
After His Mistress Killed Our Child, I Became a Ghost
Chapter 4
The delivery arrived under the cover of a moonless night. I stood at the edge of the estate’s dense pine forest, my breath pluming in the frigid air, waiting for the mechanical hum. It came low and steady—a black quadcopter drone weaving through the skeletal branches like a oversized insect. It hovered, dropped a small, padded canister into the dead leaves, and vanished back into the dark.
Back in the sanctuary of my bathroom, with the faucet running to mask any sound, I unscrewed the canister. Inside lay a single vial of clear liquid and a syringe. The label was handwritten in Levi’s sharp, angular script: *Lazarus.*
It was a neurotoxin derived from pufferfish and synthesized to mimic death—stopping the heart, cooling the skin, inducing rigor mortis. It lasted four hours. Any longer, and the mimicry became reality.
I needed to know I could endure it. I drew a micro-dose, a droplet barely visible in the barrel, and pressed the needle into my thigh.
The reaction was instantaneous. Fire raced through my veins, followed immediately by a crushing, paralyzed weight. My lungs seized. I collapsed onto the bathmat, unable to draw breath, unable to blink. My heart hammered a frantic, erratic rhythm against my ribs before slowing to a terrified crawl. For thirty seconds, I was a corpse trapped in a screaming mind.
Then, the heat faded. I gasped, air rushing into my starved lungs, my body trembling violently.
**[System Note: Pain threshold exceeded. Host resolve confirmed. Ready for extraction.]**
"Good," I wheezed, wiping a line of cold sweat from my forehead. If this was the price of freedom, I would pay it.
***
Two days later, the devil came for tea.
Josephine Ray swept into the estate’s drawing room, bringing the scent of ozone and expensive malice. She wore a tailored crimson suit, a vibrant slash of color against the room's dreary greys. I sat in a wheelchair by the window, a prop I didn't strictly need but used to sell the narrative of my decline.
"You look... peaceful, Madison," Josephine lied, settling onto the velvet sofa opposite me. She placed her phone on the low table between us, screen down. "Lucien tells me you're adjusting well to your confinement."
"It’s quiet," I murmured, keeping my eyes lowered. My hands rested in my lap, trembling slightly—a calculated affectation.
"It's for the best," she said, pouring tea with the grace of a viper uncoiling. "The city is too harsh for someone of your... constitution. Here, you can fade away with dignity."
She took a sip, her eyes scanning the room, assessing her victory. "Excuse me a moment. The drive up was interminable."
As soon as the heavy oak door clicked shut behind her, the trembling in my hands vanished. I didn't run; I moved with the precision of a surgeon. I pulled a thin, black card from my sleeve—a cloning device Levi had provided.
I placed Josephine’s phone on top of the card. A small LED on the device blinked red, then amber.
*Come on.*
The toilet flushed down the hall.
The light turned green.
I slid the card back into my sleeve and returned the phone to its exact position just as the doorknob turned. When Josephine re-entered, I was staring vacantly out the window at the grey sky.
"Lovely tea," she remarked, picking up her phone without a second glance. She had no idea she had just handed Levi the keys to her offshore vaults.
***
A storm battered the Hudson Valley that weekend, rain lashing against the windows like handfuls of gravel. Lucien arrived with the thunder, shaking off a wet trench coat in the foyer. He looked tired, the lines around his eyes deeper, his ruthlessness tempered by exhaustion.
He found me in the library, reading a book I hadn't turned the page of in an hour.
"I brought you something," he said softly, placing a velvet box on the table. Inside sat a diamond necklace, cold and heavy. "For the anniversary."
I didn't touch it. I looked up at him, studying the face I had once loved, searching for any trace of the man I thought I married.
"Lucien," I said, my voice steady. "I need to ask you one thing. And I need the truth."
He stiffened, sensing the shift in the air. "Madison, we don't need to rehash—"
"That night," I interrupted. "When she poisoned me. When I was bleeding on the floor. If you could go back... would you have called the police? Would you have saved our child instead of the stock price?"
The silence stretched, heavy and suffocating. The rain pounded against the glass. Lucien looked at the necklace, then at me. I saw the conflict war behind his eyes—the man versus the CEO. The husband versus the puppet.
"The merger was finalized the next morning," he said quietly, his voice devoid of emotion. "If Josephine had been arrested, the board would have ousted me. We would have lost everything."
He stepped closer, his hand reaching for my shoulder. "I did it for us, Madison. To build a kingdom for us."
He didn't regret it. He would do it again.
I let him touch my shoulder, feeling nothing but the phantom chill of the Lazarus drug in my veins. The last thread of hesitation snapped. The husband was dead. Only the target remained.
"I understand," I whispered, closing the book. "Thank you, Lucien. For making it clear."
He mistook my resignation for forgiveness. He didn't see the grenade pin I had just pulled in my mind.
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