
He Streamed Our Divorce, I Streamed His Funeral
Chapter 2
The internet is a cruel and efficient machine. By the time the Uber dropped me off at the sleek, minimalist townhouse I hadn't visited in months—our "official" residence that Marcus mostly used for photo ops—the algorithmic aftermath was already in full swing.
I walked through the front door, tossing my keys into the bowl. The silence was heavy, but it was nothing compared to the cacophony waiting for me on my tablet. I poured a glass of Pinot, the dark red liquid staining the crystal, and sat on the edge of the pristine white sofa. I swiped open the feed.
The highlights were everywhere. "The CEO’s Betrayal." "Wife vs. Mistress: The Ultimate Humiliation." The marketing accounts were having a field day. They had already dug up my wedding photos, juxtaposing my smiling, younger face next to grainy screenshots of the stream.
I was officially the "most miserable ex-wife in the country." The comments were a cesspool of voyeuristic pity and misogyny. "She should have kept him happy," one read. "At least he’s honest about it," another sneered.
My phone buzzed on the marble table. It was a notification from the platform itself. Scarlett had gone live.
Again.
I tapped the notification. The screen filled with her face. She was glowing, that post-coital radiance enhanced by studio lighting. She was wearing one of Marcus’s shirts—a custom-tailored Italian silk number that was comically large on her frame.
"Hey guys," she purred, her voice like spun sugar. "I just wanted to clear the air. The love Marcus and I share? It’s real. It’s passionate. Sometimes, things happen that people don’t understand."
The chat scrolled in a blur of hearts and praise. She tilted her head, letting the blonde curtain of hair fall over her eyes, playing the innocent victim of circumstance.
"I just think," she continued, her lips curling into a smirk, "that ex-wives should learn to leave with dignity.
Don't cling to the past. Know when you've been replaced."
She typed a hashtag into the title bar: #QueenBehavior.
It was masterful. She was framing her homewrecking as an act of female empowerment. I took a sip of wine, the bitter tannins coating my tongue. She was good. She understood the engagement hooks just as well as I did—maybe better, because she had no conscience to slow her down.
Then, the screen changed. The platform was smart; it knew I was connected to Marcus, so it suggested the
"Related Content." There, in the sidebar, was a clip from the original stream, edited and polished for maximum viral potential.
I watched it. I watched Marcus’s hand—my hand—sliding up Scarlett’s thigh. I watched the cold smile he wore, the glint of the signet ring. I watched him lean in, whispering something in her ear that made her throw her head back and laugh.
But I didn't look at them. I looked at the code running in the background.
My eyes darted to the corner of the screen, analyzing the metadata. The stream was tagged with "Premium,"
"Exclusive," and "High Engagement." The recommendation engine was pushing it to every male user aged eighteen to forty-five. It was using the "Shock Value" multiplier I had coded during the platform's beta phase.
It was practically screaming for me to dismantle it.
The phone on the table rang, the shrill sound cutting through my analysis. The screen flashed: Marcus.
I set the wine glass down. I let it ring. Once. Twice. Three times. I was timing my response, calculating exactly how long a "broken" woman would wait before answering.
On the fourth ring, I swiped accept. I didn't speak. I just let my breathing come in shallow, ragged gasps.
"Isabella?" Marcus’s voice came through, smooth and velvety, lacking any hint of the panic he should have been feeling. "Baby, are you watching?"
I choked back a sob, letting the silence stretch. "Marcus?" I whispered, my voice trembling. "How could you?"
He sighed, a long, theatrical sound of burden. "It’s not what it looks like, Bella. You know how the board is.
They want a younger brand image. This… this is a business arrangement. A rebranding strategy."
"A business arrangement?" I repeated, letting the pitch crack. "You livestreamed… you slept with her… for the board?"
"Think about the metrics," he said, his tone shifting into that manipulative, condescending cadence he used when he thought he was the smartest person in the room. "The engagement numbers are through the roof.
We’re trending in thirty countries. I did it for us. For the company. You’re overreacting. You always were too emotional for the high-level strategy."
"I… I just don't understand," I wept, letting the tears—I wasn't even sure when they had started—wet my cheeks. "I feel so foolish. I feel like everyone is laughing at me."
"Nobody is laughing at you, Isabella. They’re entertained. There’s a difference. Look, just stay inside. Let the
PR team handle the narrative. Don't talk to the press. I’ll handle everything. You just… rest. Try to keep it together."
"I will," I sniffled. "I just… I need some time."
"Take all the time you need. I’ll be busy with Scarlett—sorry, with the campaign—for a few days. Don't call me unless it's an emergency."
The line went dead.
I stared at the black screen for a moment, the reflection of my tear-stained face staring back. Then, I wiped the tears away with the back of my hand. The acting was exhausting, but necessary. If he thought I was broken, he wouldn't see the knife coming.
I stood up, the adrenaline finally kicking in, pushing away the fatigue. I walked over to the oak desk in the corner of the room. It was covered in dust, untouched since Marcus moved his operations to the sleek glass office downtown.
I knelt and pulled a heavy, fireproof safe from the bottom drawer. I spun the dial—12-04-14, our anniversary.
A lock clicked, and the heavy door swung open.
Inside, amidst the old passports and forgotten stock certificates, sat a black external hard drive. It was scratched and battered, a relic from a garage apartment ten years ago.
I pulled it out and plugged it into my laptop. The screen flickered as the ancient drive spun up, whirring like a dying engine. A folder popped up: PROJECT EDEN_V1.0.
I clicked it. File after file of code scrolled by, written in languages that were now obsolete, annotated with notes in my own youthful handwriting. This was it. The raw, uncompiled source code for the platform’s core recommendation engine. The DNA of the beast.
I scrolled down to the root file. MainRecommendationAlgo.js.
I opened it. The lines of code cascaded down the screen. It was beautiful. It was dangerous. It was a map of the human psyche, written in JavaScript.
I scrolled to the header comment block.
/*
AUTHOR: ISABELLA VANCE
DATE: 12/04/2014
NOTES:
The 'Alpha' weighting logic is temporary. Currently designed to prioritize novelty and shock to drive initial user acquisition.
WARNING: Do not deploy in final version without 'Moral_Failsafe' constraints engaged.
In the event of uncontrolled viral loop, initiate Kill_Switch sequence via backdoor port 8080.
*/
I ran my finger over the text. I had built a backdoor into the system a decade ago, a failsafe in case the algorithm ever learned to hate us. Marcus didn’t know about it. No one did. It was a ghost in the machine, waiting for a command that never came.
I looked at the screen, then at the paused image of Scarlett laughing on my tablet. I looked at the signet ring on Marcus’s hand in the viral clip.
The corners of my lips twitched. It wasn't a smirk, and it wasn't a grin. It was the cold, sharp realization of a surgeon who finally located the tumor.
I had spent the last ten years managing a company that Marcus thought he ran. I had curated the content, moderated the toxicity, and tweaked the knobs to keep the machine profitable but safe. I had been the brakes on a car that he was determined to drive off a cliff.
If he wanted chaos? If he wanted to use my algorithms to humiliate me?
I could give him chaos.
I cracked my knuckles. The screen of the laptop cast a pale blue light over my face as I opened the terminal window. The cursor blinked, a steady, rhythmic heartbeat.
"Initialize Kill_Switch," I typed.
I wasn't the miserable ex-wife. I was the system administrator. And it was time to run the updates.
I smiled at the screen for the first time that night. It was a predator's smile.
You may also like





