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After My Groom Planned My Death, I Planned His Novel Cover

After My Groom Planned My Death, I Planned His

The phantom weight of wet earth still crushed my chest. I snapped upright, a violent gasp tearing through my throat as my hands clawed blindly at the dark. I expected to feel the freezing mud of the unmarked pauper’s grave, the hollow ache of my empty, ruined womb. Instead, my fingers tangled in high-thread-count silk. Air flooded my lungs, smelling not of decay, but of sterile, expensive gardenias. My chest heaved as my eyes adjusted to the dim, ambient lighting of the sprawling Manhattan penthouse. Through the floor-to-ceiling windows, the city skyline glittered like a bed of crushed diamonds. Trembling, I pushed myself off the mattress and stumbled toward the sprawling marble vanity. The woman staring back at me in the mirror was a ghost. My cheeks weren’t hollowed out by months of systematic poisoning.
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Chapter 1

The phantom weight of wet earth still crushed my chest. I snapped upright, a violent gasp tearing through my throat as my hands clawed blindly at the dark. I expected to feel the freezing mud of the unmarked pauper’s grave, the hollow ache of my empty, ruined womb. Instead, my fingers tangled in high-thread-count silk.

Air flooded my lungs, smelling not of decay, but of sterile, expensive gardenias.

My chest heaved as my eyes adjusted to the dim, ambient lighting of the sprawling Manhattan penthouse. Through the floor-to-ceiling windows, the city skyline glittered like a bed of crushed diamonds. Trembling, I pushed myself off the mattress and stumbled toward the sprawling marble vanity.

The woman staring back at me in the mirror was a ghost. My cheeks weren’t hollowed out by months of systematic poisoning. My skin wasn't the translucent gray of a dying creature. I was draped in a pristine, custom-laced wedding gown, the intricate beadwork catching the low light.

Three years. The realization hit me with the force of a physical blow, stealing the breath right back out of my lungs. I was twenty-four again. It was the night of my wedding to Archer Meyer. The night my descent into hell had officially begun.

The heavy oak door of the bridal suite clicked open, the sound echoing like a gunshot in the cavernous room.

I didn't turn around immediately. I watched him in the mirror. Archer stepped into the room, the picture of ruthless perfection in his tailored tuxedo. He paused to adjust his platinum left cufflink, his dark, calculating eyes sweeping over my reflection. There was no warmth in that gaze, only the cold appraisal of a man assessing a newly acquired asset.

"The theatrics of silence won't change our arrangement, Emily," he said, his voice a low, smooth baritone that used to make my heart flutter. Now, it only turned my blood to ice. "Let's dispense with the bridal illusions. You are here because you are a necessary transaction. A pawn to balance the ledger your father so recklessly destroyed."

In my past life, those words had broken me. I had collapsed onto the plush rug, weeping, begging him to believe in my father's innocence, pleading for the love he had faked so flawlessly for a year.

Not this time.

A white-hot frequency vibrated through my jaw. My eyes dropped to the vanity, locking onto a crystal champagne flute left by the hotel staff. Without breaking eye contact with Archer's reflection, my hand shot out.

My fingers wrapped around the delicate stem. In one fluid, violent motion, I slammed the crystal against the edge of the marble counter.

The sharp *crack* shattered the suffocating silence. Glass rained down onto the floor, glittering like ice.

Archer froze, his hand dropping from his cufflink.

I spun around, gripping the jagged, broken stem, and pressed the razor-sharp edge directly against my own carotid artery. The pulse in my neck beat furiously against the glass, a millimeter away from spilling my life onto my immaculate white gown.

"Emily," Archer warned, the quiet menace in his tone slipping into genuine shock. His jaw tightened, the muscles ticking beneath his skin. "Put that down."

"I will never be your victim again, Archer," I whispered. My voice didn't shake. It was dead, hollowed out by a lifetime of suffering he hadn't yet inflicted. "You want a pawn? Find another board. If you take one step closer, I will bleed out on your imported Persian rug, and you can explain to the press why your new bride chose death over a single night in your bed."

The air between us turned brittle. Archer stared at me, his eyes searching my face for the fragile, easily manipulated girl he thought he had married. He found nothing but a void. He drummed his fingers once against the doorframe, a sharp, irritated rhythm.

Slowly, he backed away. "We will discuss your... hysteria in the morning."

The door clicked shut. I lowered the glass, my hand finally beginning to tremble. I had survived the night.

By the time the gray, unforgiving morning light bled through the windows, I had changed into a simple cashmere sweater and trousers. I stood by the window, my right thumb rhythmically tracing the smooth band of my father’s gold ring on my index finger. It was the only armor I had left.

The door opened again. Archer walked in, his composure completely restored, accompanied by a severe-looking woman in a crisp gray uniform.

"Emily," Archer said smoothly, ignoring the shattered glass still littering the vanity. "This is Margaret Walsh. She will be managing the penthouse and overseeing your transition into the household."

Margaret offered a stiff nod, her eyes darting over me with critical precision. She was his warden, placed here to monitor my every breath.

"Margaret will also be handling your dietary needs," Archer continued, his tone perfectly conversational. He gestured to a small silver tray Margaret held. On it rested a crystal glass of water and a small, unmarked amber bottle. "Including your daily health supplements. To ensure you remain in peak condition."

Margaret stepped forward, unscrewing the cap.

The moment the seal broke, a faint, metallic chemical odor drifted into the air. It was barely perceptible beneath the scent of the room's gardenias, but my stomach violently violently. It was the smell of bitter chalk and rotting almonds.

The poison.

He wasn't waiting for me to become a nuisance. The systematic destruction of my health, the toxins that would eventually kill me and my unborn child, was starting on day one.

I looked up from the tray, meeting Archer's dark, empty eyes. I didn't flinch. I reached out, my fingers brushing against the cold glass of the water, knowing exactly what I had to do. I would take his poison, I would play his game, and I would burn his entire empire to the ground.

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