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The Wife He Destroyed

Chapter 2 

Word Count: 680    |    Released on: 07/07/2025

ud. He threw his custom-tailored jacket onto a Louis XIV chair, the fabric whispering i

t did the doctor say?

loosening

ot of them. Just trying to sell me thei

ving room and collapse

hortcake from the fridge. And a Coke

t of hesitation. It was a faint, weak

ve had a stressful day

but gentle, explaining the immediate danger of a sugar-loaded dessert for a newly diagnosed diabetic. I would have presented the grim numbers from his bloodwork, quoted the doctor's warnings, and s

id nothing. I

are you staring at? You loo

I said, my voic

of whipped cream. A tall glass of Coca-Cola, fizzing with bubbles, sat beside it on the silve

u are, m

his mouth. He chewed with an aggressive, defiant energy, his eyes locked on me. It w

g. They look at a man like me, successful, powerful, and they want to knock me down a peg. '

habits of a particularly stubborn, self-destructive species. Every word, every action was

my stomach. The hope that, eventually, they would see I was only trying to help. That hope had been a fool's g

n drained the glass of soda. He leaned back

tter, even. All that

d smile. "I'm glad you're

moment, searching for the disapproval he expected, the fight he craved. Finding none, he j

on was made. I had tried to be their savior and they had crucified me for

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The Wife He Destroyed
The Wife He Destroyed
“I remember the fall. The sharp, brutal shove from my husband, David. The sickening crack as my head hit the marble staircase. The last thing I saw was his face, twisted not with remorse, but with a grief-fueled rage. His father' s last, wheezing words echoed in my ears: "She did this... Sarah... with her rabbit food..." They blamed me for their self-inflicted misery. For years, I, a dietitian, poured my soul into saving my tech mogul father-in-law, Richard Sterling, from himself. He was a man of excess, his wife enabling every destructive craving, and my husband, David, worshipping his father's stubbornness as strength. I crafted healthy meals, managed his medications, and pleaded with him to care for his own body. My reward? His constant resentment, my mother-in-law's accusations of starvation, and David's growing impatience with the "unpleasantness" I caused. I fought for his health, for our family. I got a broken neck for my efforts. They chose his dying delusion over our life together, over my life. The darkness that swallowed me was absolute, an unjust end to a life spent trying to do the right thing. Then, I felt the sunlight on my face. It was warm, a gentle caress. I opened my eyes to the familiar silk sheets of my own bed, the digital clock glowing 8:15 AM, October 12th. The day it all began, the day Richard was diagnosed with severe type 2 diabetes. I had been given a second chance. Not a chance to save him, but a chance to save myself. This time, I would do nothing. I would let him eat his cake.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10