My Death, His Ultimate Downfall

My Death, His Ultimate Downfall

You Xi

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For a decade, I was the perfect wife to tech mogul Carson Jarvis. I cleaned up every scandal and endured every affair, trapped by my father's "poison pill" inheritance clause that would leave me with nothing if I divorced him. His latest mistress was pregnant, but that wasn't what finally broke me. It was when he shut down our mansion's power grid for their tryst-and turned off my grandmother's life support. He murdered her. At a charity auction days later, he paraded his new love while she announced her pregnancy. When I confronted her for stealing my money, Carson watched as his guards broke my arm, leaving me bleeding on the floor while he comforted her. He thought I was his unbreakable wife, a possession with nowhere else to go. He expected me to clean up this mess, just like all the others. He was wrong. As I watched him shield her during the chaos of an explosion I secretly arranged, I knew my old life was over. Tonight, the world would learn of my death. And with it, Carson Jarvis would lose everything.

Chapter 1

For a decade, I was the perfect wife to tech mogul Carson Jarvis. I cleaned up every scandal and endured every affair, trapped by my father's "poison pill" inheritance clause that would leave me with nothing if I divorced him.

His latest mistress was pregnant, but that wasn't what finally broke me. It was when he shut down our mansion's power grid for their tryst-and turned off my grandmother's life support.

He murdered her.

At a charity auction days later, he paraded his new love while she announced her pregnancy. When I confronted her for stealing my money, Carson watched as his guards broke my arm, leaving me bleeding on the floor while he comforted her.

He thought I was his unbreakable wife, a possession with nowhere else to go. He expected me to clean up this mess, just like all the others.

He was wrong. As I watched him shield her during the chaos of an explosion I secretly arranged, I knew my old life was over.

Tonight, the world would learn of my death. And with it, Carson Jarvis would lose everything.

Chapter 1

The TMZ headline screamed: "Tech Mogul Carson Jarvis Caught with Influencer Karin Riddle: Is His Marriage to Amelie Knight Over?" My phone buzzed with calls from publicists and damage control specialists. It didn't sting. Not anymore. My heart had hardened into a stone years ago, a monument to a love that had long since died. But this time, Carson's recklessness was a death sentence.

He was already on the phone, his voice a smooth, practiced calm that barely masked his irritation. "Amelie, darling. You've seen the news, I assume?"

"I have," I said, my voice flat. "Another Tuesday, another scandal."

He chuckled, a sound that used to charm me but now only grated. "Yes, well. Boys will be boys, you know. Just a little indiscretion. Nothing you haven't handled before."

I gripped the phone tighter. For ten years, I had been his silent partner, his image consultant, his mop. I cleaned up every drunken brawl, every whispered rumor, every public flirtation. I smiled for the cameras, stood by his side, and lied to the world, all to protect the facade of our perfect Silicon Valley romance. I was the woman who bore his name, but not his children. The wife who smoothed over his mistakes, while he made new ones.

"She's so young, Amelie," he continued, oblivious. "So innocent. Reminds me a bit of you, actually. Back when we first met."

A cold wave washed over me. Young. Innocent. Like me, before he broke me. "Is that why you chose her, Carson? Another fresh face to defile?"

His tone sharpened just a fraction. "Don't be dramatic. Look, the usual channels are already buzzing. TMZ wants a hefty sum to pull the story. I expect you to handle it, just like always."

"And how much is 'hefty' this time?" I asked, my voice dangerously soft.

"A few million. Pocket change, really. Just make it disappear. This could hurt the IPO." He paused. "Remember all those beautiful promises I made to you on our wedding day? How I swore to cherish you, to protect you? You were my world. The media loved that story. Don't let them twist it now."

I remembered. I remembered every word. The public, too, remembered. The articles were already flooding my feeds, juxtaposing his passionate vows with today's damning photos. Carson Jarvis: From Devoted Husband to Serial Cheater?

"So, Mrs. Jarvis," a reporter's voice echoed from my voicemail, recorded just hours ago, "what's your strategy this time? Another dignified silence? Another expertly crafted PR statement?"

I stared at the screen, at Karin Riddle's eager face, at Carson's triumphant smirk. No. Not this time.

"No," I told Carson, my voice steady. "I won't be paying."

Silence on the other end. Then, a sharp intake of breath. "What did you say?"

"I said, I won't be paying," I repeated, a strange, exhilarating calm settling over me. "In fact, I have an even bigger story for them. And this one? This one is free."

He scoffed. "What could possibly be bigger than this? Your pity party?"

