
Betrayed Wife's Payback: Her Battle for Justice
Chapter 2
The antiseptic smell of the hospital wrapped around me as I approached Marcus's room. My heels clicked against the polished floor, each step bringing me closer to the man I'd built my life around—the man who now lay dying, dependent on machines to survive. The irony wasn't lost on me. After years of depending on me, the tables had finally turned.
I slowed as I heard voices coming from his room. The door was slightly ajar, and Marcus's voice, though weaker than normal, carried that familiar arrogant tone I'd grown to resent.
"She has no idea, Steph. None." His laugh was brittle, like glass about to shatter. "All these years, letting her think it was her useless womb that couldn't give us children."
My breath caught in my throat. I pressed myself against the wall, heart hammering against my ribs.
"But what if she finds out?" Stephanie's voice, tinny through the speakerphone. "What if she discovers you're the one who's infertile?"
"She won't. And even if she did, what would it matter now?" Another laugh, this one crueler. "Once I get through this, we'll move forward with the divorce. I've already started moving assets. Her shares will fund our new life—you, me, and our miracle baby."
Something cold and hard crystallized in my chest. Twelve years of marriage. Twelve years of sacrifice. All for a man who mocked me behind my back, who called me barren while hiding his own infertility. Who planned to discard me like yesterday's newspaper.
I pushed the door open with enough force that it slammed against the wall. Marcus jumped, his phone clattering to the floor. His face, already pale from illness, drained of what little color remained.
"Rachel—" he started, fumbling to disconnect the call.
"Don't." My voice was ice. "I heard everything."
His expression shifted, calculating even now. "You're overreacting. You know how dialysis makes me—"
"Stop lying." I moved closer, staring down at the man I once believed was my everything. "Why, Marcus? Why the charade? Why let me believe all these years that I was the reason we couldn't have children?"
His face hardened, the mask of the loving husband dropping completely. "Because it was easier. Because your guilt made you work harder, give more." His lips curled into a smirk. "And because you let me. You're too smart to believe you've been fooled for this long, Rachel. Part of you must have known."
His words hit like physical blows. The worst part was, he wasn't entirely wrong. I had ignored signs, dismissed doubts, chosen blind loyalty over truth.
"I supported you," I whispered, my voice gaining strength with each word. "I built your company. I made you who you are."
"And I let you believe you mattered." His eyes were cold, reptilian. "That was generous of me, don't you think?"
Something snapped inside me then—the last thread of love, of loyalty, severed cleanly. I straightened my spine, looking down at him with new eyes.
"You never loved me, did you?"
"I loved what you could do for me." He didn't even hesitate. "There's a difference."
I nodded slowly, a strange calm settling over me. "Goodbye, Marcus."
"Wait—" Panic flashed across his face. "The transplant testing—"
I walked out without answering, his desperate calls fading behind me.
Back at our penthouse—my penthouse now—I moved with mechanical precision. Marcus's laptop sat on his desk, password protected. I smiled grimly as I typed in "StephanieBaby"—the new password I'd seen him use last week. The screen unlocked immediately.
It took less than an hour to find everything. Encrypted files detailing planned transfers to Cayman accounts. Legal documents ready to contest our prenuptial agreement. Emails to his lawyer about strategies to minimize my share of our company.
All dated before his diagnosis. All meticulous, calculated, cruel.
I took screenshots of everything, forwarding them to my private email, to my lawyer, to a secure cloud account. Then I poured myself a glass of the thirty-year-old Macallan he'd been saving for his "big victory" and sat by the window overlooking Manhattan.
Marcus thought he knew me. He thought I was the same naive, devoted woman who had supported him through college, who had protected his fragile ego all these years.
He had no idea what I was capable of.
And as I sipped his precious scotch, watching the city lights flicker on against the darkening sky, I made a silent promise: By the time I was done with Marcus Thompson, he would wish the kidney failure had taken him quickly.
You may also like





