When you’ve built your life from scratch, you don’t just watch it fall apart quietly; you prepare. You plan. You wait.
For years, I’d played the part of the perfect wife: polite, graceful, and accommodating. I hosted dinner parties with a smile, even when my husband’s so-called “late nights at the office” stretched into weekends. I laughed at his jokes that had long lost their charm.
I turned a blind eye to the lipstick stains on his shirts, subtle, almost invisible, but I saw them. I noticed everything. My name is Lydia, and I’ve been married to Charles for sixteen years.
We live, or rather, lived in a sprawling white mansion on the outskirts of Charleston, surrounded by manicured gardens, a private tennis court, and a pool that always glimmered like glass in the sun. It was the kind of home that whispered wealth and power. But as I’d learn, money can’t buy loyalty.
It all started with Vanessa. She came into our lives two years ago, hired as Charles’s personal assistant. She was young, ambitious, and disturbingly confident for someone barely in her mid-twenties.
She had that polished look, perfectly blow-dried hair, red nails, and an attitude that made her seem older than she was. I noticed how she laughed a little too hard at his jokes. How her texts would pop up late at night on his phone, “urgent” matters that somehow couldn’t wait until morning.
At first, I let it go. I’d been through this before, or so I thought. Charles had flirted before he enjoyed the attention, and I’d grown used to it.
But something about Vanessa was different. There was a coldness in her, a calculation. And then one day, I saw the change in him.
He started dressing better for work, buying new suits without asking. He worked out again, grew impatient with me for the smallest things. When I mentioned taking a vacation, he scoffed and said, “Maybe you should find a hobby instead.”
I knew then that it wasn’t just a fling.
He was in deep. So I quietly started preparing. I wasn’t naïve when I married Charles.
I came from money myself, a trust fund from my late grandparents, managed carefully through legal safeguards that even Charles didn’t fully understand. When we married, he insisted on merging our finances “for transparency.” I agreed to most of it, but not all. What he didn’t know was that the trust had a secondary branch account, something only I could access, hidden behind a series of private business holdings.
It wasn’t illegal; it was just… discreet. I began transferring small amounts from our joint ventures into that account years ago. A few thousand here, a few thousand there.
Over time, it had grown into something substantial. Enough to buy me another life, if I needed to. And as I’d find out soon, I did.
The moment of truth came one sunny afternoon when Charles announced he wanted to “talk.”
We were in the living room, sunlight spilling through the tall windows, glinting off the crystal decanters on the sideboard. He stood by the fireplace, his hands shoved into his pockets like he was trying to act casual. “Lydia,” he began, clearing his throat.
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