Her Final Act of Vengeance

Her Final Act of Vengeance

Qing Bao

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My husband, Conrad, pulled me from the abyss after my brother died, saving me when I had nothing. He promised to protect me forever. But for ten years, his endless affairs and cruel mind games have been a slow poison, leaving me with a terminal illness and a broken spirit. The final blow came on our tenth anniversary. He gave my gift-an emerald necklace I' d dreamed of since our honeymoon-to his mistress, Aubrey. But that wasn't enough. He then gave her the last piece of my brother I had left: his final symphony. She scribbled on the pages, used them as a coaster, and called his life's work "garbage." As my body failed, I realized the man who swore to save me had weaponized my deepest traumas to destroy me. My love curdled into a cold, quiet rage. Now, drowning in guilt, he has destroyed Aubrey to atone for his sins. He kneels by my deathbed, begging for forgiveness, promising to do anything to earn it. He has no idea my final act of revenge requires his absolute devotion. And his life.

Chapter 1

My husband, Conrad, pulled me from the abyss after my brother died, saving me when I had nothing. He promised to protect me forever. But for ten years, his endless affairs and cruel mind games have been a slow poison, leaving me with a terminal illness and a broken spirit.

The final blow came on our tenth anniversary. He gave my gift-an emerald necklace I' d dreamed of since our honeymoon-to his mistress, Aubrey.

But that wasn't enough. He then gave her the last piece of my brother I had left: his final symphony. She scribbled on the pages, used them as a coaster, and called his life's work "garbage."

As my body failed, I realized the man who swore to save me had weaponized my deepest traumas to destroy me. My love curdled into a cold, quiet rage.

Now, drowning in guilt, he has destroyed Aubrey to atone for his sins. He kneels by my deathbed, begging for forgiveness, promising to do anything to earn it.

He has no idea my final act of revenge requires his absolute devotion.

And his life.

Chapter 1

My phone vibrated, a text message from a number I didn' t recognize. "He's all mine now. You really thought you could win?" The words burned, but the fire was a familiar one, dulled by countless other ignitions.

Conrad' s roar ripped through the air, shaking the expensive art on the walls. He wasn't just angry; he was a hurricane of pure, unadulterated fury. The crystal vase, a wedding gift from his mother, shattered against the fireplace, echoing the fracture in our lives. Shards flew, tiny knives glinting in the dim light, mirroring the feeling inside me as he pointed a trembling finger at the rumpled sheets.

"How could you, Janie? After everything? After I came back? Him?" His voice cracked on the last word, thick with disgust.

I watched him, my heart a dull thud in my chest, a worn-out drum. My body felt heavy, disconnected, like a puppet whose strings had been cut. I picked at a loose thread on the silk sheets.

"It was an experiment, Conrad," I said, my voice flat, almost bored. The truth of it felt both hollow and profound.

He laughed, a raw, guttural sound that scraped against my eardrums. "An experiment? Is that what you call screwing some stranger in our bed? Is that your sophisticated composer talk for 'I hate you'?" He stumbled backward, running a hand through his perfectly styled hair, now disheveled, wild. "Do you hate me so much that you would do this?"

I shrugged, a small, involuntary movement. What did hate even feel like anymore? My entire being felt like a hollowed-out tree, rotting from the inside. There wasn't enough energy left for hate, only a profound, aching weariness. My hands, once nimble on the piano keys, now sometimes trembled, a tremor I tried to hide, a dark secret in my bones.

"Didn't you say it was okay, Conrad?" I asked, my voice barely a whisper. "As long as it didn't mean anything? Those were your words, not mine." I gazed at the shattered vase, its delicate beauty now a dangerous mess. The room was a battlefield of broken trust and wasted years. Glasses lay toppled, an overturned chair blocked the doorway, and the faint scent of stale sex hung heavy, a testament to my own act of rebellion.

In the corner, Kash, my "experiment," sat huddled on the edge of the ottoman, his eyes wide and terrified. He looked like a deer caught in headlights, utterly out of place in our gilded cage of a bedroom. He was supposed to be gone by now.

Conrad' s eyes, blazing with green fire, snapped to Kash. "Get out!" he snarled, his voice a low, dangerous rumble. He stomped towards Kash, his powerful frame radiating menace. Kash scrambled up, tripping over his own feet, and practically flew out the door without a backward glance. Good riddance. He was just a means to an end.

Then, Conrad was back, his shadow falling over me. He grabbed my arm, his fingers digging into my flesh, a silent accusation. He yanked me up, twisting my arm behind my back until a sharp pain shot through my shoulder. My breath hitched.

"You think this is funny, Janie?" he whispered, his voice dangerously soft, a stark contrast to the brutal force he exerted. He backed me against the wall, his body pressing into mine, trapping me. "You think you can play these games?" His breath was hot on my ear, a nauseating mix of mint and something sour, like curdled milk. My stomach churned.

The humiliation washed over me, thick and cloying, but it was just another layer on an already heavy cloak of shame. I felt nothing new, just a deeper ache, a recognition of how far we had fallen. I tried to push him away, a futile effort. My body felt like lead.

