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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 3

The morning sun bled across the mahogany dining table, casting long, sharp shadows that mirrored the fractured state of my life. Archer sat at the head, sipping his black coffee, his eyes scanning a digital financial report. He drummed his fingers once against the tabletop—a rhythm of calculated impatience.

I kept my gaze lowered, carefully buttering a piece of toast I had no intention of eating. The white-hot rage from the night before still simmered in my veins, but I buried it beneath a mask of serene, wifely submissiveness. A cornered animal doesn't bare its teeth when the hunter is watching; it waits for the hunter to look away.

"Archer," I said, softening my voice to a fragile cadence. "Since I am to remain... quiet, I’d like to take over the planning for the pediatric hospital gala. It will keep me occupied, and it reflects well on the Meyer portfolio."

Archer paused, his dark eyes flicking upward. He searched my face for the defiance I had shown on our wedding night, but I offered only a placid, empty stare. He adjusted his left cufflink, a smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth. "Charity work. How predictable. Fine, Emily. If arranging floral centerpieces keeps you out of my way, do it. Margaret will manage the budget."

He thought he was giving me a sandbox to play in. He had no idea I was building a graveyard.

By noon, the penthouse study was littered with thick, cream-colored binders stamped with the hospital’s crest. Behind the closed door, I worked feverishly. Between pages of catering menus and seating charts, I transcribed the ghosts of my past life. My pen flew across the margins, documenting Archer’s private meetings with Curtis Harper, the dates of their offshore wire transfers, and the fragmented Cayman Island account numbers burned into my memory. The charity folders became my Trojan Horse.

But ink on paper wasn't enough. I needed a hunter.

Two days later, the suffocating scent of roasted duck and expensive, clashing perfumes filled the private dining room of Le Bernardin. The charity luncheon was in full swing. Margaret sat two tables away, her hawk-like gaze tracking my every move.

I waited until the keynote speaker took the podium, then stood, offering Margaret a weak, apologetic smile as I mouthed, *Restroom.*

I didn't go to the restroom. I slipped through the heavy, brass-studded doors of the kitchen, ignoring the shouts of the sous-chefs, and pushed out into the damp, gray alleyway behind the restaurant.

The cold air hit my lungs like a shockwave. Standing beneath the dripping fire escape was Victoria Chen. My best friend. My forensic accountant.

"You have exactly three minutes before your warden comes looking," Victoria said, her sharp eyes scanning the alley. She didn't waste time on hugs. We both knew the stakes.

I pulled a folded charity brochure from my clutch and pressed it into her hand. "The margins," I breathed, my heart hammering against my ribs. "Account numbers. Dates. I need you to trace the shell companies tied to Curtis Harper and the Meyer empire. Follow the routing numbers through Cyprus."

Victoria opened the brochure, her eyes widening at the dense strings of digits I had meticulously woven around a picture of a smiling child. "Emily, if Archer catches you digging into his private ledgers—"

"He won't," I cut in, my voice laced with absolute certainty. "He thinks I'm picking out napkins. Find the rot in the foundation, Vic. Prove my father didn't steal that money."

Victoria’s jaw tightened. She slipped the brochure into her coat pocket. "Consider it done. Watch your back, Em."

I slipped back into the restaurant just as Margaret approached the hallway, my face perfectly flushed as if I had merely been touching up my makeup.

When we returned to the penthouse, the brittle afternoon light illuminated a nightmare.

Alexis was standing in the center of the study, flipping through my personal stationery box. My chest seized. Between her manicured fingers, she held a worn, lined piece of paper. The ink was faded, but I knew the strokes intimately.

*Think three moves ahead, Em. I believe in you. — Dad*

"Looking for inspiration?" Alexis purred, her lips curling into a vicious sneer. She twirled my mother’s emerald pendant around her finger, the gold chain flashing under the recessed lighting. "Taking advice from a disgraced federal inmate seems counterproductive, don't you think?"

My thumb pressed into the edge of my father’s gold ring until the metal bit into bone. The urge to cross the room and wrap my hands around her throat was a physical ache.

Instead, I stood perfectly still. I let the silence stretch, heavy and suffocating, refusing to give her the tears she was desperate to drink.

"Put it down, Alexis," I said, my voice dead and flat.

She laughed, a sharp, grating sound, and crumpled the note in her fist. With a theatrical sigh, she tossed the balled-up paper into the wastebasket. "Oops. Time to clean house."

She strutted past me, her shoulder intentionally clipping mine. I didn't flinch. I just stared at the wastebasket, my breathing shallow.

Out of the corner of my eye, I saw movement. Margaret stood in the doorway. Her hands were clasped tightly over her apron, her lips pressed into a thin, white line. She had seen everything. The gaudy, unprovoked malice of the mistress, and the silent, agonizing dignity of the wife.

I turned and walked to my bedroom, closing the door on both of them.

An hour later, a soft knock broke the silence. Margaret entered, carrying a silver tray holding the bitter detox tea Bodhi had disguised as an herbal supplement. She set it on the nightstand without a word.

I looked down. There, resting perfectly flat beneath the porcelain saucer, was my father’s note. The harsh creases had been carefully, painstakingly smoothed out by hand.

I looked up, my breath catching in my throat. Margaret met my gaze. Her expression remained severe, but for the first time, her eyes held a profound, quiet understanding. She gave a single, almost imperceptible nod, then turned and left the room.

The war had shifted, and I was no longer fighting alone.

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