
My Husband Planned to Steal Everything with My Stepsister
Chapter 2
I chose the location carefully – a quiet residential street near our neighborhood where the surveillance cameras had a blind spot. The evening was cool, with just enough fog to blur the edges of my vision as I sat in my car, hands gripping the steering wheel. The plan was simple: a controlled collision with a parked car, enough damage to be convincing but not enough to cause real injury.
My heart rate remained steady as I pressed the accelerator. The impact was jarring but manageable – exactly as I'd calculated. The crunch of metal against metal echoed in the stillness. I let my head loll forward, then back, mimicking what a genuine accident victim might do. When I touched my shoulder, I felt the beginnings of a bruise forming – a real injury, but one I could control.
I pulled out my phone, my fingers trembling just enough as I dialed Julian's number. When he answered, I made my voice shaky, breathless. "Julian... there's been an accident. I'm okay, but... I hit a parked car. Can you come?"
His response was immediate, concerned. "Where are you? Are you hurt? I'm on my way."
I gave him the address, then sat in the damaged car, watching the minutes tick by on my watch. Nine minutes after my call, his phone pinged with an outgoing call – to Lilian. I'd installed a silent tracking app on his phone the day after discovering the affair, so I knew exactly who he was calling and when. I filed this detail away, another piece of evidence for Project Clean Slate.
When Julian arrived, his face was a mask of worry. He rushed to the car, pulling me into an embrace that felt hollow now that I knew the truth. "Milana, my God, are you okay? Let me look at you."
"I'm fine," I whispered, wincing as he touched my shoulder. "Just shaken up. I hit my head a little. And my shoulder... it hurts. But I'm okay."
He examined me with what looked like genuine concern, but I was looking past his performance to the calculation behind it. "We need to get you home," he said, helping me to his car. "I'll handle everything. The insurance, the police report – don't worry about any of it."
I nodded weakly, playing the part of the grateful, relieved wife. As he drove us home, I watched his profile in the passenger mirror, memorizing the way his jaw tightened when he thought I wasn't looking.
The next morning, I began my performance in earnest. I moved slowly around the penthouse, one hand resting on my lower back, the other occasionally touching my temple. When Julian offered me coffee, I accepted it with a grateful smile, then winced as I reached for the mug. "Thank you," I murmured. "I don't know what I'd do without you."
He patted my hand, his wedding ring catching the light. "That's what I'm here for. Take the day off. Rest. I'll handle the office."
I nodded, watching as he grabbed his keys and headed for the door. "You're a saint," I called after him, and he paused, turning back with a smile that didn't quite reach his eyes. "Just looking out for my wife," he said, but his phone was already in his hand, probably texting Lilian the latest update.
Over the next few days, I refined my act. Headaches that came and went. Fatigue that made me nap in the afternoons. A slight limp when I thought someone might be watching. Julian's behavior shifted in response. In public – on video calls, when we encountered neighbors – he was the picture of concern. But in private, he grew careless. His phone stayed face-up more often. He took longer showers. He stayed out later, claiming work emergencies.
A week after the accident, Lilian appeared at our door. "I heard about your accident," she said, her voice soft with concern. "Mom told me. I came as soon as I could. Are you okay?"
"I'm fine," I assured her, ushering her inside. "Just a little banged up. Come in. I could use the company."
Lilian moved through our penthouse with a familiarity that made my skin crawl. She touched surfaces – the marble countertop in the kitchen, the leather couch in the living room – with a proprietary ease that spoke volumes. She paused in doorways, looking into rooms as if imagining herself living there. When she stood at the kitchen window, gazing out at the Seattle skyline, I saw her lips move slightly, as if she were talking to herself.
"Tea?" I offered, keeping my voice warm and my expression open. "I could use a cup."
"That would be lovely," she replied, turning from the window with a smile that didn't quite reach her eyes. As I prepared the tea, I cataloged every detail – the way she ran her fingers along the edge of the counter, how she stood in the exact spot where I usually prepared meals, the slight lift of her chin as she took in the view from our living room.
She was already claiming this space in her mind, and I was giving her every opportunity to show me just how far her ambition reached. Each visit was an audit, each gesture a declaration of intent. And I was taking careful notes on everything she touched, everything she coveted, everything she planned to take from me.
But what she didn't know was that I was already three steps ahead, building a trap that would leave her with nothing but the consequences of her own greed.
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