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Till Death Do Us Part, Indeed Novel Cover

Till Death Do Us Part, Indeed

My husband, Augustine, was a serial cheater, and I was a terminally ill artist. His mistress didn't just steal my marriage; she publicly flaunted it, taunting me at every turn. The final blow came when they desecrated the sculpture I made for my dead mother, laughing as they defiled my most sacred memory. He used my childhood trauma to break me, freezing my assets, destroying my career, and trapping me in our home like a prisoner. He had promised to be my safe harbor, but instead, he became the monster who weaponized my deepest pain. But my cancer gave me a deadline and a dark purpose. I lured him back, manipulating him into destroying his mistress and bankrupting himself for a forgiveness I would never grant. As he knelt before me, a broken man offering his shattered empire, I gave him my final command. "Now," I whispered, my voice cold as the grave, "it's time to pay with your life."
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Chapter 2

Annice Turner POV:

The water continued to gush, a deafening roar that filled the sterile bathroom. My teeth chattered uncontrollably, but the cold was almost a comfort, a physical sensation strong enough to momentarily distract from the chaos in my mind and the burning in my gut. I dragged myself out of the tub, my muscles screaming in protest, my soaked clothes clinging unpleasantly to my skin. Every movement was an effort, a testament to the unseen battle raging within me.

My feet crunched on the shattered wine bottle in the bedroom, each step a painful reminder of Augustine's fury. The room was a wreck, pillows torn, lamps overturned, a chaos mirroring the landscape of my soul. But amidst the destruction, something glinted under the harsh overhead light.

It was a small, velvet box, almost perfectly preserved despite the wreckage around it. My vision blurred slightly, my head swimming from the cold and the pain, but I stumbled towards it, drawn by an inexplicable pull. Gently, I picked it up, my fingers trembling.

Inside, nestled on a silken cushion, was a diamond necklace. Not just any necklace. It was the "Starlight Embrace," a bespoke piece from Cartier, the central diamond a tear-shaped marvel surrounded by smaller, intricately set stones. It had been featured in Vogue, a masterpiece of modern design. Augustine had outbid a Saudi prince for it at a charity auction, a grand, public display of his supposed devotion.

A bitter laugh escaped my lips, a dry, rasping sound. I remembered the night he'd presented it to me, just a few months ago. He'd orchestrated a lavish "reconciliation dinner," complete with a private chef and a string quartet playing our wedding song. He'd spoken of new beginnings, of rebuilding what we'd lost, of a love stronger than any mistake. He' d showered me with expensive gifts, taken me on extravagant trips, meticulously rebuilt the facade of our perfect life. He had been so earnest, so attentive, so obsessive in his pursuit of winning me back.

And for a while, a foolish, fleeting while, I had almost believed him. I started to wonder if perhaps, just perhaps, his affair had been a moment of weakness, an aberration. He had seemed so genuinely remorseful, so desperate to atone. He' d become the perfect husband on paper, anticipating my every need, stifling me with his suffocating affection.

But the fear of betrayal had calcified inside me, forming an impenetrable shell. Every late phone call, every hurried text message, every shared glance with a female assistant-they all became monumental red flags, proof of his inherent deceit. My childhood trauma, the way my world had shattered when my mother died by suicide after my father left, abandoning me to days of solitary terror, had warped my perception. Augustine had become a proxy for my father, and I was constantly braced for the next abandonment.

The truth was, I was exhausted. Exhausted by the constant vigilance, by the pretense, by the slow, painful decay of my own body. The cancer was a cruel joke, a physical manifestation of the emotional rot that had set in after Augustine' s first betrayal. It was a ticking clock, and with each passing day, my patience, my capacity for forgiveness, withered. I didn't want a new beginning. I wanted an ending. A finality that would erase the pain.

My revenge affair wasn't an act of passion. It was an experiment. A desperate, twisted test. I needed to see if he would truly change, if his possessive love was genuine, or if it was just another facet of his control. I needed to know if he would feel the same soul-crushing emptiness I had felt.

"You said you' d never abandon me again," I whispered to the empty room, clutching the necklace. "But you did, didn't you? You abandoned me in plain sight, while pretending to build me a gilded cage." I thought of his first affair, the one that had started all this. How could he have walked away from me, from everything we built, for her? What had she offered that I couldn't?

My fingers brushed against something else hidden beneath a crumpled receipt. It was a small, embossed card. My vision swam again, but I forced my eyes to focus. "For Annice, my one true love. May this be a symbol of our unbreakable bond. Forever yours, Augustine." The words were scrawled in his elegant hand, a stark contrast to the violence he' d just unleashed.

A wave of bitter laughter wracked my body, turning into a dry, hacking cough that squeezed my abdomen, sending sharp stabs of pain through my gut. It felt like a thousand tiny needles piercing my stomach, a familiar agony that brought tears to my eyes. The diamonds on the necklace mocked me, sparkling with a cold, indifferent brilliance.

My phone buzzed on the bedside table, a jarring interruption to the suffocating silence. I picked it up, my fingers clumsy. It was a message from an unfamiliar number. A picture.

It was Cristina. Cristina Reynolds, the social media influencer, Augustine' s mistress. Her face, perfectly sculpted by filters and expensive procedures, beamed from the screen. She was draped across a sleek, black Porsche, her lips parted in a sensual pout. The caption beneath the photo was short, sharp, and designed to wound: "Augustine's new toy. Some women know how to keep their men happy."

My breath caught in my throat. I recognized the Porsche. It was Augustine's newest acquisition, a car he'd bought just last week, claiming it was an investment. I stared at the image, then back at the "Starlight Embrace" necklace in my hand. Two very different gifts, two very different women. My calm shattered, replaced by a cold, searing fury.

The phone buzzed again. Another message, from the same number. "He always comes back to what he truly desires, Annice. You were just a temporary distraction. A charity case."

A profound sense of emptiness washed over me, deeper and colder than the ice water. I knew this feeling. It was the same one I'd had when my mother left. The world outside the bedroom faded. All that remained was the pulsing pain in my stomach and the image of Cristina's triumphant smile. The game wasn't over. It had just begun.

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