He slammed his fist against the wall beside my head, hard enough to make the plaster crack. His knuckles were raw, already bleeding, but he didn't flinch. He just stared at me, his eyes wide, almost pleading. There was a flicker of something ancient and desperate in them, a primal fear of loss. It was unsettling.

I recoiled, but he was too quick. He pinned my wrists above my head, his body a suffocating weight against mine. The room started to spin, the edges of my vision blurring. A wave of nausea hit me, hard. My head throbbed, a familiar, unwelcome guest.

"Who was he, Janie?" he demanded, his voice thick with a twisted mix of jealousy and rage. "Some cheap thrill? What did he have that I didn't? Was it his youth? His lack of baggage? Or just the sheer pleasure of watching me break?" His grip tightened, my bones screaming in protest.

"You want to know what I think?" he roared, his face inches from mine, spittle flying. "I think you're a narcissistic bitch. I think you enjoyed every second of this, knowing it would destroy me! You want to kill me, don't you? Is that it?"

The pain in my abdomen flared, sharp and sudden, like a lightning strike. My vision swam. I gagged, a metallic taste flooding my mouth. I didn't mean to, but my body betrayed me. I leaned away from him, my stomach convulsing, and vomited onto the pristine white rug, barely missing his expensive Italian shoes. It was a pathetic, involuntary heave, bile and stomach acid burning my throat. I couldn't even look at him.

He staggered backward, away from the mess, his face pale with shock and disgust. "Janie? What the hell...?" His voice was laced with disbelief, a flicker of something akin to hurt. "You're doing this just to spite me, aren't you? You're ruining everything."

I couldn't answer. The pain was too intense, a fiery knot in my gut, twisting and turning. My limbs felt weak, my head a drumbeat of agony. All I could do was gasp, trying to draw enough air into my burning lungs.

"This is it, Janie," he said, his voice hard, almost resigned. He wiped a hand across his mouth, his eyes fixed on the puddle on the carpet. "We're done. For good this time. You want to be independent? Fine. Live with your choices. We' re nothing but strangers from now on." With that, he stormed out of the room, the heavy oak door slamming shut behind him with a final, echoing thud that vibrated through the floorboards. The sudden silence was deafening, a vacuum sucking all the air from the room.

After a long moment, my body slowly uncurled from its fetal position. The throbbing in my head eased, replaced by a dull ache. My eyes scanned the wreckage of the room, a mirror to the wreckage inside me. Then I saw it. On my bedside table, tucked neatly beside my usual stack of medical journals, was a small, velvet box. Gold-embossed.

I reached for it, my fingers trembling slightly. Inside lay a delicate diamond necklace, the centerpiece a small, perfectly cut emerald. It was the same one I' d admired years ago, in the window of that tiny boutique in Paris during our honeymoon. A frivolous expense, I' d called it then, but a secret part of me had yearned for its cool elegance. I remembered tracing the emerald with my finger, imagining its weight against my skin, a symbol of a future I believed in.

Conrad must have gone back for it. After everything, he still came back for it. I remembered our last reconciliation, just a few months ago. He' d seemed so earnest, so dedicated to making things work, showering me with attention, with gifts, with promises. He was always good at promises. He' d cooked me dinner, played my favorite classical pieces on the grand piano downstairs, stayed up talking to me all night, listening to my fears, my anxieties, my dreams. He was the Conrad I thought I' d married, the one who rescued me from the abyss after Leo died. He was attentive, devoted, almost obsessively so. He covered every base, anticipated every need. He was perfect.

But even then, a cold suspicion had begun to worm its way into my heart. Was this real? Or was it just another performance? Another calculated move to regain control? He had always been so good at playing the part, at making me believe in the fairytale after he' d shattered it.

The shadow of Aubrey Neal, his latest affair, still loomed. Her ghost was in every soft touch, every whispered word, every lavish gift. I was haunted by the thought that he was just a better actor than I was. My illness, still a secret, gnawed at me, stripping away my ability to create, my ability to live. The fear, the pain, the betrayal – it all coiled together, tighter and tighter, until I felt like I was suffocating. I had reached my limit.

My actions tonight, with Kash, were a desperate, ugly parody of his own betrayals. An eye for an eye, a test of his own twisted philosophy. He preached that physical acts meant nothing, that only emotional connection mattered. I wanted to see if he truly believed it when the shoe was on the other foot.

My trembling fingers closed around the small card nestled inside the velvet box. The elegant script spelled out a date: "Our 10th Anniversary. Forever, my Janie." Tomorrow. The necklace, the card, the smashed vase, the raw wounds on Conrad' s knuckles, the bile on the rug, and the stranger's lingering scent – it all coalesced into a sharp, agonizing ache in my chest. A silent scream ripped through my soul.

Just then, my phone buzzed again, lighting up the darkness. It was that number, the one with the provocative message. The screen flashed another text.

Aubrey Neal: "He' s mine now, Janie. You really thought you could win?"

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