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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 4

Annice Turner POV:

The Art Gala was a kaleidoscope of flashing lights and hushed murmurs, a glittering cage designed to trap the unwary. I moved through it like a ghost, a phantom in a plain black dress, my face carefully devoid of emotion. Augustine and Cristina were, predictably, the undisputed monarchs of the night. Cristina, resplendent in a gown that looked suspiciously like a modified version of my own bridal design, held court beside Augustine, her laughter ringing a little too loudly, a little too frequently. They were a picture of power, wealth, and undeniable, sickening affection.

I felt eyes on me, whispers following my every step. The pity, the judgment, the thinly veiled curiosity-it was a familiar chorus. "Poor Annice," their looks seemed to say. "She really let herself go." The whispers were like needles, pricking at the raw edges of my already frayed nerves.

Cristina, like a shark sensing blood, detached herself from Augustine and glided towards me, a predatory smile plastered on her perfect lips. "Annice, darling," she purred, her voice dripping with artificial sweetness. "How lovely to see you. You really made an effort tonight." Her eyes raked over my simple dress, a silent insult.

She held out her hand, a delicate tremor running through her fingers. On it, gleaming under the spotlight, was my mother's amethyst ring. The one Augustine had "lost" years ago, the one he swore he'd protect. It was a simple, antique silver band, a family heirloom. Now it was a prop in her twisted game.

I stared at the ring, then at her hand, then back at my own, pale and slender, unadorned. My engagement ring, a modest sapphire, sat in a drawer at home, a relic of a past that felt impossibly distant. Cristina's hand, perfectly manicured, weighed down with the ring that should have been mine, seemed impossibly delicate, yet strong in its cruelty.

I forced myself to compare us. Her, vibrant and glowing, her skin radiating health, her carefully constructed beauty a weapon. Me, gaunt and pale, my eyes shadowed by fatigue and illness, my once-bright spirit dimmed to a flicker. She was everything I was not, everything I had lost.

"Still wearing your mother's old rock, Annice?" Cristina's voice was a low taunt, meant only for my ears. "Poor thing. Still clinging to the past, aren't you? Augustine told me all about your little 'childhood trauma.' So sad. No wonder you're so... fragile."

I could feel Augustine's gaze from across the room, a possessive heat. He was watching, waiting. Waiting for me to crumble, to run, to beg for his protection. He wanted me to be the broken woman he could swoop in and save, solidifying his image as the benevolent, long-suffering husband. But I wouldn't give him the satisfaction. Not tonight. Not ever again.

A sudden, unexpected surge of adrenaline coursed through me, hot and sharp. My carefully constructed calm shattered. My hand shot out, not to grab the ring, but to slap her. Hard. The sound cracked through the polite hum of conversation, drawing every eye in the room.

Cristina gasped, her perfect face twisting in shock, a red welt blooming on her cheek. Augustine was across the room in an instant, his face a thundercloud. He grabbed my arm, his fingers digging into my flesh. "Annice! What the hell is wrong with you?" he hissed, dragging me towards a less conspicuous service exit.

Just as we reached the door, there was a deafening clang. A massive metal sculpture, part of the new exhibit, swayed precariously, then crashed to the floor, sending a shower of sparks and a wave of panic through the crowd. Alarms blared, red lights flashed, and the elegant gala dissolved into a chaotic swirl of screaming, pushing bodies.

Augustine's grip on me loosened as he instinctively turned to see the commotion. It was all I needed. My chest tightened, a familiar, suffocating panic rising. The enclosed space, the scent of dust and burning metal, the frantic press of bodies-it was too much. It was the closet. My mother. Trapped. I couldn't breathe. My phobia, dormant for so long, clawed its way back to the surface.

"Get away from me, you psycho!" Cristina shrieked, her voice shrill above the alarms. She stumbled towards me, her eyes wild with a fresh fury. She lunged, her manicured nails raking across my face, leaving stinging trails. "You ruined everything! You're nothing but a damaged goods! You're just like your crazy mother!"

The words hit me with the force of a physical blow. My mother. The trauma. The days I spent trapped in that house, alone with her body, waiting for someone to find us. The fear, the hunger, the crushing silence. The enclosed space. The panic attack seized me, a crushing weight on my chest. My vision tunneled, the world shrinking to a terrifying point.

Augustine. He was there. He had found me. For days, he had been my only salvation, my only connection to the outside world. He had held me, fed me, promised to never leave me alone again. He was the only one who seemed to understand. He was my rock, my refuge.

Then my father had returned, not with comfort, but with cold indifference. He had simply packed my mother's belongings, erased her as if she had never existed, and left me with a nanny I didn't know. He never spoke of her again. And Augustine, my Augustine, had sworn he was different. He had sworn to protect me from that kind of abandonment.

But he betrayed me. He told Cristina everything. My deepest, darkest secret, the wound that never healed. He had weaponized my pain, offering it up to his mistress as a twisted joke. The full horror of his betrayal slammed into me, not just the affair, but the casual cruelty of revealing my most vulnerable truth. He had taken my mother's memory, my most sacred sorrow, and handed it over to be desecrated.

My body heaved, a dry, painful spasm. My vision dimmed further, the edges of the world fading to black. I felt myself falling, the chaos around me dissolving into a silent, suffocating void. The last thing I heard was Cristina's triumphant, mocking laughter, echoing in the darkness.

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