
After My Groom Planned My Death, I Planned His
Chapter 2
The pill sat in the center of my palm, a smooth, innocuous oval of death. It looked like a prenatal vitamin, but the smell—faintly metallic, like old pennies and bitter almonds—triggered a phantom gag reflex deep in my throat.
Margaret Walsh stood three feet away, her hands clasped over her starch-stiffened apron. She watched me with the impassive scrutiny of a prison warden ensuring the inmate swallowed their sedation.
"For your nerves, Mrs. Meyer," she said, the title sounding more like an accusation than an honorific. "Mr. Meyer insists."
I didn't argue. In my last life, I had taken these blindly, trusting the husband who was slowly hollowing out my bones. This time, I lifted the glass of water with a trembling hand—a calculated performance of fragility. I tossed the pill into my mouth, taking a large, frantic gulp of water, but curled my tongue backward, trapping the capsule against the roof of my mouth.
"There," I whispered, offering a weak, watery smile.
Margaret nodded, satisfied, and turned to adjust the linens on the bed. The moment her back was turned, I moved to the floor-to-ceiling window. A large, decorative weeping fig stood in the corner, its soil dark and loose. I coughed into my hand, spitting the dissolving capsule into my palm, and in one fluid motion, buried it deep in the dirt. My thumb pressed the earth down hard, sealing the toxicity away from my body.
But avoiding the poison wasn't enough. I needed proof, and I needed an ally.
I swayed, gripping the velvet curtains. "Margaret..." I gasped, letting my knees buckle just enough to look convincing. "The room is spinning. I can't... I can't breathe."
Margaret was at my side instantly, her grip firm but ungentle. "Sit down. I'll call Mr. Meyer."
"No," I wheezed, clutching my chest. "I need a doctor. Now. Call Dr. Reed. He treated my father... he knows my history."
By the time Bodhi arrived, the afternoon sun had dipped behind the skyline, casting long, bruised shadows across the penthouse. He walked in carrying a battered leather medical bag, bringing with him the scent of rain, fresh mint, and lavender—a sharp, living contrast to the sterile, expensive air of my prison.
Archer was absent, busy destroying lives in a boardroom somewhere, leaving Margaret to hover in the doorway of the guest room.
"I need to examine her vitals, Ms. Walsh," Bodhi said. His voice was calm, but his knuckles were white where he gripped his stethoscope. "Patient confidentiality is strict, especially given the... delicate nature of Mrs. Meyer's condition."
Margaret hesitated, her eyes narrowing, but eventually, she stepped back and closed the door.
The moment the latch clicked, the air in the room shifted. Bodhi looked at me, his professional mask slipping to reveal a raw, terrified tenderness.
"Emily," he breathed, stepping forward. "You look..."
"Alive," I finished for him. I didn't waste time on pleasantries. I moved to the bathroom, turning the faucet on full blast to create a wall of sound. I dug into my pocket, producing a second pill I had managed to palm from the bottle earlier that morning.
I pressed it into his hand. "Test this."
Bodhi frowned, lifting the pill to the light. He scraped a tiny fragment off with his thumbnail and touched it to a reactive strip from his bag. The paper turned a violent, bruised purple instantly.
His eyes snapped to mine, horror flooding his gaze. "Heavy metals. Mercury and lead compounds. Emily, this isn't a supplement. It's a slow-acting abortifacient. It attacks the nervous system first."
"I know," I said, my voice flat. "I need to flush it out without them knowing I've stopped taking it."
Bodhi’s jaw tightened, a muscle feathering in his cheek. He didn't ask how I knew. He reached into his bag and pulled out a nondescript paper bag filled with dried herbs. "Dandelion root, milk thistle, and cilantro extract. Brew this. It looks like tea, smells like tea. But it will strip the metals from your blood."
Our fingers brushed as I took the bag. His skin was warm, steady—an anchor in the storm. "I will get you out of here, Emily," he vowed, his voice a low rumble.
"Not yet," I replied, hiding the bag inside my vanity. "I have to burn the house down first."
Bodhi left before Archer returned, but the peace he brought was short-lived.
The elevator doors slid open with a soft chime later that evening. Archer walked in, looking every inch the king of New York, but he wasn't alone.
Alexis Harper strutted in behind him. She wore a dress that cost more than my father’s car, and a smile that was all teeth.
"Emily," Archer said, tossing his keys onto the console table. "Alexis will be staying here for the foreseeable future. As my personal assistant, she requires proximity to manage my schedule during the merger."
It was a lie so transparent it was insulting. Alexis didn't look at him; she looked at me. She walked straight past me, her hip checking mine with deliberate force, and sat down at my vanity.
"God, the lighting in here is dreadful," she sighed, picking up a tube of lipstick. She uncapped it, the red wax looking like a bullet, and applied it slowly, watching my reflection in the mirror.
That was when I saw it. Resting against her collarbone, glinting in the vanity lights.
My mother’s emerald pendant. The heirloom Archer had sworn was in the safety deposit box.
Alexis saw my gaze land on the necklace. She smiled, twisting the gold chain around her finger. "Archer gave it to me for luck," she purred, her voice dripping with false sweetness. "He thought it was too heavy for someone in your... fragile condition. You don't mind sharing, do you, Emily?"
The rage that surged through me was white-hot, a physical blow to the chest. But I didn't scream. I didn't cry. I watched her preen in my mirror, wearing my mother's legacy like a trophy of war.
"Not at all," I said, my voice smooth as glass. "Some things are better suited for the help."
The smile fell from Alexis's face. Archer stiffened.
The war had begun.
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