
He Married Me Just for Money
Chapter 3
The diamond bracelet glittered under the boutique's crystal chandeliers, catching the light in a dazzling display that would have once made my heart flutter. Oliver fastened it around my wrist with practiced tenderness, his fingers lingering against my pulse point.
"Do you like it, darling?" His voice carried that honeyed warmth he reserved for public displays of affection. "Only the best for my wife."
I tilted my wrist, watching the diamonds shimmer. Each stone probably represented another lie, another betrayal, another woman.
"It's beautiful," I said, forcing a smile that didn't reach my eyes. "Thank you."
The sales associate beamed at us, clearly charmed by the picture we presented—the devoted husband lavishing gifts on his adoring wife. If only she knew.
"Shall I wrap it, Mrs. Smith?" she asked.
"No need," Oliver answered before I could speak. "My wife will wear it out."
As we left the boutique, his hand possessively at the small of my back, I felt the weight of the bracelet like a shackle. Once, I would have treasured such a gift, convinced it meant he truly loved me despite his indiscretions. Now I recognized it for what it was—a distraction, a bribe, perhaps even guilt.
"I have meetings all afternoon," Oliver said as we reached the car. "Don't wait up for dinner."
"Of course." I leaned in as he kissed my cheek, the familiar scent of his cologne no longer comforting. "I have some calls to make anyway."
He looked relieved at my compliance, never suspecting that beneath my docile exterior, something had finally broken free.
The moment his car disappeared around the corner, I pulled out my phone and called my assistant.
"Rebecca, I need you to do something for me. Discreetly." I twisted the diamond bracelet, watching it catch the sunlight. "Launch a full audit of all my personal assets and holdings. Everything connected to the Robinson name."
"Ma'am?" Rebecca's surprise was evident. "Is everything alright?"
"No," I said simply. "But it will be. And Rebecca? Not a word to anyone, especially at Smith Group."
"Understood. I'll contact the forensic accountants immediately."
I slipped the bracelet off my wrist and into my purse. Another pretty cage to add to my collection.
---
That night, I lay awake listening to the sounds of our empty mansion. Oliver had texted that he was "working late"—a tired excuse I'd accepted countless times before. My phone showed it was past midnight when I finally heard his key in the lock.
But he wasn't alone. Female laughter, poorly hushed, drifted up the stairs.
Instead of confronting them, I silently slipped into our master bathroom, positioning myself behind the partially open door. The marble floor chilled my bare feet as I stood motionless in the darkness.
"She has no idea," Oliver's voice carried from the bedroom. "The diamond bracelet worked like a charm. You should have seen her face—so pathetically grateful."
"You always know exactly how to handle her." The woman's voice was familiar—Lily, his current favorite. "What about the documents?"
"All taken care of." The bed creaked as they settled onto it. "I've planted everything we need. If she tries to fight the divorce, she'll look unstable, paranoid. I've got recorded conversations of her 'episodes' that make her sound completely unhinged."
"And if she discovers the transfers?"
Oliver laughed—a cold, hollow sound I'd never heard from him before. "By then it'll be too late. I've already laid groundwork with our friends, her doctors. Poor Scarlett, never recovered from her parents' death, inventing conspiracies. The court will see a fragile woman who needs protection from herself, not a CEO capable of managing millions."
I pressed my hand against my mouth to stifle any sound that might escape. The calculated cruelty of his plan made my blood run cold.
"And then?" Lily asked.
"And then we take everything. The house, the investments, the Robinson fortune. She'll be left with nothing but her delusions."
I'd heard enough. Trembling with a rage I'd never experienced before, I waited until their voices dissolved into other sounds before silently retreating to the guest bedroom.
---
Dawn found me in Oliver's home office, methodically searching through drawers and cabinets while he slept upstairs with his mistress. The morning light cast long shadows across the mahogany furniture as I ran my fingers along the bookshelf, feeling for any irregularity.
Near his collection of first editions, my fingers caught on a slight indentation. Pressing it revealed a hidden panel that slid away to expose a small safe I'd never known existed.
My heart raced as I tried combinations—his birthday, our anniversary, his mother's birthday—all failures. Then, on a hunch, I tried the date we met. The safe clicked open.
Inside lay several USB drives, each meticulously labeled with dates spanning our entire relationship. With trembling hands, I picked up the one marked with the date of our last major argument.
The realization of what these might contain sent ice through my veins. How long had he been planning this? How many moments of vulnerability, of private pain, had he secretly recorded to use against me?
As I gathered the drives, my diamond bracelet caught the morning light, throwing prisms across the wall. In that moment, I knew with absolute certainty that the woman Oliver married—the trusting, forgiving Scarlett who desperately wanted to believe in love—had finally died.
And something else entirely had taken her place.
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