
My Husband Planned My Death for His Mistress
Chapter 2
One week after the accident, I stood in our penthouse, staring at the Manhattan skyline through floor-to-ceiling windows. The city looked different now—colder, harder, like everything else in my life.
The discharge papers crinkled in my hand as I moved through our home. The space felt cavernous, empty despite its expensive furnishings. Mason was at physical therapy for his hand, giving me precious alone time.
I wandered into his home office, running my fingers along the mahogany desk where he'd built his empire. Where he'd planned my death.
"You thought I'd be gone by now," I whispered to the empty room. "Both of us."
My fingers traced the edge of his desk drawer. It was locked—unusual for Mason, who considered himself too important for such petty security measures. I found the key hidden in his bookshelf, behind a first edition of "The Great Gatsby."
Inside the drawer lay a black burner phone, the kind drug dealers used in movies. My hands trembled as I turned it on.
Hundreds of text messages filled the screen, all between Mason and someone named "K." Karina. The woman from the phone call.
I scrolled through months of exchanges, each one a knife to my heart.
"She's so boring in bed. Like fucking a corpse." Mason had written three months ago.
"I can't wait until we don't have to hide anymore," Karina replied. "When will you leave her?"
"Soon. Her trust fund kicks in next year. Once I have that..."
My vision blurred with tears as I read their plans to use my inheritance—my family's money—to start a new life together.
The most recent messages were from the day of the accident.
"It's happening today," Mason wrote. "After the appointment."
"Will you be free tonight?" Karina asked.
"Free forever," he replied.
I set the phone down and walked to the bathroom, staring at my reflection. The woman looking back at me was a stranger—hollow-eyed, pale, with a new hardness around her mouth.
I touched my flat stomach, remembering the life that had been growing there. Our baby. Our future.
"Divorce isn't enough," I whispered to my reflection. "He took everything from me."
I wiped away my tears and straightened my shoulders. The perfect wife mask slipped back into place.
---
Three days later, I sat in a small café in Brooklyn, far from our usual haunts. Marley Jackson slid into the booth across from me, her sharp eyes taking in my appearance.
"You look terrible," she said bluntly.
"Thanks." I pushed the burner phone across the table. "I need your help."
Marley examined the phone, her expression hardening as she scrolled through the messages. "Jesus Christ, Alexis."
"He tried to kill me, Marley. And our baby." My voice remained steady, surprising even myself.
She looked up, conflict evident in her eyes. The Grant family had been her firm's biggest client for years.
"I can't just..." she began.
"Read this one," I said, pointing to a message from the night before the accident.
Marley's face drained of color as she read Karina's message: "Will the baby be a problem too?"
"He was going to kill our child," I said softly. "His own baby."
Something shifted in Marley's eyes—professional distance giving way to personal horror.
"What do you need?" she asked finally.
"We need to secure his assets before he realizes what's happening. The company, the properties, everything."
Marley nodded slowly. "I can draft transfer documents under the guise of estate planning due to his injury. He'll sign them."
"He will," I agreed. "He thinks I'm too stupid to be a threat."
---
That evening, I found Mason in our living room, surrounded by empty whiskey glasses. His bandaged hand trembled as he reached for another drink.
"They're saying I'll never operate again," he slurred, his face twisted in self-pity. "The board is talking about replacing me."
I sat beside him, placing a comforting hand on his shoulder. "They can't do that to you."
"They can and they will," he spat. "Those vultures have been waiting for me to stumble."
I bit my lip, feigning concern. "What if there was a way to protect yourself?"
He looked at me, bleary-eyed but curious.
"The stress of fighting the board while recovering... it's too much," I said softly. "What if you signed over your voting rights and equity to me temporarily? Just until you're better."
Suspicion flickered across his face. "Why would I do that?"
"Because I can fight them for you," I insisted. "I can handle the board while you heal."
Mason studied me, his expression calculating despite his drunkenness. He'd always underestimated me—that was his mistake.
"You'd do that?" he asked, his ego stroked by my apparent devotion.
"Of course." I smiled, reaching for the papers Marley had prepared. "You're my husband."
Hours later, as Mason passed out in our bed, I stared at the signed documents in my hands. The first piece of my revenge had fallen into place.
He thought he was still in control. He had no idea what was coming next.
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