Betrayal's Echo: A Wife's Revenge
fect. Her groundbreaking research, a neural interface designed to bypass damaged spinal cords, was a success. She had done it. Aft
e worn fabric of her lab chair creaking in the silent room. It was past midnight, but sleep was a luxury
s that would change their lives forever. But an unread em
re In
t promotional spam. She almost deleted it, but somethi
picture of a sun-drenched European chateau. But it wasn't the image that made he
request the pleasure of your company
mind refused to process the words. Dr. Ethan Vance. Her
from now. The location, Château de Villette, was only a four-hour drive from her lab. This couldn't be real. Ethan was
It was legitimate. A cold dread, heavy and suffocating, settled in her stomach. The joy from her scient
t of the facility she had called home for three years. The drive through the dark, winding mountain roads was a blur. Her mind was
the immaculate lawns. A large white tent was set up near a garden, glowing with fairy lig
ard the sounds of the party, her heart pounding a frantic rhythm against her ribs. She stayed in the
n she s
ha
in a wheelchair. He was standing on his own two feet, perfectly straight, p
iffany. She was radiant in a flowing white dress, her blonde hair styled in an elegant updo. She looked up at Ethan
ightmarish detail was real. Her husband, cured by her own hands, was celebrating his marria
uldn't look away. She watched them mingle, watched them accept congratulations, watc
s of the manicured gardens, just beyond the circle of light. She could hear their voices
had to be patient. These last two years have been difficult, keeping things under wraps. E
nd. For two years, while she had been pouring her blood,
ou know. He told me so from the beginning. Evelyn was just... a necessary step. A convenient sol
ive words sliced through the last of Evelyn's denial. The
a small ceremony on a windswept beach. She remembered the look in Ethan' s eyes, the
om the waist down. Permanent. She had refused to accept it. She had sat by his bedside, holding his limp hand, and made him a
herself from friends and family, all to lead this one-in-a-million experimental research project. She had worked until her eyes burned and her
oo profound, the betrayal too complete for something as simple as tears. I
at the happy couple one last time, a tableau of her life
d back to her car, her footsteps silent on the gravel path. She got in, star
them smiling on their anniversary filling the screen. Her thumb hovered over the delete button. Then, with a
on. And as she drove into the blackness of the European night,