
After My Husband Tried to Murder Me, I Returned
Chapter 2
The water was impossibly clear as I surfaced alone, my breathing apparatus hissing in the sudden silence. Forty-seven minutes. That's how long I needed to wait before the panic could begin.
I floated in the crystalline blue, checking my dive watch with the methodical precision of a man following a script. Emily's absence felt like a weight lifted from my chest rather than a loss. The cage was three hundred feet below, sealed and silent, holding its precious cargo in the darkness where no one would ever find it.
Forty-six minutes now.
I swam toward shore with measured strokes, my mind already shifting into character. The devastated husband. The man whose world had just collapsed. I'd practiced this performance in mirrors for weeks, perfecting the tremor in my voice, the way my face would crumple with grief.
The beach was nearly empty when I dragged myself onto the sand, my wetsuit dripping Pacific water onto the pristine white shore. A few tourists lounged under umbrellas in the distance, their laughter carrying on the trade winds. None of them had any idea they were about to witness the beginning of my greatest performance.
Forty-three minutes.
I sat on the beach, staring out at the water where my wife had supposedly vanished. The irony wasn't lost on me—Emily had always loved the ocean. She'd grown up sailing with her father, spent summers at the family compound in Martha's Vineyard. Water was supposed to be her element.
Now it was her tomb.
My phone felt heavy in my waterproof case. The weight of the call I was about to make. I closed my eyes and summoned the image of Emily's face as she'd looked at me this morning over breakfast—trusting, radiant, completely unaware that she was living her final hours.
The emotion I needed began to build in my chest. Not grief, but something close enough to fool anyone watching.
Forty-seven minutes exactly.
I dialed 911 with shaking fingers, letting my voice crack as the operator answered.
"Please, I need help!" The words tore from my throat with surprising authenticity. "My wife—she's missing! We were diving and she just—she vanished!"
"Sir, please stay calm. Can you tell me your location?"
"Mauna Kea Beach, near the north point. We were diving together and when I turned around she was gone!" I let a sob escape, the sound echoing across the empty beach. "Please, you have to send someone. She could be hurt, she could be—"
"Sir, emergency services are on their way. Stay exactly where you are."
I ended the call and immediately began pacing the shoreline, playing the part of a man desperate to do something, anything, to find his missing wife. The tourists were starting to notice now, their conversations quieting as they watched the unfolding drama.
Twenty minutes later, the beach erupted with activity. Coast Guard boats appeared on the horizon, their engines cutting white wakes through the blue. Emergency vehicles lined the shore access road, their lights painting the sand in alternating red and blue.
Detective Kenji Tanaka arrived with the second wave of responders. He was younger than I'd expected, with sharp eyes that seemed to catalog every detail of the scene. His handshake was firm, his voice professionally compassionate.
"Mr. Miller, I'm Detective Tanaka with Honolulu PD. I know this is difficult, but I need to ask you some questions about what happened."
I nodded, wiping my eyes with the back of my hand. "Anything. Whatever you need to find Emily."
He led me to a quieter section of beach, away from the growing crowd of emergency personnel and curious onlookers. His notebook appeared in his hands with practiced efficiency.
"Tell me about the dive. Start from the beginning."
I took a shuddering breath, letting my voice shake as I began the story I'd rehearsed a hundred times. "We went out around ten this morning. Emily's been wanting to see the coral formations near the north point—she read about them in some diving magazine. I thought it would be romantic, you know? For our anniversary."
"How experienced a diver is your wife?"
"She's certified, but not as experienced as me. That's why I was staying close." I paused, letting anguish creep into my expression. "God, I should have stayed closer."
"What happened down there, Mr. Miller?"
"We were at about sixty feet, following the reef line. The visibility was incredible—you could see for maybe a hundred feet in every direction." I gestured toward the water, my hand trembling slightly. "Emily was taking pictures of some tropical fish when I noticed my air gauge. I swam over to check her levels too, and when I looked back..."
I let my voice break completely, burying my face in my hands. "She was just gone. Like she'd never been there at all."
Detective Tanaka's pen scratched against his notebook. "Did you see anything unusual? Any equipment problems? Marine life that might have startled her?"
"Nothing. The water was calm, perfect conditions. That's what makes this so—" I looked up at him, letting desperation fill my eyes. "She's a strong swimmer, Detective. Even if something went wrong with her gear, she should have been able to surface."
"How long did you search before surfacing?"
"I don't know. Fifteen, maybe twenty minutes? I kept diving down, calling her name underwater, looking everywhere I could think of." The lie flowed smoothly, each detail carefully crafted. "Finally I had to surface when my air got low. I was hoping she'd already made it back to shore, that maybe I'd just missed her somehow."
The detective's eyes never left my face as I spoke, cataloging every micro-expression, every pause. But I'd been preparing for this moment for months. Every word was calculated, every emotion performed with the skill of a man whose life depended on the show.
"We'll need to search your equipment," he said finally. "Standard procedure."
"Of course. Whatever you need." I gestured toward where I'd left our gear. "Emily's tank and regulator are still down there somewhere. Maybe if you find them..."
As the Coast Guard boats combed the water in expanding search patterns, I stood on the beach playing my role to perfection. The grieving husband, clinging to hope while facing the unthinkable. Tourists approached with sympathy and offers of help. Local news crews arrived, their cameras capturing my anguish for the evening broadcast.
Each interaction was another opportunity to cement my story, to build the narrative that would carry me through the investigation to come. Emily Carter Miller, beloved wife and heiress, had vanished without a trace during what should have been a romantic anniversary dive.
And I was the heartbroken widower who would inherit everything she'd left behind.
As the sun began to set over the Pacific, painting the water in shades of gold and crimson, I allowed myself one moment of genuine satisfaction. The performance was flawless. The plan was working.
Emily was gone, and soon, very soon, I would finally have everything I'd ever wanted.
You may also like





