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My Husband Planned My Death with My Sister Novel Cover

My Husband Planned My Death with My Sister

Three years. The doctors called it a medical miracle when my eyes finally fluttered open to the harsh, sterile lights of the ICU. But the real miracle would have been staying asleep. My throat felt like cracked glass. My muscles, atrophied and trembling, barely responded as I tried to push myself up against the scratchy hospital sheets. "Dax," I rasped. My little boy. He was five now. He stood at the foot of my hospital bed, his small hands gripping the plastic railing so hard his tiny knuckles turned white. I managed a broken smile, extending a shaking, bruised arm.
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Chapter 3

The manila envelope Marcus Chen slid across the rusted hood of the abandoned sedan felt heavier than my own pulse.

"It’s all there," Marcus murmured, his collar pulled up against the biting New York wind. "Birth certificate, social, passport. You’re officially a ghost, Mrs. Ortiz. Or should I say, Mademoiselle Laurent."

I didn't smile. I just tucked the thick, waterproof pouch into the inner lining of my trench coat, pressing it flush against my ribs. The leather of the passport radiated a phantom heat—my ticket out of this suffocating graveyard. "Thank you, Marcus."

"Don't thank me. Just don't miss your flight tomorrow," he said, melting back into the shadows of the industrial park.

I turned up my collar and stepped out into the deluge. The freezing rain fell in sheets, slicking the cracked pavement and drowning the distant sirens of the city. My left leg, still protesting the recent nerve graft, dragged with a heavy, agonizing rhythm. Every step sent a jolt of fire up my spine, but I gritted my teeth. Just one more night. One more night, and Eliana Ortiz would cease to exist.

I took a shortcut through a narrow, unlit alleyway behind a row of boarded-up storefronts. The only light came from a flickering, neon liquor sign bleeding a sickly amber glow onto the wet asphalt.

Then, the rhythm of the rain was broken.

A heavy splash. The scrape of a boot against gravel.

I stopped. The hair on the back of my neck stood on end. I glanced over my shoulder, my hand instinctively pressing against the passport at my ribs.

Three figures detached themselves from the darkness. They didn't stumble like drunks or hurry like commuters. They moved with a predatory, synchronized stillness, fanning out to block the exit.

My heart hammered a frantic warning against my ribcage. I pivoted to run, ignoring the searing pain in my leg, but a fourth shadow stepped out from behind a rusted dumpster, cutting off my escape.

"Going somewhere, Eliana?" the man in front rasped. He was built like a cinderblock, a thick scar bisecting his eyebrow. He knew my name.

Before I could open my mouth to scream, a heavy boot slammed into the back of my bad knee. The joint gave out with a sickening pop. I hit the ground hard, my palms tearing open against the broken glass and wet gravel. The taste of copper flooded my mouth.

I tried to scramble backward, but a hand twisted violently into my wet hair, wrenching my head back. White-hot pain exploded behind my eyes as a fist drove into my stomach. The air violently evacuated my lungs. I gagged, curling into a fetal position, but another kick caught me squarely in the ribs.

"Look at her," one of the men sneered, spitting a wad of tobacco into the puddle beside my face. "Not much of a fight left in this one."

The leader crouched beside me, his grip on my hair tightening until my scalp burned. His breath smelled of stale beer and rust. He reached into his jacket, the ambient neon light catching the jagged edge of a switchblade.

"Shame to ruin such a pretty face," he whispered, the blade tracing a cold, terrifying line down my jaw. "But your sister sends her regards. Says you’ve overstayed your welcome. We're just here to finish what that steering wheel started three years ago."

The words hit me harder than the physical blows. The cold rain washing over my bruised face suddenly felt like ice in my veins. *Finish what it started.* The car crash. The drunk driver. It hadn't been an accident. Nyomi hadn't just stolen my life while I slept—she had put me to sleep in the first place.

A hollow, agonizing laugh bubbled up in my throat, choking on my own blood. My sister wanted me dead.

The man raised the blade, his eyes narrowing. "Time to sleep, Eliana."

"NYPD! Drop the weapon!"

The authoritative scream ripped through the alley, followed instantly by the deafening, metallic *clack* of a service weapon being racked. A blinding beam of a tactical flashlight cut through the rain, pinning the leader like a roach in the light.

For a fraction of a second, the thugs froze. Then, the alley erupted into chaos. The man holding me shoved my head into the pavement and bolted. The others scattered like rats, their heavy boots splashing frantically toward the chain-link fence at the far end.

"Don't move!" the voice roared again, but the officers were already giving chase.

Footsteps rushed toward me. A pair of sturdy hands gripped my shoulders, gently rolling me onto my back. Through my swollen, blurring vision, I saw the gold badge clipped to a utility belt.

"Hey, stay with me. I'm Detective Torres," she said, her voice tight but steady. She pressed two fingers to my neck, checking my pulse. "Dispatch, I need a bus at my location, female victim, severe trauma."

I couldn't speak. I could only stare at the puddle a few feet away.

Torres followed my gaze. Lying in the murky water, dropped by the leader in his frantic escape, was a black burner phone. Its screen was cracked, but the backlight was glowing brightly, illuminating a fresh, unread text message.

Torres reached over, using a pen from her pocket to flip the phone out of the water. Her eyes scanned the glowing screen, her professional demeanor shifting into a rigid, icy stillness.

I didn't need to read it. I already knew the truth.

Torres looked down at me, her jaw tightening. "Who is Nyomi Green?"

I closed my eyes, the freezing rain mixing with the hot tears I swore I wouldn't shed. They weren't tears of sorrow. They were tears of absolute, unyielding rage. The tug-of-war was over. The rope had snapped.

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