
A Wife's Fierce Revenge
Chapter 2
The sterile white walls of Dr. Hanson's office seemed to close in around me as I sat rigidly on her plush sofa. My hands were folded in my lap, knuckles white with tension. It had been three days since I'd discovered the truth—three days since my world had imploded.
"Sarah, grief doesn't follow a linear path," Dr. Lena Hanson said, her voice gentle but firm. She was in her fifties, with kind eyes that had probably witnessed every shade of human suffering. "What you're feeling is normal after such profound trauma."
I stared at the abstract painting on her wall—blues and grays swirling into a storm, much like the one raging inside me.
"Normal?" My voice sounded foreign to my own ears. "Is it normal to want to destroy someone? To want to make them suffer as much as they've made you suffer?"
Dr. Hanson's pen paused over her notepad. The air in the room seemed to thicken.
"You're talking about Brandon," she said carefully.
"And Jessica." The names tasted like poison on my tongue. "While our daughter was being murdered—while I was losing our baby—he was at a birthday party for her dog." My voice didn't break; it had hardened into something unrecognizable. "They took everything from me. Now I want to take everything from them."
Shock flickered across Dr. Hanson's face before her professional mask slipped back into place. She hadn't expected this from me—the grieving mother, the perfect wife. None of them knew what was forming in the ashes of my former self.
"Revenge won't bring Emma back, Sarah," she said softly. "It won't heal your grief."
"I don't want healing." I met her eyes directly. "I want justice."
I left her office with a prescription for sleep medication I had no intention of taking. Clarity, not numbness, was what I needed now.
The next morning, I called Arthur Vance. The Chen family attorney had known me since childhood, had helped my parents build their empire. He arrived at my Hamptons house within hours, his silver hair immaculate, his eyes sharp with concern.
"Sarah, my dear." He embraced me briefly in the foyer. "I came as soon as I could."
I led him to Brandon's home office—a space I'd rarely entered before. It felt appropriate for what I was about to do.
"I need divorce papers," I said, sitting behind the mahogany desk. "And I need them disguised as something else."
Arthur's eyebrows rose slightly, but he didn't question me. Instead, he placed his briefcase on the desk and opened it.
"What did you have in mind?"
My hands trembled slightly as I outlined my plan. I hid them beneath the desk, forcing my voice to remain steady.
"The Emma Mitchell Memorial Fund," I said. "Brandon needs to think he's signing documents to establish a foundation in our daughter's name. But what he'll actually be signing is a divorce agreement and authorization for Emma's funeral arrangements—exactly as I want them."
Arthur studied me for a long moment. "He'll contest it once he realizes."
"By then, it will be too late." I smiled, the expression feeling foreign on my face. "He never reads what he signs. His arrogance will be his downfall."
Two days later, the documents were ready. I prepared Brandon's favorite meal—filet mignon with truffle butter, asparagus, and red wine reduction. The dining room was dimly lit, a single candle burning between us as we sat at opposite ends of the table.
"I thought we should do something," I said softly, watching him cut into his steak. "For Emma."
His eyes flickered with what might have been guilt. "Of course."
After dinner, I brought out the documents and a pen. "The Emma Mitchell Memorial Fund," I explained, my voice breaking appropriately. "To help other families affected by violence."
Brandon signed without reading, his pen scratching across the signature lines I'd marked with small tabs. His eyes never left mine, full of a performance of shared grief.
"I'll have Arthur file these tomorrow," I said, gathering the papers with steady hands.
The next morning, Brandon's roar of rage echoed through the house as he burst into the kitchen, divorce papers clutched in his hand.
"What the hell is this?" he demanded, his face contorted with fury. "You tricked me!"
I looked up from my tea, meeting his gaze without flinching. "I learned from the best."
The mask of the loving husband fell away completely, revealing the monster beneath. In that moment, I saw him clearly for the first time—and I knew exactly what I had to do next.
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