
After His Mistress Poisoned Me, I Planned My Escape
Chapter 1
The Manhattan sky hung like slate above the cemetery, heavy with unshed rain. I stood at my mother's graveside, my black dress absorbing the chill that seeped through the October air. The mourners—New York's elite, gathered in their funeral finery—formed a somber half-circle around the fresh earth. I had arranged every detail of this service with the same precision I brought to everything: white roses, my mother's favorite hymn, a eulogy that captured her grace without revealing her private struggles. For once, I had done something that was solely mine, not an extension of Conrad Morrison's perfect socialite wife.
But then I saw it—a flash of scarlet cutting through the sea of black. My breath caught as Billie Cooper stepped out from behind the crowd, her red cocktail dress a deliberate wound against the mourning. She clung to Conrad's arm, her crimson lips curved into a smile meant only for me. The whispers began immediately, rippling through the crowd like wind through dry leaves.
'She's wearing *red* to a funeral?'
'A widow's funeral, no less...'
'Conrad's new...'
I felt their eyes on me, waiting for the perfect wife to crack. My hands remained steady at my sides, but inside, something fundamental shifted. Ninety-nine affairs I had documented, each one a small death. This would be the hundredth, and somehow, standing at my mother's grave, it felt like the final nail in a coffin of my own making.
'Conrad,' I said quietly, stepping toward them. My voice remained steady, a trait that had once made him proud. 'This is a private family moment. I need to ask you to remove your guest out of basic respect for my mother.'
Conrad's fingers moved to his cufflinks—his tell when preparing to assert dominance. 'Eleanor,' he said, his voice carrying just enough to reach the front rows of mourners, 'Billie is paying her respects. There's no need to make a scene.'
The words landed like physical blows. From the corner of my eye, I saw Margaret Morrison—Conrad's mother—go very still three rows back, her elegant posture stiffening almost imperceptibly. The crowd's whispers grew louder, more pointed. I had become theater for their entertainment.
I said nothing. There was nothing left to say that wouldn't be twisted, dissected, and weaponized later. Instead, I turned and walked away, my heels clicking against the stone path, each step measured and deliberate. I left them there—my husband and his mistress—standing in their scarlet defiance at my mother's grave.
Back at the Hamptons mansion, I entered my private study and opened my laptop. The spreadsheet glowed in the dim light—my secret ledger of survival. Each cell contained a name, a date, a brief description. Ninety-nine entries of silent endurance. I typed the final line with steady fingers: Billie Cooper, October 15th, Funeral. The number at the bottom read 100.
I closed the laptop and moved to the balcony, where my collection of succulents sat in their ceramic pots. Once vibrant and resilient, they had grown brittle and yellowed from neglect. I touched one gently, feeling the dry skin crumble beneath my fingertip. How long had it been since I'd watered them? Since I'd tended anything that might grow?
From my desk drawer, I retrieved my old college sketchbook. The cover was worn, the spine cracked from countless openings and closings. I hadn't looked at it in years—not since the car crash, not since Conrad had 'saved' me and I'd folded myself into the shape of his wife. I opened it to a half-finished drawing: a woman standing at a window, her back to the viewer, looking out at something beyond the frame.
I stared at the blank space beside her, the empty chair where someone might sit. My fingers hovered over the page, itching for a pencil. But I closed it without adding a single line. Some doors, once closed, should stay that way.
In the silence of the empty house, I began to plan. Not with panic or tears, but with the same methodical precision I'd applied to every crisis in our marriage. This time, though, the crisis was my own making. I would walk away, and no one would see me break.
Three days later, I drove to the private golf club my father had secretly left me in his will—a place Conrad didn't know existed until I'd mentioned it once, offhandedly, years ago. I needed to feel connected to something that was still mine, something untainted by the Morrison name.
But as I approached the clubhouse, I saw her again. Billie, this time in white golf attire, lounging on the steps like she owned the place. And beside her, signing papers at the reception desk, was Conrad.
'What are you doing here?' I asked, my voice barely above a whisper.
Conrad looked up, surprise flickering across his face before settling into that familiar expression of mild irritation. 'Eleanor. I didn't expect you.' He gestured to the papers. 'I've signed the club over to Billie. She's always wanted a place to practice.'
The casual cruelty of it stole my breath. My father's legacy, given away like a bauble. 'This club was my father's gift to me,' I said, my voice steady despite the rage building in my chest.
'Was it?' Conrad's eyebrow arched. 'You never mentioned ownership. I assumed it was a family asset.' The lie rolled off his tongue with practiced ease.
I stepped forward, reaching for the papers. 'Show me.'
Conrad's hand shot out, shoving me backward with enough force to send me stumbling onto the gravel path. I felt my wrist twist as I caught myself, heard the sickening crack before I felt the pain. From the clubhouse steps, Billie's laughter cut through the air like broken glass.
'Clumsy, Eleanor,' Conrad said, already turning away. 'You should watch where you're going.'
I looked down at my wrist, already swelling, and then back at the two of them—my husband and his mistress—walking away across the green my father had loved. The pain was clarifying, crystallizing everything I had been denying for years.
At the charity gala days later, my wrist still in a cast, I felt the familiar tightness in my chest. The asthma attack came swiftly, without warning. I reached for my purse, my fingers closing around the familiar shape of my inhaler.
But as I pulled it out, Billie was suddenly there, her face a mask of concern. 'Oh, let me help,' she said sweetly, taking the inhaler from my trembling hand and replacing it with another vial. 'You look terrible.'
I inhaled deeply, expecting relief—but instead, my lungs burned as if I'd swallowed fire. Chili powder. She had swapped my medication for chili powder. I collapsed, gasping, the room spinning around me as my airways closed.
A server knocked the vial from my hand, shouting for help. Someone called for an ambulance. Through the chaos, I saw Conrad arrive, Billie at his side. He knelt beside me, his face a perfect picture of concern for the crowd, but his eyes were cold.
'What happened?' he asked, not waiting for an answer. 'A misunderstanding, clearly. The inhaler must have been tampered with.' He helped me to my feet, his grip firm on my uninjured arm. 'Let's get you some water.'
As he led me away, I heard Billie's voice behind us, pitched to carry: 'Poor Eleanor. Always so careless with her things.'
I looked up at Conrad's face, searching for any flicker of the man I thought I'd married. There was nothing there but impatience and the faintest trace of annoyance at the disruption to his evening. In that moment, I knew with absolute certainty that the spreadsheet was complete. One hundred affairs, one hundred humiliations, and now, one hundred reasons to walk away.
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