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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 6

Annice Turner POV:

A new message popped up on my phone, not from Augustine, but from Cristina. A short video. It showed her in an intimate embrace with Augustine, his head buried in her neck, laughing, seemingly oblivious to the world. It was clearly old footage, dated months ago, but it was another piece of the puzzle, another shard of the truth. Below it, a text from Cristina: "He never stopped, Annice. Not really. He was just better at hiding it from you."

My fingers tightened around the phone, my knuckles white. Another lie. Another betrayal. Augustine had looked me in the eye, sworn on our future, promised he' d cut all ties. And all along, he' d been laughing at my face. My anger, a cold, steady flame, flickered higher.

I confronted him that night. He walked in, smelling faintly of antiseptic from the hospital visit with Cristina, and looked surprised to find me waiting. "Annice, I told you to stay put. You shouldn't be out of bed."

"Don't you dare talk to me about staying put," I said, my voice dangerously calm. "Cristina sent me something today. A video."

He flinched, his face paling. "That's old, Annice. You know she's trying to manipulate you. She's a vindictive woman." He tried to dismiss it, to wave it away with a condescending hand gesture.

"Vindictive?" I echoed, a bitter laugh escaping me. "Or just honest? Augustine, you chose her. Again and again. Even when I was dying, you chose her. Why? What does she have that I don' t?"

He sighed, running a hand through his hair, his patience wearing thin. "Annice, you're being irrational. This is different. She's young, vibrant. She understands the world I move in now. You... you're always clinging to the past, to things that are broken." His gaze swept over me, a look of tired disdain. "We're not the same people we were when we met. You're holding onto a ghost."

His words, brutal in their honesty, struck me cold. Not with pain, but with a sudden, chilling clarity. He saw me as a relic, a burden, an obstacle to his carefully constructed new life. He didn't love the broken pieces of me; he resented them.

A dark resolve solidified within me. I would not cling to a ghost. I would become one. Not a ghost of the past, but one that haunted his future. I had tried to fight Cristina through the public eye, leveraging what little social currency I had left. I had even attempted to contact the press, hinting at Augustine's infidelity and Cristina's calculated climb.

But Augustine was quicker. He was powerful. The stories never ran. My attempts to expose Cristina were swiftly and silently squashed. Instead, an article appeared, praising Augustine for his philanthropic efforts, donating millions to a charity for emerging artists-a veiled jab at my failed career. He was a master manipulator, pulling strings from the shadows, ensuring his chosen narrative prevailed.

Then the lawyers came. Not for a divorce, but for a restructuring of assets. My small inheritance, the one thing my mother had left me, was suddenly tied up in obscure legal battles, frozen "for my own protection." My studio, the sanctuary where I had hoped to finish my masterpiece, was declared an unsafe environment, its lease suddenly terminated. He was systematically dismantling my life, piece by piece, under the guise of concern.

"It's for the best, Annice," he'd said, his voice smooth and placating. "You're not well. You need to focus on your health. I'll take care of everything." He wanted me dependent, indebted, a bird with clipped wings, singing only for him.

And I let him. Because I was tired. So incredibly tired. The cancer was a constant, debilitating drain. My body was a battlefield, and I was losing the war. The chemotherapy had ravaged me, leaving me weak, nauseous, my hair falling out in clumps. My once-nimble fingers, capable of coaxing life from clay and marble, now trembled uncontrollably. My art, my passion, lay dormant, choked by the despair and the physical agony.

I spent my days watching Cristina's rise, a morbid fascination gripping me. She was dazzling, untouchable, living the life I'd once dreamed of. I watched her from the shadows, a specter of my former self, nurturing a poisonous seed of vengeance. "I hope you choke on every stolen breath, Cristina," I whispered to my reflection, my eyes hollow, my voice a croak. "And you, Augustine, I hope you drown in your own gilded cage."

Then came the diagnosis. The doctors were grim, their faces etched with sympathy. Aggressive, advanced stomach cancer. Terminal. Weeks, maybe months, if I was lucky. The trauma, the stress, the endless cycle of betrayal-it had taken its toll. My body had simply given up.

I saw Augustine that day, after my appointment. He was leaving a high-end restaurant, Cristina on his arm, her laughter echoing in the crisp autumn air. They looked perfect, bathed in the golden glow of the setting sun, a picture of effortless happiness. I, on the other hand, was a ghost, my skin sallow, my eyes sunken, a scarf wrapped tightly around my bald head. The contrast was stark, brutal. He saw me, of course. His smile faltered, replaced by a flicker of pity, quickly masked by practiced concern. He gave me a conciliatory nod, a patronizing wave.

I saw the look in his eyes: Poor Annice. So sad. But not my problem anymore.

My mother's suicide, her lonely death, her unmourned existence-it haunted me. I couldn't die like that. Unseen, unacknowledged. I needed someone. Anyone. I needed him. The thought was repugnant, but survival, even a twisted one, was a powerful instinct. If I was going to die, it wouldn't be alone. It wouldn't be in silence.

I called him. My voice was weak, trembling. "Augustine," I whispered, the word tasting like ash. "I need you."

He came. He always did, when I played the victim. He saw my vulnerability, my brokenness, and it appealed to his twisted sense of charity, his need for control. He moved me back into our opulent mansion, fussing over me, arranging for the best doctors, showering me with hollow gestures of affection. He reveled in his role as the concerned, doting husband, rehabilitating his image in the eyes of his peers.

One evening, he sat by my bedside, gently stroking my hair. "That rumor about Cristina, Annice," he said, his voice soft, almost a purr. "That she was still seeing me, even after our reconciliation. You didn't believe it, did you?"

My eyes, dulled by sickness, met his. "Did it matter what I believed, Augustine?" I asked, my voice raspy. A sharp cramp in my stomach made me wince, but I forced myself to remain still.

His jaw tightened. He disliked my defiance, even in my weakened state. He leaned closer, his eyes intense. "You think you can bait me, Annice? You think you can hurt me with your little games?" His hand moved from my hair to my neck, his thumb pressing lightly against my pulse point, a subtle threat. "You're mine, Annice. Always have been. Always will be." His head descended, his lips brushing mine, a predatory kiss that reeked of ownership.

I spat in his face. A wet, visceral act of defiance.

He froze, his eyes widening in shock, then narrowing into slits of pure fury. "You bitch!" he snarled, his hand tightening around my throat, not enough to choke me, but enough to convey his power. "You will regret that." With a violent shove, he pushed me back onto the bed, then stormed out, the door slamming with a familiar, terrifying finality. I lay there, gasping for air, the taste of blood in my mouth, but a faint, triumphant smile touched my lips. He was still here. He was still mine. He was still playing my game.

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