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After My Husband Tried to Murder Me, I Returned Novel Cover

After My Husband Tried to Murder Me, I Returned

Deeply indebted Jack takes rich wife Emily to Hawaii for their anniversary, locks her in an underwater cage, and surfaces alone to fake a diving accident so he can inherit her fortune. Police close the case with no body, trapping Jack in legal limbo until a 7-year wait for death papers. On day 13, he wakes to find Emily—identical, warm, loving—lying beside him in her silk nightgown, greeting him as “honey.” Jack’s perfect murder has come undone: the victim is back, and he has no idea how or why.
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Chapter 1

The salt air carried Emily's laughter as we stepped off the private charter boat onto the pristine dock of the Mauna Kea Beach Hotel. Her eyes sparkled with the same excitement I'd seen a year ago when I'd slipped that ring onto her finger—back when I still believed I could love her enough to forget about the money.

"Jack, this is incredible!" She spun around, her sundress catching the Hawaiian breeze, arms outstretched like she could embrace the entire Pacific. "I can't believe we're actually here. Our first anniversary..."

I forced my practiced smile, the one that had gotten me this far. "Only the best for my wife."

The resort sprawled before us like something from a dream—or a nightmare, depending on your perspective. Manicured lawns rolled down to white sand beaches, palm trees swayed in perfect choreography, and wealthy guests lounged by infinity pools that seemed to spill directly into the ocean. This was Emily's world. This was what I'd married into.

What I'd killed for.

"The penthouse suite overlooks Mauna Kea Beach," I said, sliding my arm around her waist as we walked toward the main building. Her skin was warm through the thin fabric, and for a moment—just a moment—I remembered what it felt like to touch her without calculating her net worth. "Private balcony, ocean views..."

"You spoil me." She leaned into me, and I caught the familiar scent of her perfume—something expensive and floral that she'd worn since our wedding day. "But honestly, Jack, I'd be happy in a tent on the beach as long as I'm with you."

The irony wasn't lost on me. In less than forty-eight hours, she'd be sleeping somewhere much less comfortable than a tent.

Our suite was everything the concierge had promised. Floor-to-ceiling windows framed the endless blue of the Pacific, and the terrace featured a private hot tub that Emily immediately gravitated toward. She pressed her palms against the glass, breath fogging the surface as she gazed out at the water.

"Look at those colors," she whispered. "I've never seen water so clear. It's like you can see straight to the bottom of the world."

I joined her at the window, my reflection ghosting over hers in the glass. "Wait until you see it from underwater. There's something I want to show you while we're here."

She turned, eyebrows raised with curiosity. "Oh?"

"It's a surprise." I brushed a strand of her dark hair behind her ear, the gesture automatic after a year of marriage. "Trust me?"

"Always." The word came without hesitation, and something twisted in my chest. Emily's trust was absolute, unwavering, dangerous in its completeness. She looked at me like I hung the moon, like I was the answer to every prayer she'd ever whispered into the dark.

If only she knew what I'd been praying for.

That evening, we dined at the resort's signature restaurant, a place where the wine list read like Emily's trust fund and every dish was a work of art. She ordered the local fish, I chose the steak, and we shared a bottle of champagne that cost more than most people made in a week.

"To us," Emily raised her glass, the crystal catching the candlelight. "To our first year, and to all the years ahead."

I clinked my glass against hers, the sound sharp and final. "To the future."

She talked about plans—our plans. A house in the Hamptons, maybe children in a few years, trips to Europe, a foundation she wanted to start in her father's name. She painted a picture of a life I'd never live, a future that would end in three days when her body was discovered floating in some remote corner of the Pacific.

"You're quiet tonight," she observed, reaching across the table to cover my hand with hers. "Everything okay?"

"Just thinking about how lucky I am." The lie came easily. I'd been practicing variations of it for months. "Sometimes I can't believe you chose me."

Her smile was radiant. "You saved my life, Jack. Literally. If you hadn't been there that day at the beach..."

I remembered that day perfectly. Emily, struggling in the surf, her expensive swimsuit and designer sunglasses marking her as exactly the kind of target I'd been looking for. I'd been watching the wealthy tourists for weeks, studying their patterns, their vulnerabilities. When I saw her go under, it wasn't heroism that drove me into the water—it was opportunity.

"Fate," I said simply.

"Exactly." She squeezed my hand. "We were meant to find each other."

After dinner, we walked along the moonlit beach, waves lapping at our bare feet. Emily collected shells, exclaiming over each one like she'd discovered buried treasure. She was beautiful in the moonlight, her skin luminous, her movements graceful and unhurried.

I tried to feel something—guilt, regret, even basic human sympathy. But all I could think about was the cage waiting on the ocean floor, the debts that would disappear with her death, the life I'd finally be able to live once her money was mine.

"Jack?" She'd stopped walking and was looking at me with concern. "You seem... distant. Are you sure everything's alright?"

I pulled her close, kissing her forehead with practiced tenderness. "Just overwhelmed by how perfect this is. How perfect you are."

She melted against me, and I felt her body relax. "I love you so much it scares me sometimes," she whispered into my chest. "I never thought I could feel this way about anyone."

"I know," I murmured, stroking her hair. "I know."

Later, as she slept beside me in the king-sized bed, I stared at the ceiling and ran through the plan one more time. The remote diving spot I'd scouted months ago. The cage I'd positioned during my "reconnaissance" trip last month. The story I'd tell the authorities when I returned alone, devastated by the tragic accident that had claimed my beloved wife.

Emily stirred in her sleep, reaching for me instinctively. Her hand found my chest, and she smiled without opening her eyes. Even unconscious, she trusted me completely.

Tomorrow, I'd suggest the diving trip. Tomorrow, I'd begin the final act of this elaborate performance. Tomorrow, Emily Carter Miller would take her last breath, and Jack Miller would finally get everything he'd ever wanted.

I closed my eyes and dreamed of clear water and darker depths.

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