He called me his "rock" online while whispering to her that I was a "fragile old witch."
He thought I was a fool, too weak to fight back.
So I gave them exactly what they wanted. I faked my own death.
And as the "grieving" widower prepared to claim my fortune at his family's grand gala, I prepared to make my own spectacular entrance.
Chapter 1
Eliana Baker POV:
The clerk slid the de facto marriage registration across the polished table. It was our fifth anniversary, a day that should have been filled with champagne and promises, now marked by this sterile document.
Its cold print screamed of infidelity, of a life I thought was mine unraveling before my eyes.
The irony was a bitter taste in my mouth. Five years to the day, Jacoby Rosales had slipped a diamond onto my finger, whispering about forever. Now, five years later, forever was being legally undone by his casual cruelty.
My hand didn' t tremble as I picked up the pen. It moved with a chilling precision, signing away my marriage, my dreams, my very identity as Jacoby' s wife. The paper didn't just hold legal clauses; it held the shredded pieces of my heart.
The chair on the other side of the table remained empty, just as Jacoby's side of our bed had been for too many nights. A hollow ache settled deep in my chest.
"Callie," I said, my voice steady despite the tremor that threatened to seize my soul. "Please ensure this is filed immediately. And discreetly."
Callie, my assistant, nodded, her face a mask of professional calm, though her eyes held a silent sympathy. "Consider it done, Eliana."
"And the arrangements for the gala next week?" I continued, already moving past the wreckage of my marriage to the architecture of my revenge. "Are Jacoby and Bridgette on the guest list?"
Callie's brow furrowed slightly. "Bridgette Cole, his junior analyst? Yes, they're both confirmed. Shall I remove them?"
A ghost of a smile touched my lips, a cold, predatory curve. "No, Callie. Absolutely not. Make sure they have the most prominent seats in the house. Front and center."
Callie looked at me, a question in her eyes. "Are you sure, Eliana? That charity gala is a very public event. Our five-year anniversary is also next week."
I turned my gaze to the window, watching the city lights blur into a watercolor smear against the darkening sky. It was a view Jacoby and I had once shared, toasted to, dreamed under. Now, it was just a backdrop to my desolation. The date hung in the air, a cruel whisper of what we once were.
"Yes, Callie. I'm very sure." My voice was quiet, but it carried the weight of steel. "It' s my birthday too. Make sure it's a night they-and everyone else-will never forget."
Callie hesitated, then nodded. "Understood. Eliana, if I may... your family. They're still expecting to meet Jacoby at the firm's shareholder meeting."
I clenched my jaw. My family. Powerful, influential, and fiercely protective. They had insisted on a prenuptial agreement that would leave an unfaithful spouse with nothing. Jacoby, blinded by ambition and perhaps by a naive belief in his own charm, had dismissed it as a formality.
"They'll meet him, Callie. Just not in the way they expect." I stood up, the emptiness in the room mirroring the emptiness in my heart. "And make sure the 'special' invitations are sent out for that meeting."
The silence hung heavy, broken only by the distant hum of the city. I felt a cold dread settle in my stomach as I heard my phone vibrate. It was a social media alert. Jacoby.
Jacoby Rosales: Five years with this incredible woman, Eliana. Every day is a blessing. Grateful for our journey, our love, our future. #AnniversaryLove #Soulmate #Blessed
A wave of nausea washed over me. The comments poured in, showering him with praises for being such a devoted husband. "Couple goals!" "So sweet!" "True love!"
He even replied to one: "She' s my rock, my everything. Couldn' t imagine life without her."
My rock? My everything? The words were a bitter mockery. He was performing, painting a perfect facade for the world while systematically dismantling my life behind the scenes.
I stumbled toward my desk, the room tilting slightly. His words were like a physical blow, a fresh wound on top of old ones. I sank onto the plush leather chair, my hands clenching into fists.
Just yesterday, I had come home early, hoping to surprise him. Instead, I had found a voice message on our home phone. Not from a client, not from a colleague, but from a woman. Her voice was too sweet, too familiar.
"Jacoby, darling, you were amazing last night. Bridgette will be so jealous. Can't wait for round two tonight."
Bridgette. The name hit me like a physical blow. His junior analyst, the ambitious young woman he'd introduced me to with a casual, "She's good, really talented."
I remember that day. At a corporate dinner, Jacoby had introduced us. Bridgette had smiled, her eyes cold and calculating even then. She' d tried to engage me in conversation about some complex trading algorithms, a field she knew I was passionate about but rarely discussed publicly. I' d offered some vague, polite answers, unwilling to reveal the depth of my involvement in the tech world. Now, I understood. She wasn' t interested in conversation; she was assessing the competition.
That night, Jacoby had come home late, reeking of expensive perfume and cheap excuses. I' d seen the faint lipstick stain on his collar, the rumpled shirt, the forced cheerfulness in his eyes. He'd tried to pull me into an embrace, but I'd recoiled, a silent scream trapped in my throat.
He hadn't even noticed. Or perhaps he hadn't cared. He'd just muttered something about a late meeting and crashed onto the bed, snoring almost immediately.
The next morning, I confronted him, armed with the voice message. He denied it, of course, his eyes wide and innocent. "Eliana, that's absurd! She's just a colleague. Maybe a prank call?"
But the scent of cheap perfume still clung to his clothes. Later that week, I' d found a crumpled receipt in his suit pocket for an expensive dinner for two at a restaurant he knew I loved, a restaurant we always went to for our special occasions. The date on the receipt was the night he' d claimed to be working late. And the payment? His personal credit card.
The final straw had been a photo, sent anonymously to my phone. A grainy image of Jacoby, laughing, his arm around Bridgette Cole, their faces inches apart, at that very restaurant. The caption: "True love blooms where you least expect it."
My heart had shattered, not into a million pieces, but into a cold, hard lump of ice. The pain was still there, but it was a distant, numb ache, like a phantom limb. All that remained was a burning resolve.
My phone vibrated again, a new message. Another social media post from Jacoby, a picture of him and Bridgette at a high-profile industry event. She was glowing, her hand resting possessively on his arm. The caption read: "Celebrating a successful quarter with my brilliant team. Hard work pays off!"
The comments were just as effusive. "What a power couple!" "You two are unstoppable!"
I stared at the screen, my eyes dry. There was no more rage, no more tears. Just a profound, chilling emptiness. The contrast between his public persona and his private betrayal was a chasm I could no longer bridge. He wasn't just cheating; he was parading his infidelity, rubbing it in my face, daring me to react.
He would soon learn that I always played the long game. And I always won.