
After My Groom Planned My Death, I Planned His
Chapter 5
The air in the penthouse had curdled since the gala. Archer was a storm cloud of silent fury, burying himself in his study with a bottle of scotch, while Alexis paced the living room like a caged tiger, her humiliated vanity demanding blood. She couldn't attack Archer, so she turned her claws on the only other target in the room.
I sat in the wingback chair by the window, ostensibly reading a book, though my eyes never moved past the first paragraph. Alexis hovered near the foyer console, her fingers tracing the rim of a heavy crystal vase filled with white lilies—funereal flowers for a dead marriage.
"You think you're clever, don't you?" Alexis asked, her voice tight. She didn't wait for an answer. "That little speech about termites? It was cute. But Archer isn't going to leave me, Emily. He needs me."
I turned a page, the sound crisp in the silence. "Needs is a strong word for a liability, Alexis."
Her face flushed a blotchy, ugly red. Her hand lashed out, not at me, but at the pedestal.
With a violent crash, the crystal vase shattered against the marble floor. Water pooled rapidly, soaking the expensive Persian rug, and shards of glass exploded outward like shrapnel. The sound was deafening—a chaotic, jagged noise that ripped through the quiet.
In my first life, this sound would have sent me cowering. It was the soundtrack of my abuse, the prelude to Archer’s rages. Even three nights ago, on my wedding night, broken glass had been my desperate weapon of self-destruction.
Alexis watched me with predatory anticipation, her lips curled into a cruel smirk, waiting for the flinch. Waiting for the trembling hands and the panic attack she knew lay just beneath my skin.
But I didn't move.
I didn't blink.
I slowly closed my book and set it on the side table. My heart hammered a slow, steady war drum against my ribs, but my hands were steady as stone. I looked at the glittering mess on the floor, then up at her disappointed face.
"You missed," I said simply.
I stood up, my heels clicking rhythmically on the marble as I walked toward her. I stopped inches from where the water stained the hem of her dress. Her smirk faltered, replaced by a flicker of genuine confusion.
"You're pathetic," she spat, though the venom lacked its usual potency.
My gaze dropped to my mother’s emerald pendant, still resting against her collarbone. The gold chain looked tight, choking.
"Be careful with that necklace, Alexis," I whispered, leaning in close enough to smell the stale champagne on her breath. "Borrowed jewelry always turns your neck green. It’s the cheap metal reacting to the sweat of desperation."
Alexis recoiled as if I’d slapped her. Her hand flew to her throat, covering the emerald. Before she could sputter a retort, I walked past her, stepping carefully over the largest shard of glass, leaving her standing in the wreckage she had created.
Once inside the sanctuary of the guest bedroom, I locked the door and leaned against it, exhaling a breath I hadn't realized I was holding. My facade of ice melted instantly, replaced by the adrenaline of the hunt.
The burner phone hidden inside my pillowcase vibrated.
I scrambled across the room, digging it out. The screen illuminated the dark room with a single name: *Victoria*.
"Tell me you have it," I answered, skipping the pleasantries.
"I have it," Victoria’s voice came through, crackling with exhaustion and triumph. "Curtis Harper’s personal ledger. He thought 256-bit encryption would save him. He was wrong."
A cold thrill raced down my spine. "And the frame-up?"
"It’s all here, Em. The wire transfers, the falsified invoices, the emails to the corrupt auditors. They didn't just frame your father; they orchestrated a systemic looting of the pension fund to cover their bad bets in Macau. Archer signed off on every single transaction."
I closed my eyes, a single tear slipping out—not of sorrow, but of fierce, burning relief. "Send it to the secure server. I’m finishing the dossier tonight."
The next morning, the penthouse was abuzz with frantic energy. Caterers were carrying in crates of champagne, and florists were erecting arches of roses that cost more than most people’s annual rent.
Archer found me in the kitchen, nursing a cup of Bodhi’s herbal tea. He looked haggard, the lines around his eyes deeper than usual, but his arrogance remained untouched.
"Alexis is having a birthday celebration tonight," he announced, adjusting his tie without looking at me. "A small gathering of close friends and key investors. You will stay in your room. I don't need your 'metaphors' souring the mood."
"Of course, Archer," I said, blowing softly on my tea to hide the savage smile fighting to break through. "I wouldn't want to ruin her big night."
He grunted and left, oblivious to the fact that he had just handed me the detonator.
An hour later, disguised in a heavy trench coat and oversized sunglasses, I slipped out the service entrance. The city was gray and biting, the wind whipping my hair across my face as I walked three blocks to a nondescript mailbox.
In my hands, I held a thick, padded envelope. Inside was the trinity of their destruction: the audio recording of Archer and Curtis laughing about my father’s death, Victoria’s forensic report on the embezzlement, and the decrypted ledger proving federal fraud.
I looked at the address label one last time.
*Special Agent James Morrison*
*Federal Bureau of Investigation*
*Financial Crimes Division*
I slotted the envelope into the metal maw of the mailbox. It slid down with a heavy, final thud.
Tonight, Alexis wanted to be the center of attention. Tonight, Archer wanted to secure his investors. I would give them exactly what they wanted—an audience they could never escape.
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