My gaze drifted to the framed photo on my desk. My grandmother, her eyes sparkling with life, now gone. "This story," I whispered, though he couldn't hear me, "cost me everything. It cost me the last piece of my heart that still beat." The price was her life. My grandmother's life.

It wasn't just money I'd given Carson. I'd given him my future, my identity, my very self. I' d defied my powerful Texas oil baron father, Hunt Marshall, running away from an arranged marriage to a man I barely knew, for Carson, a charismatic but unknown tech enthusiast working for my father's security detail. My father, in a fit of rage, had structured my inheritance with a 'poison pill' clause: divorce Carson, and lose everything. Carson knew this. He used it.

He used it after the kidnapping.

The memory still burned. Five years ago. Carson, reckless with his early success, had made enemies. I was the collateral damage. They abducted me, demanding a ransom, a message to Carson. When he finally paid, hours turned into days. Days of terror. Days of brutal humiliation. They carved their brand into my skin, a permanent scar, a reminder of their claim, and of his negligence. They had publicly shamed me, parading my battered image across dark corners of the internet. My body, my sanctuary, was damaged beyond repair. I couldn't have children.

Carson, in a rare moment of genuine remorse, had paid off the media, burying the story, painting me as a fragile victim. He swore he'd never let anything hurt me again. He swore he'd never betray me. My infertility became our unspoken tragedy, a wound he promised to heal with devotion.

But narcissists don't heal; they seek new wounds to inflict.

His first public affair, three years later, was with his executive assistant. I was numb then, but something primal still stirred. I drafted divorce papers. He found them. He fell to his knees, clawing at his face, begging for forgiveness. "It was nothing, Amelie! Just a moment of weakness, a foolish mistake! She meant nothing!" He swore on our sacred bond, on our shared trauma. He even struck himself, as if self-punishment would atone.

Then, his voice dropped, ominous. "And what about your father, Amelie? You think he'd let you walk away with nothing? He'd see you homeless, broken, just to prove his point. You know his 'poison pill' is ironclad. You have no choice. You can't leave me."

He was right. I couldn't. Not then. I moved into a separate wing of the mansion, a ghost in my own home, a prisoner of his making and my father's wrath. He called it a "cooling off period." He just called it my inability to tolerate his "mistakes."

When I refused to appear at a charity gala with him, he leaked stories about my "instability," my "fragility" after the kidnapping. He humiliated me publicly again. Still, I held my ground.

Then came the call. My grandmother, the only person who had ever truly loved and understood me, was gravely ill. A sudden stroke. She was on life support in our smart mansion. Carson, holding all the strings, all the access codes, played the loving grandson, but he subtly controlled her care, threatening to "pull the plug" if I didn't comply. He needed me to stand by him, to return to my role as his perfect wife.

"Just be a good wife, Amelie," he'd purred, stroking my hair. "And your grandmother will get the best care money can buy. I promise. I'll make everything right again. No more mistakes."

I choked down my fury and my disgust. I played the part. He bought me expensive jewelry, paraded me at galas, and swore the affairs were over. For a few months, a fragile peace reigned. But it was a lie. It was always a lie.

The public affairs became more frequent, more brazen. Each time, I fixed it. Each time, he grew more confident in my captivity, in his belief that I had nowhere else to go. He even bragged about it, laughing with his friends about his "unbreakable wife."

Until Karin Riddle.

She was different. She was pregnant.

And last night, while Carson was with Karin, celebrating their future, he had done something careless. Something so utterly, profoundly cruel, he probably hadn't even registered it. To ensure their privacy, to avoid any smart-home devices recording their tryst, he had shut down the entire grid in our mansion. Including the medical wing.

My grandmother's life support.

It had only been for an hour, he'd probably reasoned. No harm. But an hour was enough. Her weak heart, deprived of oxygen, simply gave out.

When I found her, her nurse was in hysterics. My grandmother, pale and still, looked at me with fading eyes. "My child," she whispered, her voice barely audible. "Don't let them... don't let them break you. Live... live for yourself." Then, she was gone.

Her words were a thunderclap, shattering the last vestiges of my hope, my compliance. I had endured everything, but this? This was unforgivable. This was the final straw.

I would leave. Not just leave him, but erase myself from his life. And then, I would make him pay.

His voice crackled on the phone. "So, Amelie? What's this big news? Are you finally going to admit you're past your prime? That you can't give me an heir?"

A chilling calm settled deep in my bones. "You're right, Carson," I said, my voice eerily devoid of emotion. "I can't give you an heir. And you're right, I am past my prime. But what I can give you... is a very public, very permanent goodbye."

I hung up, the click echoing in the silent room. Tonight, the world would learn of my death. And with it, Carson Jarvis would lose everything.

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