Chapter 3
The woman had to be delusional.
That was all I could think as I stood frozen in the hospital lobby, the stark white light bouncing off the polished floors and reflecting in her watery eyes. She looked like someone out of place- too regal, too precise, standing amidst nurses and patients and the scent of disinfectant.
“You’re one of the Lindseys,” she whispered, as if revealing a divine secret.
My body stiffened. “I think you’re mistaken.”
But she wasn’t listening. Her hands moved faster than I could react, plucking a single strand of my hair from my shoulder like it was the key to unlocking a kingdom.
‘I’ll get this tested,” she said with eerie certainty. “Don’t disappear.”
blinked. Was this really happening? Of all the bizarre turns my life had taken lately, this was the most surreal. A stranger claiming I belonged to a billionaire dynasty? Right after I’d walked out of the hospital, hollowed out by grief and emptiness?
didn’t respond. I simply turned and walked away, her eyes burning into my back like she knew something I didn’t. Maybe she did. But I didn’t care. Not right now. There were other chains I needed to break first.
The lawyer’s office was quiet and cold, filled with the scent of wax and aged leather. A wall of egal books loomed behind his desk like silent witnesses.
placed the papers down with a finality I hadn’t felt in years. “I want a divorce.”
He glanced at me over his glasses. “May I ask on what grounds?”
could have listed a hundred. But I didn’t want a trial, or vengeance, or his money.
‘Just file it,” I said, voice steady. “I want nothing from him. Just freedom.”
With a nod, he took the documents. “We’ll process it today.”
As I stepped outside, the chill in the air didn’t bite. For the first time in five years, it felt clean. I was breathing something new.
What I wasn’t prepared for was to find her waiting for me.
Suzanne.
She was lounging on my living room couch like a queen, her red satin dress catching the light, legs crossed elegantly, lips painted in a smirk I wanted to rip off her face.
“Well, well,” she said in that sugar–coated tone. “Look who’s finally home.”
Bryan was beside her, silent, unreadable. He raised his hands and signed smoothly, as thought nothing had ever happened, “Suzanne wanted to surprise you. She’ll be staying with us for a while.”
I felt my throat tighten, but I forced a blank smile. They still thought I couldn’t hear. They thought I was still the silent, broken wife.
Suzanne’s eyes sparkled with mock innocence. “You’ll come to my party, won’t you? It’s going to be the event of the year.”
Bryan translated like a good little puppet. “It would mean a lot to her.”
I nodded. “Sure.”
Chapter 3
213
3:50 pm DO
She clapped her hands once, delighted. “Fabulous.”
That night, I packed. Quietly. Carefully. I had a one–way flight booked–three days from now Enough time for them to leave on their little romantic getaway, and for me to disappear before they even realized I was gone.
But then came the sounds.
I wasn’t even trying to listen. Through the paper–thin walls of our home, their moans seeped through–rhythmic, raw, nauseating. I sat paralyzed, the zipper of my suitcase half–closed, my chest hollow.
No tears came. Not this time.
I stood, phone in hand, and walked into the hallway. Their bedroom door wasn’t even closed. didn’t push it open–it was already ajar, a perfect frame for betrayal.
Bryan, wrapped around her. Suzanne, gasping his name. Their bodies tangled. Their lies exposed.
“I’ll give you everything,” he whispered to her, pressing a kiss to her neck.
“I love you,” she replied, laughing softly.
Click. Record. Save. Done.
I left them there and returned to my packing.
The day of the party arrived like poison in a glass. I hadn’t wanted to go, but skipping it would only spark suspicion. And I wasn’t about to give them the satisfaction of guessing my plan.
The estate was ablaze with golden lights, champagne towers, velvet ropes, and carefully curated guests. Paparazzi flashes danced across the marble like strobe lights. Music pulsed beneath it all like a heartbeat I no longer belonged to.
I moved through the crowd like a ghost, unnoticed, untouched.
“She’s glowing tonight,” one guest whispered.
“Did you see the necklace Bryan gave her? Pure gold. Custom.”
My hand instinctively went to my own neck–where a similar necklace rested. The one Bryan hac given me just yesterday.
I had thought it meant something.
But no. It was just another trick. A decoy. A matching collar for a wife he never loved and a mistress he never left.
I unclasped it without hesitation and let it slip into the darkness, vanishing in the trimmed grass like it had never existed.
Suzanne was radiant in red, dangling from Bryan’s arm, smiling like she was untouchable. She had the man. She had the spotlight. She thought she had won.
Then she walked toward me.
Her perfume hit me first–sweet, cloying, overpowering. She leaned in, the lights from the chandeliers reflecting off the diamonds on her ears.
“Since you’re so useless,” she whispered, her voice a silk–covered blade, “why don’t you do us al
3:50 pm
Chapter 3
The woman had to be delusional.
That was all I could think as I stood frozen in the hospital lobby, the stark white light bouncing off the polished floors and reflecting in her watery eyes. She looked like someone out of place- too regal, too precise, standing amidst nurses and patients and the scent of disinfectant.
“You’re one of the Lindseys,” she whispered, as if revealing a divine secret.
