
The Psycho Wife’s Final Revenge
Chapter 1
The heavy oak door of the master bedroom was cracked open, letting a slice of warm yellow light spill into the dark hallway. I stood motionless on the plush carpet, my hand still gripping the handle of my rolling suitcase. I had caught an earlier flight out of Chicago, hoping to surprise my husband and son.
Instead, a burst of laughter stopped me dead in my tracks.
"Hold your hair up," Leo said. My fifteen-year-old son’s voice drifted through the gap. "The clasp is stuck."
"Careful, Leo. Don't scratch the stones," Mark warned. His tone was light, teasing.
I shifted my weight and pushed the door open another half inch.
A young woman sat at my vanity mirror. Chloe. She was Mark’s new twenty-something 'consultant' for his struggling firm.
She held her left hand up to the vanity lights. My diamond wedding band flashed on her ring finger.
"Does it look okay?" Chloe asked, giggling.
Mark stepped into my line of sight. He handed her a crystal flute of champagne. "It belongs on you."
Leo finally snapped the necklace shut. The heavy diamond teardrop—my anniversary gift from three years ago—rested against Chloe’s collarbone.
"Way better than when Mom wears it," Leo muttered, stepping back to admire his work. "She just hides it in the safe. Or she wears it with those boring gray suits."
My stomach turned over. Fifteen years of packing lunches, funding Mark's failed startups, and building this life, completely erased by a teenager's sneer and a husband's poured drink.
I pulled out my phone. I swiped to the video mode and hit the red record button.
Chloe held up her hand, admiring the ring. "Are you sure we have time? What if her flight gets changed?"
Mark laughed, taking a sip from his own glass. "She’s in Chicago until tomorrow night. Even if she flew back early, she'd go straight to the office. She's predictable."
"You're so bad, Mark."
Leo dropped onto my side of the mattress. "Can we order pizza now? Mom never lets us get the greasy kind. She's obsessed with organic garbage."
Mark rubbed Leo's shoulder. "Order whatever you want, buddy. Use my card."
"Can Chloe stay over?" Leo asked.
"Of course she can," Mark said.
I tapped the screen to stop recording. I uploaded the file directly to my private cloud drive.
I turned away from the door. No screaming. No kicking the wood open to demand answers.
My sneakers made zero sound on the floorboards as I walked down the hall. I left my suitcase sitting by the front door.
I stepped into the garage. The sharp scent of motor oil grounded me.
I slid into my SUV and hit the ignition button.
"Call Julian Hayes," I told the car's Bluetooth system.
The line rang twice before picking up.
"Claire?" Julian answered. "Tell me you're not calling about the merger. It's Friday night."
"I'm not," I said, throwing the car into reverse. "I need you to draft papers."
"What kind of papers?"
"Divorce. And a full financial separation. I want every shared account frozen by Monday morning."
"Whoa. Slow down. Did Mark do something?"
"I just sent a video to your secure inbox. Open it."
Silence stretched over the line, followed by the rapid click of a mouse. "Jesus. Is that...?"
"My husband. My son. And Mark's new assistant, Chloe."
"She's wearing your jewelry."
"My wedding ring. And my anniversary necklace."
"Claire, I am so sorry."
"Don't be sorry, Julian. Be fast. I want the initial filings ready by tomorrow morning."
"I'll have my team on it tonight. What about custody?"
"Leo made his choice," I said, gripping the steering wheel. "He's fifteen. Let Mark have him."
"Are you sure? A judge will want to know—"
"I'm sure. I want the house. I want my company shares back. I want the cars. Strip them of everything."
"I'll draw it up."
I ended the call.
"Navigation," I commanded the dashboard screen. "Cancel route to airport."
"Route canceled. State your destination."
"Four Seasons Hotel, downtown."
"Routing to Four Seasons."
I drove through the affluent neighborhood I had funded. The manicured lawns, the massive gated driveways—I paid for all of it. I stayed when Mark's first business went bankrupt. I paid off his private debts. I hired elite tutors for Leo when he failed math. I sacrificed my own peace to keep the picture perfect.
I thought I was holding a family together.
Instead, I was just financing my own replacement.
Let them figure out how to pay the property taxes without my trust fund. Let Mark see how much Chloe liked him when the credit cards declined.
The lobby of the hotel was quiet when I arrived.
I walked straight to the marble front desk.
"Good evening," the clerk said, straightening his posture. "How can I help you?"
"I need a suite," I said. "Under Claire Vance."
He typed rapidly on his keyboard. "Ah, Mrs. Vance. Welcome back. Will Mr. Vance be joining you this weekend? I can issue two keys."
"No. Just me."
"Alright. I have your usual corner suite available on the twelfth floor."
"Perfect. I also need to make a change to my guest profile."
"Of course. What would you like to update?"
"Remove Mark Vance from my emergency contacts. Cut his access to my corporate account entirely. If he tries to book a room or charge a meal to my name, decline it."
The clerk’s fingers paused over the keys. He looked up, his eyes professional but alert. "Done. Should I add a new contact?"
"Julian Hayes." I wrote the number on a hotel notepad and pushed it across the counter.
"All updated, Ms. Vance. Here is your key."
"Thank you. And if anyone calls asking for my room number, I am not here."
"Understood."
I rode the elevator up to the twelfth floor. The doors parted, and I walked down the silent hallway.
I swiped the keycard and pushed into the suite.
The room was dark and completely still. No teenagers complaining about homework. No husband pretending to work late in his study.
I dropped my purse on the armchair.
My phone buzzed in my pocket.
I pulled it out. A text message from Mark lit up the screen.
*Mark: Hey, hope the Chicago meetings went well. Leo has a huge math project due Monday. He needs you to tutor him over Zoom tonight. Call us ASAP.*
A second message followed immediately.
*Mark: Also, transfer five thousand to the joint checking? Need to pay the landscapers tomorrow. Love you.*
I stared at the glowing screen.
*Love you.*
The words made my jaw tighten. I sat on the edge of the king-sized bed.
Another buzz vibrated against my palm. A voice memo from Mark.
I hit play.
"Claire, seriously, pick up. Leo is stressing out about this math thing. You know I can't help him with calculus. Call back."
In the background of the recording, Chloe's faint laugh echoed. "Is she ignoring you?"
"She's probably just in a meeting," Mark's voice replied on the audio. "She always drops everything for Leo eventually."
The recording ended.
I stared at the empty text box. My thumb hovered over the digital keyboard.
They were waiting for me to fix their problems. They were waiting for my money.
I typed three words: *No more transfers.* Then I deleted them. He didn't deserve an explanation, and I didn't owe him a warning.
I blocked his number, set the phone face-down on the nightstand, and turned off the lamp. For the first time in fifteen years, I fell asleep without setting an alarm for someone else's morning.
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