
My Groom Poisoned Me to Steal My Inheritance
Chapter 3
The sterile scent of the clinic was different from the cold, crisp air of my ice studio. It smelled of rubbing alcohol and anxiety. I sat on the examination table, the paper crinkling beneath me with every shallow breath. Dr. Aris Thorne, a toxicologist who owed my grandfather his career, held a tablet with the gravity of a judge delivering a death sentence.
"The panel is conclusive, Athena," he said, his voice low, lacking its usual clinical detachment. He turned the screen toward me. The chemical structures looked like jagged little sculptures, ugly and sharp.
"Medroxyprogesterone acetate," he read, tapping the first graph. "At three times the therapeutic dose. And trace amounts of benzodiazepines."
I stared at the levels spiking in red. It wasn't just betrayal; it was biological warfare. Bennett hadn't just stolen my art; he had stolen my future. Every morning, with a kiss on my forehead and a glass of fresh-squeezed juice, he had been chemically neutering me. He smiled while he did it. He planned our life together while ensuring I could never create life of my own.
"Is the damage permanent?" I asked. My voice didn't tremble. It was flat, dead.
Dr. Thorne hesitated. "It’s reversible, but it will take time. Your system needs to flush the toxicity. If you had continued for another six months..."
He didn't finish. He didn't have to.
"Document everything," I said, sliding off the table. I buttoned my coat, feeling the silk lining against my skin like armor. "I want certified copies sent to Marcus. Chain of custody must be impeccable."
"Athena, this is assault. We should call the police now."
"Not yet," I said, twisting the sapphire ring until it bit into my knuckle. "The police are a blunt instrument. I need a scalpel."
Leaving the clinic, the city looked different. The grey winter sky wasn't gloomy; it was a reflection of my own internal landscape. I didn't feel the cold wind on Fifth Avenue. I felt a burning, precise rage that clarified everything. They wanted my life? Fine. I would show them what it cost to maintain it.
My next stop was a nondescript office building in Midtown, home to shell companies and quiet money. I sat across from a junior associate who didn't know my face, only my wire transfer. Within an hour, "The Crystal Trust" was born. It was a ghost entity, a holding company with indistinguishable board members and a singular purpose.
I opened my laptop in the back of the car as we drove uptown. Bennett’s studio was already hemorrhaging money. Without my silent infusions of cash to cover the rent, the materials, and the exorbitant utility bills for the climate control, he was drowning in overhead. The creditors were circling. I didn't shoo them away. I bought them out.
With a few keystrokes, The Crystal Trust purchased the distressed debt of the Cruz Studio. I bought the lien on his equipment. I bought the outstanding loan on his "brand." I was no longer just his wife; I was his landlord, his bank, and his executioner. He was living on my property, working with my tools, breathing air I paid for, and he didn't even know the eviction notice was already drafted.
Later that afternoon, my phone pinged with a notification from the security system at the penthouse. *Motion Detected: Master Bedroom.* I pulled up the feed.
Joelle was standing in front of my floor-to-length mirror. She was trying to zip up my custom Dior gown—the emerald one I wore to the Met Gala two years ago. It was too tight in the bust, the fabric straining dangerously. Her face was flushed, not with embarrassment, but with frustration.
"Stupid thing," she muttered, yanking the zipper. The sound of tearing silk was audible even through the tiny microphone.
She froze, looking at the rip in the side. Then, with a petulant scowl, she grabbed my platinum credit card—the supplementary one I had foolishly given Bennett for 'emergencies'—and stormed out.
I switched feeds to the GPS tracker on the card. She was heading to Bergdorf's.
I let her get all the way to the register. I let her pick out a twenty-thousand-dollar Oscar de la Renta gown, likely for the charity luncheon she had RSVP'd to in my place. I imagined her standing there, chin high, trying to channel the Richardson arrogance she had studied but never understood.
I waited until the transaction hit the pending queue. Then, I froze the account.
Ten minutes later, the audio feed in the penthouse picked up the slam of the front door. Joelle threw her purse across the room, knocking over a vase of white lilies. Bennett emerged from the studio, covered in dust, looking haggard.
"What is it now?" he snapped.
"It was declined!" Joelle shrieked, her voice cracking. "The card was declined in front of everyone! The salesgirl looked at me like I was trash, Bennett! Like I was nobody!"
"It's a glitch," Bennett said, rubbing his temples. "I'll call the bank."
"It's not a glitch!" She paced the room, kicking at the spilled water from the vase. "She cut us off. She's starving us out."
"She can't," Bennett scoffed, though his eyes darted nervously to the pile of unpaid invoices on the counter. "I'm the talent. The money follows the talent."
"You're not the talent!" Joelle screamed, the facade finally cracking. "You haven't sculpted anything decent in three weeks! We have no money, Bennett. I can't even buy groceries, let alone a gown. Fix it!"
"Don't talk to me like that," he roared back, advancing on her. "You're the one who said we didn't need her! You said you could handle the social calendar!"
"I could if I had the money!"
They stood in the ruin of my beautiful, curated living room, screaming over the scraps of the life I had built for them. It was ugly. It was pedestrian.
I closed the laptop. The silence of the Hamptons estate rushed back in, heavy and comforting. I looked at the medical report on my desk, the jagged lines of poison. They were worried about money. They should have been worried about me.
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