My body stiffened. “I think you’re mistaken.”
But she wasn’t listening. Her hands moved faster than I could react, plucking a single strand of my hair from my shoulder like it was the key to unlocking a kingdom.
“I’ll get this tested,” she said with eerie certainty. “Don’t disappear.”
I blinked. Was this really happening? Of all the bizarre turns my life had taken lately, this was the most surreal. A stranger claiming I belonged to a billionaire dynasty? Right after I’d walked out of the hospital, hollowed out by grief and emptiness?
I didn’t respond. I simply turned and walked away, her eyes burning into my back like she knew something I didn’t. Maybe she did. But I didn’t care. Not right now. There were other chains needed to break first.
The lawyer’s office was quiet and cold, filled with the scent of wax and aged leather. A wall of legal books loomed behind his desk like silent witnesses.
I placed the papers down with a finality I hadn’t felt in years. “I want a divorce.”
He glanced at me over his glasses. “May I ask on what grounds?”
I could have listed a hundred. But I didn’t want a trial, or vengeance, or his money.
“Just file it,” I said, voice steady. “I want nothing from him. Just freedom.”
With a nod, he took the documents. “We’ll process it today.”
As I stepped outside, the chill in the air didn’t bite. For the first time in five years, it felt clean. was breathing something new.
What I wasn’t prepared for was to find her waiting for me.
Suzanne.
She was lounging on my living room couch like a queen, her red satin dress catching the light, legs crossed elegantly, lips painted in a smirk I wanted to rip off her face.
“Well, well,” she said in that sugar–coated tone. “Look who’s finally home.”
Bryan was beside her, silent, unreadable. He raised his hands and signed smoothly, as though nothing had ever happened. “Suzanne wanted to surprise you. She’ll be staying with us for a while.”
I felt my throat tighten, but I forced a blank smile. They still thought I couldn’t hear. They thought I was still the silent, broken wife.
Suzanne’s eyes sparkled with mock innocence. “You’ll come to my party, won’t you? It’s going to be the event of the year.”
Bryan translated like a good little puppet. “It would mean a lot to her.”
I nodded. “Sure.”
2/3 5.7%
3:50 pm D
She clapped her hands once, delighted. “Fabulous.”
That night, I packed. Quietly. Carefully. I had a one–way flight booked–three days from now. Enough time for them to leave on their little romantic getaway, and for me to disappear before they even realized I was gone.
But then came the sounds.
I wasn’t even trying to listen. Through the paper–thin walls of our home, their moans seeped through–rhythmic, raw, nauseating. I sat paralyzed, the zipper of my suitcase half–closed, my chest hollow.
No tears came. Not this time.
I stood, phone in hand, and walked into the hallway. Their bedroom door wasn’t even closed. I didn’t push it open–it was already ajar, a perfect frame for betrayal.
Bryan, wrapped around her. Suzanne, gasping his name. Their bodies tangled. Their lies exposed.
“I’ll give you everything,” he whispered to her, pressing a kiss to her neck.
“I love you,” she replied, laughing softly.
Click. Record. Save. Done.
I left them there and returned to my packing.
The day of the party arrived like poison in a glass. I hadn’t wanted to go, but skipping it would only spark suspicion. And I wasn’t about to give them the satisfaction of guessing my plan.
The estate was ablaze with golden lights, champagne towers, velvet ropes, and carefully curated guests. Paparazzi flashes danced across the marble like strobe lights. Music pulsed beneath it all like a heartbeat I no longer belonged to.
I moved through the crowd like a ghost, unnoticed, untouched.
“She’s glowing tonight,” one guest whispered.
“Did you see the necklace Bryan gave her? Pure gold. Custom.”
My hand instinctively went to my own neck–where a similar necklace rested. The one Bryan had given me just yesterday.
I had thought it meant something.
But no. It was just another trick. A decoy. A matching collar for a wife he never loved and a mistress he never left.
I unclasped it without hesitation and let it slip into the darkness, vanishing in the trimmed grass like it had never existed.
Suzanne was radiant in red, dangling from Bryan’s arm, smiling like she was untouchable. She had the man. She had the spotlight. She thought she had won.
Then she walked toward me.
Her perfume hit me first–sweet, cloying, overpowering. She leaned in, the lights from the chandeliers reflecting off the diamonds on her ears.
“Since you’re so useless,” she whispered, her voice a silk–covered blade, “why don’t you do us all
a favor and die?”
3:50 pm D
Then her hands slammed into my chest.
I stumbled, heels slipping against the slick edge of the pool. Time slowed. My body pitched backward. The water welcomed me with a frigid, violent embrace.
The cold hit like a thousand needles. My lungs screamed. My limbs flailed, dress dragging me down like it had been sewn from stone. I couldn’t surface. I couldn’t breathe.
Above, I could see silhouettes. Blurred lights. Ripples. Shapes moving.
Bryan’s face appeared at the edge.
He looked down at me with calm disinterest, his suit untouched by panic.
Suzanne stood beside him, not a hair out of place.”
He shrugged. “Someone’ll get her.”
And then he walked away.
The last of my breath bubbled from my lips, and darkness claimed me.