
After My Husband Fathered His Mistress’s Child, I Faked My Death
Chapter 3
The house was a mausoleum of secrets, and I had become its silent haunter. Since the garden party, I had perfected the art of invisibility. Anthony and Priscilla moved through the rooms with the arrogance of ownership, their voices carrying down the hallways while I remained a static object in the periphery. But objects have ears.
I’d hidden the baby monitor—one of the spare units Priscilla had discarded for a newer model—behind a row of leather-bound law books in Anthony’s study. It was a pathetic act of espionage, fueled by a paranoia that felt increasingly like survival instinct. I sat in the guest bedroom, the receiver pressed to my ear, the static hissing like a snake.
“...getting impatient, Ant,” Priscilla’s voice crackled through the speaker. “The lawyers are asking questions about the trust fund. If Caroline doesn’t sign off on the new trustees, we’re stuck.”
“I told you, I’m working on it,” Anthony replied, the clink of glass suggesting he was already drinking. “She’s stubborn. If I push too hard, she clams up.”
“Stubborn is fixable,” Priscilla purred. The sound of her heels clicking on the hardwood floor grew louder. “Broken things are easy to discard. Remember Brian?”
My breath caught in my throat. Brian was Anthony’s brother. Priscilla’s late husband. The man who had died in a ‘freak accident’ on the Pacific Coast Highway.
“Don’t bring him up,” Anthony snapped, his voice tight.
“Why not? I solved that problem for us, didn’t I?” Her tone was chillingly casual, as if discussing a stain on the carpet. “A little adjustment to the brake lines, a steep curve… and suddenly, I was a wealthy widow and you were free of his oversight at the company. I solve problems, Anthony. Permanently.”
Ice flooded my veins. The receiver slipped from my sweating palm, clattering onto the duvet. I stared at the device, horrified. She hadn’t just trapped Anthony; she owned him. And I was the only loose end left dangling.
I didn’t sleep that night. Every creak of the house sounded like footsteps coming to finish what the car crash seven years ago had started. By dawn, terror had hardened into a cold, diamond-sharp resolve. I couldn’t just divorce Anthony. If I tried to leave legally, Priscilla would see me as a threat to her empire. I had to vanish.
I used the burner phone I’d bought with cash from my secret stash—money I’d skimmed from the grocery budget for years—and texted Simone. *Code Red. The old oak tree. One hour.*
Getting to the park was agony. The path to the old oak was unpaved, a rugged trail of packed dirt and protruding roots that my sleek, indoor wheelchair wasn’t built for. I had to force the wheels over the uneven ground, my arms screaming with effort, sweat stinging my eyes. Every jolt sent a shockwave of phantom pain through my missing shins, but I didn’t stop. I couldn’t.
Simone was waiting on the bench, her sharp blazer looking out of place among the joggers and strollers. When she saw me—disheveled, panting, mud splattered on my wheels—her face crumpled.
“Care,” she breathed, rushing forward to help me over the last root.
“Don’t,” I gasped, waving her off. “I need to do this.”
I wheeled myself to the bench and locked the brakes. In low, hurried whispers, I told her everything. The baby. The humiliation. The conversation in the study. When I mentioned the brake lines, Simone’s hand flew to her mouth.
“She confessed to murder?” Simone hissed, her lawyer’s eyes scanning the perimeter for listeners.
“She bragged about it,” I corrected. “Simone, if I file for divorce, she’ll kill me. She sees me as an obstacle to Anthony’s money. I can’t fight them in court. I need to be gone.”
Simone stared at me for a long moment, the gears in her brilliant mind turning. She didn’t offer platitudes. She offered a solution.
“There’s a way,” she said slowly. “But it’s extreme. And there’s no coming back.”
She pulled out her tablet and opened an encrypted app. “I have a contact. Dr. Elena Rodriguez. She runs a black-site medical institute in Zurich. It’s off the books, highly experimental. They specialize in bio-regeneration and advanced prosthetics for… high-value assets. Mercenaries, spies. People who need to be rebuilt.”
“Rebuilt?” I asked, looking down at the empty space where my legs used to be.
“Completely,” Simone said. “It’s not just therapy, Care. It’s a metamorphosis. But it’s painful. And dangerous. They require you to be a ghost. No paper trail. No family.”
We initiated the video call right there in the park, shielding the screen from the sun. Dr. Rodriguez appeared, a stern woman with silver hair and eyes that dissected me through the pixels.
“Mrs. Cruz,” she said, her voice heavily accented. “Simone tells me you are desperate.”
“I’m determined,” I corrected.
“The procedure involves bone lengthening, nerve grafting, and experimental tissue regeneration,” Dr. Rodriguez said clinically. “The pain will be exquisite. The recovery will take two years of isolation. The failure rate is… significant. Why should I take you?”
I looked at my hands—hands that used to grip a steering wheel at a hundred miles an hour, hands that now sketched gardens I was told I couldn’t build. I thought of Priscilla’s smirk. I thought of Anthony’s pity.
“Because I’m already dead,” I said, my voice steady. “I just need a body that can walk out of the grave.”
Dr. Rodriguez studied me for a long silence. Then, a small, terrifying smile touched her lips. “Very well. We begin the extraction protocols tonight. Prepare yourself, Caroline. The woman you are is about to cease to exist.”
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