
From Trophy Wife to Scientific Queen
My husband Julian celebrated our five-year anniversary by sleeping with his mistress. He thought I was a clueless trophy wife, too dim to notice the vanilla and tuberose scent on his expensive suits. He was wrong. For years, I played Mrs. Vance, hiding my brilliance while Julian claimed my patents.
An anonymous email confirmed his ultimate betrayal: photos of him and Scarlett Kensington in ecstasy. My heart didn't break; it solidified into ice at five years wasted.
I activated "The Protocol" for a new identity and escape countdown. Playing the doting wife, I plotted his downfall, catching him with his mistress selling my work, and publicly snapping his credit card.
His betrayals and stolen work ignited a cold, calculated fury. He had no idea the monster he'd created. I was dismantling his empire.
I shredded his patent papers, stripping him of his ill-gotten gains. With a final tap, I initiated "Identity Erasure." Mrs. Vance was dead. Dr. Evelyn Thorne had just begun her counterattack.
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Chapter 3
The next day, Evelyn decided to purge. The penthouse felt contaminated. Every object held a memory of a lie. She needed to feel the weight of her own resources, the power she had kept hidden in the dark.
She went to Fifth Avenue.
Bergdorf Goodman was a temple of a different kind. It smelled of expensive leather and old money. Evelyn wasn't shopping for the frilly, pastel things Julian liked her to wear-the clothes of a docile doll. She was shopping for Dr. Thorne. Sharp lines. Monochromatic palettes. Structure.
She was in the designer section, running her hand over a black wool coat, when she heard the voice. It was a shrill, piercing sound that set her teeth on edge.
Victoria Vance. Her mother-in-law.
"This stitching is atrocious," Victoria was saying to a terrified sales assistant. "Do you know who I am?"
Evelyn froze. She peered through the rack of clothes.
Victoria was sitting on a velvet ottoman like a queen on a throne. Next to her, pirouetting in front of a tri-fold mirror, was Scarlett. And sitting on the sofa, looking bored but holding his wallet, was Julian.
Of course. The "Board Meeting" continued.
Evelyn considered leaving. She could slip out the side door. But then she looked at Julian. He looked so comfortable. So safe in his deception.
No.
She pulled the black coat off the rack. She put it on over her dress. It fit perfectly. She buttoned it up, popping the collar. She walked out from behind the rack.
"Hello, Victoria," Evelyn said. Her voice was smooth, carrying effortlessly across the quiet room.
The silence that followed was absolute.
Victoria turned, her face paling beneath her layers of makeup. "Evelyn? What on earth are you doing here? You look... drab."
Julian jumped up from the sofa. His eyes darted between Evelyn and Scarlett. Panic flared in his pupils. "Evelyn, darling. I... I bumped into mother and Scarlett. We were just... picking out a gift for you."
Scarlett stopped spinning. She looked Evelyn up and down, a smirk playing on her lips. She leaned toward Victoria and whispered, loud enough for everyone to hear, "Elle n'a pas de je ne sais quoi. Très ennuyeuse." (She has no spark. Very boring.)
The sales assistants looked down, trying to hide their embarrassment. Julian looked relieved that Evelyn probably didn't understand.
Evelyn smiled. It was a terrifying smile, but she kept it directed at Scarlett. She stepped closer, invading Scarlett's personal space, until she could smell the vanilla perfume.
She leaned in, her lips brushing Scarlett's ear, and whispered so softly that neither Julian nor Victoria could hear.
"Au contraire, chérie. C'est ton goût qui est ennuyeux. Et ta grammaire est atroce." (On the contrary, darling. It is your taste that is boring. And your grammar is atrocious.)
Scarlett's eyes widened in genuine shock. She pulled back, staring at Evelyn as if she were a ghost. Evelyn winked, then stepped back, her face returning to a mask of bland pleasantry.
"What did you say?" Julian asked, sensing the tension but missing the context.
"I just told her the red brings out her eyes," Evelyn lied smoothly.
She walked over to the counter where Julian had left his Black Amex card. The card that was linked to the joint account. The account that was technically funded by the patent royalties from her initial work, though Julian had signed the papers.
She picked up the card. It felt heavy and cool.
"I'll take this coat," she said to the assistant. "And actually..."
She looked at the limited edition handbag Scarlett had been eyeing. The one that cost twelve thousand dollars.
"I think Scarlett needs a parting gift."
She held the card up. Julian reached for it. "Evelyn, wait-"
Evelyn bent the card. The plastic groaned, then snapped with a loud, sharp crack that echoed through the boutique.
She dropped the two halves into Scarlett's open shopping bag.
"Oops," Evelyn said, her eyes dead. "I think this account is overdrawn, darling."
She reached into her purse and pulled out a thick stack of cash-bills she had retrieved from her private safe deposit box that morning, untraceable and cold. She slammed the money on the counter.
"Keep the change," she told the stunned assistant.
She turned on her heel, the black coat billowing behind her like a cape, and walked out of the store. She didn't look back. She didn't need to. She could feel Julian's shock radiating like heat waves, but she knew he wouldn't chase her. Not with his mother and mistress there to manage.