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My Husband and Sister Planned to Kill Me Novel Cover

My Husband and Sister Planned to Kill Me

The pain medication was wearing off as I stepped out of the taxi onto the cobblestone driveway of my family's Mercer Island estate. Three weeks had passed since the surgery, but my abdomen still throbbed with each step. The doctor had warned against traveling, but I needed to escape the suffocating silence of our downtown condo—and Nash's increasingly cold shoulders. I'd called ahead to let the staff know I was coming for Thanksgiving. My mother hadn't sounded thrilled, but I needed family right now. Needed comfort. The mansion loomed before me, its windows glowing amber against the gray Seattle afternoon. Rain pattered softly on my jacket as I made my way up the grand entrance steps. "I'm home," I whispered to myself, pushing open the heavy oak door. The foyer was empty, but I could hear voices from the conservatory—my father's favorite place before he passed.
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Chapter 4

The fluorescent lights of Whitmore Asylum buzzed overhead as I lay strapped to the bed in isolation. My wrists were raw from struggling against the leather restraints, and my throat burned from screaming until my voice gave out. Nash's threat of "permanent solutions" echoed in my mind, each word a countdown to my inevitable death.

A mechanical whirring sound broke through my despair. The ventilation grate in the corner of my cell rattled, then shifted slightly. I watched, transfixed, as gloved fingers appeared through the opening, prying the metal cover loose.

"Amelia," a familiar voice whispered. "Don't make a sound."

Waylon Fisher's weathered face appeared in the vent opening, his eyes as sharp and determined as I remembered from my childhood. My father's chauffeur—the man who had taught me to drive, who had been at Dad's side for twenty years.

"Waylon," I breathed, tears instantly blurring my vision. "How did you—"

"Later," he hissed, pulling himself through the narrow opening with surprising agility for a man his age. "We have minutes, not hours."

He moved with military precision, checking the corridor before returning to my bedside. From his tool bag, he produced a small vial and a syringe.

"This will neutralize the sedatives in your system," he explained, injecting the clear liquid into my IV line. "You'll need your wits about you."

The effect was immediate—the fog in my mind began to lift, replaced by a surge of adrenaline.

"Your father would never have committed suicide," Waylon said as he worked on the restraints. "And I knew that 'suicide attempt' of yours was a setup the moment I saw the reports."

"How did you find me?" I asked as the first strap fell away.

"Your father installed tracking software on all family vehicles fifteen years ago," he replied, his voice tight with controlled anger. "When Nash's car GPS showed frequent trips to Whitmore, I knew something was wrong."

The final restraint fell away, and I sat up, wincing at the pain in my abdomen. "Nash has guards everywhere."

"Not anymore." Waylon's smile was grim as he pulled out a small device. "I've looped the security footage for this wing and disabled the cameras. The night guard is taking a long nap courtesy of this." He held up a tranquilizer gun.

He helped me to my feet, supporting my weight as my legs threatened to buckle. "Can you walk?"

"Yes," I insisted, though my body screamed in protest.

"Follow me," he whispered, leading me toward a supply closet at the end of the hall.

Inside, he pushed aside cleaning supplies to reveal a service hatch in the floor. "This leads to the old utility tunnels. The asylum was built over an abandoned mining operation."

The hatch opened to reveal a narrow shaft lit only by Waylon's flashlight. The air was stale and damp, smelling of earth and rust.

"They'll search the roads," Waylon explained as we descended. "But they won't think to look underground."

The tunnel stretched before us, a forgotten artery beneath the institution. We moved as quickly as my weakened body allowed, the darkness swallowing us whole.

"How did you know about these tunnels?" I asked, my voice echoing against the concrete walls.

"Your father believed in contingency plans," Waylon replied cryptically. "He made sure I knew every escape route on the property."

After what felt like hours but was probably only twenty minutes, we emerged in a forest clearing half a mile from the asylum. The night air hit my face like a blessing, the first fresh air I'd breathed in weeks.

Waylon's truck waited at the tree line, its engine running. "We're not safe yet," he warned as he helped me inside.

We drove in silence through winding back roads, eventually turning onto an unmarked dirt path that led to a small cabin nestled among towering pines.

"My safe house," Waylon explained as we pulled up. "Off-grid, no records."

Inside, the cabin was sparse but clean—a single room with basic furnishings and walls lined with surveillance equipment and maps.

"You need to see something," Waylon said, his voice suddenly heavy with grief.

He pulled a locked box from beneath the floorboards and opened it with a key around his neck. Inside were several USB drives, audio recorders, and a thick folder of documents.

"Your father's death wasn't a heart attack," he said, placing a small recorder on the table between us. "It was murder."

My blood turned to ice as he pressed play. My mother's voice filled the room, cold and calculating.

"The old man is getting suspicious," she said. "We need to accelerate the timeline."

"Is everything prepared?" Another voice—Elena Torres, Nash's mother.

"The medication has been adjusted," my mother replied. "His heart will give out during tomorrow's board meeting. No one will question a stress-induced cardiac event."

"And Amelia?" Elena's voice again.

"Leave her to me," my mother said dismissively. "Once Richard is gone, she'll be no threat."

I sat frozen as the recording continued, each word driving a knife deeper into my heart. My father hadn't just died—he'd been betrayed by the two women he'd trusted most.

"There's more," Waylon said quietly, sliding a document across the table.

It was a transfer of assets—billions in Chapman Corporation shares being moved to offshore accounts controlled by the Torres family.

"They've been planning this for years," Waylon explained, his eyes burning with righteous anger. "And they're not finished yet."

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