
Submarine Plot Against Wife
Chapter 2
The yellow gas clouded my vision, each breath burning like fire in my lungs. My fingers scrambled across the control panel, searching for anything that might save me. The livestream comments continued to filter through—strangers betting on how long I'd last, what I'd do next, how I'd beg.
They wanted a show. They were getting one.
But not the one they expected.
"Theo," I rasped into my comm, fighting to keep my voice steady as the poison seared my throat. "You forgot who designed these systems."
His smile faltered on the other side of the glass. For the first time, uncertainty flickered across his face.
I slammed my palm against the emergency override panel hidden beneath the main console—the failsafe I'd insisted on during construction, the one that Marco had called paranoid overkill. My vision blurred, but muscle memory guided my fingers through the sequence. Four digits. Six digits. Biometric confirmation.
The submersible's central computer chimed acknowledgment.
"What are you doing?" Kya's voice crackled through the speaker, panic rising. "Theo, she's accessing something!"
I didn't answer. Couldn't waste the breath. Instead, I pulled up the detonation controls for the deep-water explosives—the charges we'd planted to collect mineral samples after the survey was complete.
"Ava, stop!" Theo's voice had lost its calm control. "You'll kill yourself!"
A bitter laugh escaped my burning lungs. "That was your plan anyway."
Through the glass, I watched his face contort with rage as he realized what I was doing. He lunged for the external controls, but it was too late. My authorization codes were already processing. The system was mine again.
I had seconds to make an impossible choice: die slowly in this gas chamber for their entertainment and give foreign agents access to trillion-dollar strategic resources—or destroy everything.
Including, most likely, myself.
The mineral deposit coordinates flashed on my screen. The exact location Theo had been planning to transmit once I was dead. The nation's most valuable natural resource discovery in decades.
My finger hovered over the detonation command.
"I'm sorry," I whispered, though I wasn't sure to whom.
I pressed the button.
The world exploded.
The blast wave hit before the sound did—a wall of force that tore through the submersible's structure. The reinforced glass of my prison shattered inward. Alarms shrieked. Emergency lights flashed red through clouds of debris and gas. The cabin ripped away from the main structure, and suddenly I was tumbling through open water, still trapped inside the fractured control module.
The ocean rushed in, cold and violent. But instead of crushing me, the pressure differential created by the explosion propelled the severed cabin upward like a cork from a champagne bottle. My ears popped painfully as we rocketed toward the surface, the emergency flotation system somehow still functioning despite the catastrophic damage.
Blackness closed in at the edges of my vision. The last thing I saw before consciousness slipped away was sunlight filtering through three thousand meters of water, growing brighter with each passing second.
---
"She's coming around."
The voice sounded distant, muffled. A bright light stabbed at my eyes as someone pried my eyelids open. I tried to turn away, but my body wouldn't respond.
"Pupillary response normal. Oxygen levels stabilizing."
I was alive. The realization hit me with the same force as the explosion had. Somehow, impossibly, I was alive.
"Ms. Daniels, can you hear me?"
I managed a weak nod, my throat too raw for speech. Gradually, the world came into focus. I was on a medical transport vessel, surrounded by emergency response personnel. But behind them stood figures in dark uniforms. Military intelligence.
"Ava Daniels," one of them stepped forward, her voice clipped and professional. "I'm Commander Sarah Chen, Naval Intelligence. You're being detained pending investigation into the destruction of a classified national asset valued at approximately one trillion dollars."
She leaned closer, her expression unreadable. "Either you're a traitor to your country, or you've got one hell of a story to tell."
I tried to speak, but only managed a painful whisper. "Theo... Kya..."
"Your husband and colleague have already provided statements," Chen replied coldly. "They claim you've been unstable for months. That you deliberately sabotaged the mission."
The betrayal twisted inside me like a knife. They'd failed to kill me, so now they were trying to destroy me another way.
"Not... true," I rasped.
Commander Chen studied my face for a long moment. "For your sake, I hope you can prove that. Because right now, you're looking at treason charges."
I closed my eyes, exhaustion and despair washing over me. I'd survived the explosion only to face a different kind of execution.
But I was still breathing. And as long as I was breathing, I would fight.
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