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His Cruel Game, Her Perfect Escape

His Cruel Game, Her Perfect Escape

On the first anniversary of our reconciliation, I thought my tech mogul husband and I had finally turned a corner. Then I discovered our entire marriage was a spectator sport. It was a cruel, year-long revenge game orchestrated by him and his lover, and I was the punchline. For their amusement, I was poisoned with food contaminated with dog feces, publicly humiliated with a twenty-million-dollar auction scam, and beaten until my ribs broke by his family's private security. I endured it all, playing the part of the clueless, loving wife while they laughed about it in a group chat called "The Jillian Andrews Comedy Hour." But their grand finale was a step too far. I overheard him calmly planning to leave me to die in a remote cabin during a blizzard, a "tragic accident" that would finally set him free to be with his mistress. He thought he was writing the final chapter of my life. He didn't know I was about to use his murder plot as my own perfect escape. I faked my death, vanished into thin air, and left him to explain to the world how his beloved wife disappeared off the face of the earth.
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Chapter 5

Jillian Andrews POV: I woke up in our bed. The sun was streaming through the floor-to-ceiling windows, making me wince. Every muscle in my body screamed in protest as I tried to move. My back was a solid sheet of fire. I was lying on my stomach, and I could feel the cool, soothing pressure of medicated bandages against my skin. "Easy now," a soft voice said. Alex was sitting on the edge of the bed, a bowl of antiseptic and a clean cloth in his hand. He was gently dabbing at the edges of the dressings. His touch was feather-light, his expression a mask of tender concern. For a fleeting, insane moment, I saw a flicker of something real in his eyes-a flash of genuine pain, of horror at what had been done to me. It was there and then it was gone, swallowed by the practiced performance. "You have a few broken ribs," he said quietly. "I told them you fell down the stairs. I'm so sorry, Jill. I tried to stop her." Liar. He finished tending to my wounds and stood up to leave the room, pulling the door almost shut behind him, leaving it open just a crack. It was a careless mistake, one he would never have made if he weren't so confident in my brokenness. A few moments later, I heard his voice, a low murmur from the living room. He was on the phone. With her. "She's fine," he was saying to Charlotte, his voice stripped of its earlier tenderness. "A few bruises. She's tougher than she looks." There was a pause. I could imagine Charlotte's petulant tone on the other end. "No, I don't think we broke her spirit yet," Alex continued. "We need a grand finale. Something she can't come back from." My breath caught in my throat. "I have an idea," he said, a new excitement in his voice. "You know that cabin my family owns up in the Blackwood Mountains? It's completely isolated. The forecast says a massive blizzard is hitting this weekend. I'll take her up there for a 'romantic getaway.' I'll leave her there, tell her I'm going into town for supplies, and just... not come back. The storm will do the rest. They'll find her in the spring. A tragic accident." A cold, profound dread washed over me. He wasn't just trying to humiliate me anymore. He was planning to kill me. Or at the very least, leave me to die. "Don't worry," he chuckled, a sound that made my skin crawl. "I'll make sure her phone is off. No one will even know she's there until it's too late. It's the perfect ending, isn't it?" He was silent for a moment, listening. "No, I'm not getting soft," he said, his voice hardening. "This is for you, Charlotte. All of it. I'll see you Sunday night to celebrate." He hung up. My world, which I thought had already been reduced to rubble, crumbled into dust. The man I had once loved, the man who was right now dabbing antiseptic on my wounds, was calmly planning my death. But through the horror, a new, chilling clarity emerged. He had just handed me my escape on a silver platter. His perfect ending would be my perfect beginning. With painstaking effort, I reached for my laptop on the nightstand. My fingers flew across the keyboard, my body screaming with every movement. I sent a single, encrypted message to the Delphi Agency. Change of plans. The stage is set. Blackwood Mountains, Bradley Cabin. This weekend. I'll send coordinates. The finale is coming. I erased the message, cleared my browser history, and sank back into the pillows, my face a mask of exhausted pain. When Alex came back into the room a few minutes later with a tray of food, I looked at him with wide, broken eyes. "What is it?" he asked, his voice soft again. "Take me away from here, Alex," I whispered, the words tasting like ash. "Just for a little while. Somewhere quiet." He was a phenomenal actor, but I saw the flicker of surprise, the flash of triumph in his eyes before he masked it with pity. "Of course, my love," he said, stroking my hair. "I know the perfect place. A cabin in the mountains. We'll leave on Friday." I let him believe he was in control. I let him think I was a shattered, defeated woman, desperate for his comfort. The drive up to the mountains was silent. Alex kept glancing at me, a strange, unreadable expression on his face. It looked almost like guilt. For a moment, I wondered if he would back out. "That red circle on the calendar," he said suddenly, his eyes on the road. "The surprise you had for me. Is it... is it still happening?" I turned to look at him, a slow, sad smile touching my lips. "Yes, Alex," I whispered. "It's happening right now." A flicker of unease crossed his face. He didn't understand. He couldn't. We arrived at the cabin as the sun began to set, painting the sky in shades of bruised purple and orange. The air was cold and thin, and the wind whispered through the pines with a mournful sound. I could hear the distant howl of a wolf. It was a wild, dangerous place. He helped me inside, my body still stiff and sore. He lit a fire in the stone fireplace. "I, uh, I forgot to pick up wine," he said, avoiding my eyes. "And some other supplies for the storm. The general store is only about forty-five minutes away. You'll be okay here for a little while, right?" "I'll be fine," I said, my voice hollow. He grabbed his keys, hesitating at the door. He looked at me, his handsome face a mess of conflicting emotions. "Jillian..." he started, then stopped. "Go," I said. "I'll be here when you get back." He nodded, a jerky, uncertain movement, and then he was gone. The sound of his car's engine faded into the distance, leaving only the sound of the rising wind. I knew he wasn't coming back. This was it. The final act. I stood up, ignoring the shooting pains in my back. I walked to the door and stepped out into the frigid evening air. I left my phone on the table. I tore a small piece from the sleeve of my jacket and snagged it on a thorny bush near the edge of the woods. Then I walked. I walked to the pre-arranged extraction point, a secluded bend in the road a mile away. As the first snowflakes began to fall, a dark, unmarked van pulled up. The side door slid open. I took one last look back at the light of the cabin, a tiny, solitary beacon in the vast, darkening wilderness. I thought of Alex, driving away to his new life with Charlotte, believing he had finally won. I climbed into the van, and the door slid shut, plunging me into darkness. The vehicle moved silently, pulling away, leaving no tracks in the freshly falling snow. Jillian Andrews was gone. Meanwhile, miles down the mountain road, Alex Bradley felt a sharp, inexplicable pang of dread. His phone rang, an unknown number. He almost ignored it, but something compelled him to answer. "Mr. Bradley?" a grim voice said. "This is Sheriff Miller with the Blackwood County Sheriff's Department. We're calling about your wife."
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