
After My Husband Fathered His Mistress’s Child, I Faked My Death
Chapter 4
The numbers on the screen were just pixels, but they felt like bloodletting. Sitting in the dim glow of Simone’s office, I watched as we drained the life out of Caroline Cruz. Bit by bit, transfer by transfer, my identity dissolved into a labyrinth of offshore accounts in the Cayman Islands and Singapore. My inheritance, the last tether to the Hendersons, vanished into the digital ether.
"That's the last of the liquid assets," Simone murmured, her fingers flying over her keyboard. She didn't look at me. She couldn't. On the desk between us lay a velvet pouch. Inside was my grandmother’s vintage sapphire collection—pieces I had sworn never to sell. "The buyer in Zurich wired the funds an hour ago. It covers the clinic's initial fee and the first six months of rehab."
I reached out and touched the velvet one last time. It was cold. "Do it."
Simone hit enter. The money was gone. I was gone. All that remained was a shell in a wheelchair, waiting for the tide to come in.
***
Two days later, the final blow landed not with a shout, but with a travel brochure. Anthony tossed it onto my lap while I was eating breakfast—dry toast that tasted like sawdust.
"Paris," he announced, adjusting his silk tie in the hallway mirror. He didn't even turn around. "Priscilla has never seen the Louvre. And the baby… well, the nanny thinks the change of air will be good for his colic."
Paris. The city he had promised me seven years ago. The honeymoon we never took because my legs had been crushed into pulp three days before the flight. I stared at the glossy image of the Eiffel Tower, feeling a phantom ache in my calves so sharp I almost cried out.
"When?" I asked, my voice hollow.
"Tomorrow night," he said, finally turning. His eyes slid over me, frictionless, finding no purchase on my pain. "I've hired a new night nurse for you. Mrs. Higgins. She specializes in… geriatric care. She’ll make sure you don’t hurt yourself while we’re gone."
Geriatric care. I was twenty-nine.
"You're leaving me with a babysitter so you can take your mistress to our honeymoon destination?"
Anthony sighed, that long, suffering exhale of a martyr. "Don't start, Caroline. It's business. And family. You're just… not up for the travel. You know how the cobblestones get."
He checked his watch, grabbed his briefcase, and walked out the door without a goodbye. The heavy oak door slammed shut, sealing my fate. He didn't know it, but he had just signed my release papers.
***
The storm hit the coast twelve hours later, a furious squall that battered the Malibu cliffs. It was perfect. Nature was providing the cover I needed to die.
I sat at my desk one last time, the pen trembling in my hand. The note had to be convincing. It had to scream of a woman broken beyond repair, a woman who saw herself as a burden. It wasn't hard to write. The words poured out of me, a venomous purge of every insecurity Anthony had planted in my psyche.
*I can't be the anchor dragging you down anymore. The ocean is the only place where I won't need legs to float. I'm setting you free, Anthony. Be happy.*
I left the note on his pillow, right where he would find it after returning from his 'business dinner' with Priscilla.
Getting into the car was an ordeal of adrenaline and terror. I transferred into the driver's seat of my modified sedan, folding my wheelchair into the back with trembling arms. The hand controls felt cold under my palms. I drove through the lashing rain, the wipers fighting a losing battle against the deluge. The marina was a ghost town, the boats bobbing violently in their slips.
I parked near the rental office. I had booked the *Sea Spirit* under a fake name weeks ago, paying cash. Dragging my spare wheelchair out of the trunk in the pouring rain was a nightmare of slick pavement and biting wind. I was soaked to the bone within seconds, my hair plastered to my skull, but I felt strangely feverish.
I wheeled myself down the swaying dock, the wood slick and treacherous. The *Sea Spirit* was a modest cruiser, rocking wildly. I managed to board, locking the wheels of the chair on the aft deck.
I didn't start the engines immediately. I sat there in the dark, the rain stinging my face, looking back at the lights of the Malibu hills. Somewhere up there, in that glass prison, Anthony was probably pouring Priscilla a drink, laughing about the 'invalid' he had left at home.
"Goodbye, Mrs. Cruz," I whispered into the gale.
I disabled the GPS tracker with a pair of wire cutters Simone had given me. Then, I keyed the ignition. The engines roared to life, a guttural sound that matched the storm. I steered the boat out of the harbor, past the breakwall, and into the churning blackness of the Pacific.
When I reached the coordinates Simone had memorized for me—a patch of treacherous currents known as the Devil’s Jaw—I killed the engines. The boat began to drift, tossed like a toy by the swells.
I staged the scene with clinical precision. One shoe, kicked off near the railing. The wheelchair, overturned and wedged against the stern cleat. It looked exactly like a tragedy.
A dark shape emerged from the rain—a stealth zodiac, running without lights. Simone’s contact. The pilot, a man whose face was obscured by night-vision goggles, brought the rubber craft alongside with terrifying skill.
"Jump!" he yelled over the wind.
I didn't have legs to jump. I used my arms, my rage, and every ounce of strength I had left. I hauled myself over the gunwale, my body scraping against the fiberglass, and fell into the bottom of the zodiac with a wet thud.
As the pilot gunned the engine, peeling us away into the night, I looked back. A massive wave caught the *Sea Spirit*, lifting it high before smashing it down against the jagged rocks of the reef. Wood splintered. Fiberglass shrieked.
Caroline Cruz drowned in that wreckage. The woman shivering in the bottom of the boat, staring at the dark horizon, had no name, no past, and no legs. But for the first time in seven years, she was free.
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