie with meticulous precision before turning his attention to Claire.
“Good morning,” he said, his voice smooth but firm.
“Morning,” Claire replied without looking at him, cutting her toast into tiny pieces she had no intention of eating.
Victor frowned. He disliked her detached demeanor, though he would never say so outright. It was one of the many things that had changed in their marriage over the past few years.
He poured himself a cup of coffee, watching her from the corner of his eye. “We need to talk.”
Claire’s hand froze mid-cut. She placed the knife down deliberately and looked up at him. “About what?”
Victor took a measured sip of his coffee before responding. “About us.”
There it was. The conversation she had been dreading but also waiting for.
“I’ve been thinking,” Victor continued, “that we should see someone. A professional. A therapist.”
Claire’s expression didn’t change, but her stomach twisted into a knot. Therapy? Of all things, she hadn’t expected this.
“You want us to see a therapist?” she asked, her tone carefully neutral.
“Yes,” Victor said, setting his coffee down. “I believe we need someone to help us… bridge the gap. Things haven’t been the same between us, and I want to fix it.”
Fix it? The words echoed in her mind. There was nothing to fix, Claire thought bitterly. Their marriage had been a transactional arrangement from the start, orchestrated by her father to secure his political alliances. Victor got the beautiful, polished wife who completed his image, and Claire… well, Claire got the money and status her father had promised would make her happy.
Only it hadn’t.
“Victor,” she began carefully, “I don’t think therapy is necessary. We’ve been busy, that’s all. Maybe we just need to—”
“It’s not up for discussion,” Victor interrupted, his tone hardening. “I’ve already made the arrangements. We’ll see Dr. Marcus Oladipo tomorrow.”
Claire stared at him, momentarily stunned by his decisiveness. She knew better than to argue. Victor Adebayo wasn’t a man who entertained dissent, especially not from his wife.
“Fine,” she said finally, pushing her plate away. “If that’s what you want.”
Victor’s eyes lingered on her for a moment, searching for something in her expression. He didn’t find it.
Later that day, Claire retreated to the sanctuary of her bedroom. She closed the door softly and leaned against it, letting out a long, shaky breath. Therapy. Victor was grasping at straws, trying to salvage something that had been doomed from the start.
She walked over to the vanity, her fingers brushing against the cool surface as she stared at her reflection. The woman who stared back at her looked perfect—flawless makeup, expensive jewelry, a designer dress—but she felt like a stranger.
Claire’s thoughts drifted, as they often did, to Daniel.
It had been years since she had seen him, but the chance encounter at the art gallery a month ago had reignited something she thought she had buried. He had looked different, older but still familiar. His smile had been warm, his voice soft yet steady. They had talked for only a few minutes, but those minutes had lingered in her mind ever since.
Daniel had been her first love, the man she had dreamed of building a life with before her father’s ambitions had torn them apart. She had been young and naïve then, believing that love was enough to overcome anything. Her father’s voice still haunted her: “Love won’t put food on the table, Claire. Victor is the kind of man who can give you the life you deserve.”
And so she had married Victor, trading her heart for a gilded cage.
Claire’s phone buzzed on the nightstand, pulling her from her thoughts. She grabbed it, her pulse quickening when she saw Daniel’s name on the screen.
“Are you okay?” the message read.
She hesitated for a moment before typing back, “I’m fine. Just… thinking.”
The reply came almost instantly. “I’m here if you need to talk.”
Her fingers hovered over the keyboard. There was so much she wanted to say, but she couldn’t find the words. Instead, she simply typed, “Thank you.”
As she set the phone down, Claire’s mind shifted to the prenup she had signed before her wedding. If she divorced Victor, she would walk away with more money than she could spend in a lifetime. It wasn’t just about the money, though—it was about freedom. The money was her ticket out, her way to start over. Maybe even with Daniel.
The thought gave her a flicker of hope.
In his study, Victor stared out the window at the sprawling gardens below. His jaw tightened as he swirled the whisky in his glass. He couldn’t ignore the feeling that Claire was slipping away from him, and he wouldn’t let it happen.
Victor Adebayo was a man who controlled every aspect of his life, from his business empire to his household. He wouldn’t lose his wife, not to her discontent and certainly not to anyone else. Therapy would fix things. It had to.
But deep down, Victor knew that fixing their marriage wouldn’t be as simple as he wanted to believe.
As night fell over Lagos, the Adebayo household remained quiet, each occupant lost in their own thoughts. Claire lay awake in bed, staring at the ceiling, her mind racing with plans for escape. Victor sat in his study, nursing his drink and clinging to the illusion of control.
And somewhere in the city, Dr. Marcus Oladipo prepared himself for the clients who would soon drag him into their web of secrets and lies.
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