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Secrets Of The Neglected Hacker Wife

Secrets Of The Neglected Hacker Wife

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10 Chapters
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For five years, Chloe played the perfect, docile wife to Silicon Valley titan Julian Carlisle. Then, she stopped taking the daily "vitamins" he gave her, hacked her own home security system, and caught him passionately kissing their son's live-in tutor. The betrayal cut impossibly deep. The tutor had already brainwashed her five-year-old son, who publicly screamed that he hated Chloe and only wanted his teacher. Worse, after planting a bug in her mother-in-law's study, Chloe uncovered a horrifying truth. Her entire marriage was a calculated trap. They had secretly drugged her daily meals for years to keep her compliant and fertile, using her as a pedigree "broodmare" with no family ties just to produce the Carlisle heir. Julian even gave Chloe's custom wedding ring to his mistress to wear as a trophy, while his elite circle of friends laughed at the naive wife. Her body, her child, her marriage-none of it was real. It was a hostile takeover of her life by a nest of vipers who thought they had her completely controlled. But they forgot one crucial detail about the woman they chose to manipulate. Underneath the perfect housewife facade, Chloe was a top-tier hacker with a military-grade classified past. Logging into her hidden terminal, she shed her gentle disguise and contacted her former commander. "I need to activate the Phoenix Protocol." They wanted a compliant wife, but they were about to get their absolute destruction.

Contents

Secrets Of The Neglected Hacker Wife Chapter 1

Chloe Sinclair stared at the glowing screen of the laptop, the harsh blue light illuminating a face drained of all color. Her breath was trapped in her throat, her lungs burning, but she couldn't look away.

On the high-definition security footage playing before her, her husband, Julian Carlisle, was devouring a blonde woman on a cream-colored sofa. It wasn't just a kiss; it was a hungry, desperate claiming.

Scarlett Thorne. The young, vibrant woman,a third-rate actress. But after Aidan met her by chance at an event, he insisted that they hire her as his live-in music tutor.

Before Chloe's mind could even process the sheer, suffocating magnitude of the betrayal, the video skipped to a different timestamp. The door in the footage flew open, and her seven-year-old son, Aidan Carlisle, burst into the frame.

Chloe's hand flew to her mouth as she sank back into the leather chair, her heart shattering when Aidan completely ignored his father and threw himself straight into Scarlett's open arms.

"Scarlett!" Aidan squealed, burying his small face in her blonde hair. Then, his sweet, childish voice chirped a sentence that twisted like a jagged blade in Chloe's chest. "Auntie Scarlett, I like you best. Mommy is always tired. She never plays with me."

On the screen, Julian watched them. He wasn't annoyed by the interruption. Instead, a soft, genuine smile, a smile Chloe hadn't seen directed at her in years, spread across his handsome face. They looked like a real, happy family. Chloe's entire existence, her motherhood, her marriage, had been effortlessly erased by a child's innocent words and a husband's calculated deceit.

The sheer, calculated cruelty of the scene didn't just paralyze her; it hollowed her out.

She stared at the man on the screen, the man who had spent the last five years systematically destroying her mind. Tonight, Chloe had jolted awake in the oppressive darkness of their master bedroom, her body slick with cold sweat, gasping for air as if breaking the surface of a dark ocean.

For five long years, her reality had been trapped in a thick, chemical fog.

Every single night, Julian would hand her a pill from an elegant amber bottle. "For your emotional stability, darling," he would murmur, his voice as smooth and comforting as silk, while her domineering mother-in-law, Eleanor Carlisle, watched from the doorway with cold, hawk-like eyes to ensure she swallowed it.

They had convinced her she was sick. Unstable. Unfit.

But recently, a spark of primal clarity had pierced the haze. For the past few days, she had secretly palmed the pills, spitting them into the sink when no one was looking.

Tonight, the chemical veil had finally lifted. Fully lucid for the first time in half a decade, a fierce, clawing maternal instinct had driven her out of bed.

She had slipped into Julian's forbidden study, intending only to access the master security system on his laptop to check the cameras in Aidan's room. She just wanted to see her little boy sleeping safely.

Instead, on his password-free desktop-a glaring monument to his arrogant belief that she was too broken, too medicated to ever snoop-she had found a hidden folder labeled "Aidan's Growth Log". It wasn't a collection of innocent school photos. It was a meticulously archived library of security footage from a secret penthouse.

Five years of infidelity. A son weaponized against her. A mind deliberately poisoned by the very family she had married into. The betrayal wasn't just a knife in the back; it was a slow, deliberate dismemberment of her entire reality, violently ripping the ground from beneath her feet.

But as she stared at the frozen image of her husband and his mistress playing house with her son, Chloe didn't cry. The tears simply refused to come.

The docile, heavily medicated housewife died in that leather chair. In her place, something ancient, cold, and lethal woke up. It was a pure, crystalline shard of hate.

Her hand moved to her neck, her fingers finding the familiar shape of the silver leaf pendant she had never taken off. It wasn't just jewelry. It was a relic from a past life Julian knew nothing about.

With a deft, practiced twist, Chloe separated the leaf from its chain. The stem revealed a micro USB-a custom-made, military-grade encrypted flash drive.

Her fingers flew across the trackpad. The trembling was gone, replaced by a sudden, terrifying precision. She selected all the video files. Dragged them. Dropped them into the drive's icon. The progress bar filled in seconds.

She didn't stop there. Her hands moved to the keyboard, the light, rapid tapping a ghostly echo in the silent room. Muscle memory, dormant for years, flared to life. She navigated to the system logs, exploiting a back-end vulnerability she herself had discovered in the OS years ago. She purged every trace of her login, every record of the file transfer, every digital footprint. She reset the system clock.

It was as if a ghost had passed through the machine.

Chloe slipped out of the study, the heavy oak door clicking shut behind her. It sounded like a vault sealing the tomb of her marriage.

Back in her bedroom, she ignored the king-sized bed that now felt as vast and empty as a desert. She opened her personal laptop. The screen flickered to life, displaying what looked like a simple, mundane game of Minesweeper.

Her fingers danced across the keyboard in a strange, syncopated rhythm. Not random clicks. It was a sequence, a cadence. On the grid of gray squares, she tapped out a complex, multi-layered password.

The game interface dissolved instantly. In its place, a pitch-black screen appeared, a single green cursor blinking expectantly in the dark. A command-line terminal.

Chloe typed a line of code, the keystrokes sharp and deliberate.

A simple, unadorned chat box materialized.

She typed. Her fingers were steady as stone.

Director, it's me.

The cursor blinked in the heavy silence of the room for a long, tense moment. Then, a reply appeared, the green text reflecting in her cold eyes.

Ghost? We thought you went dark for good.

Ghost.

Chloe's call sign from DARPA. She hadn't heard that name in seven years. A lifetime ago.

A smile, thin and sharp as a razor's edge, touched Chloe's lips. The woman who had been drugged and manipulated was gone. The operative had returned, and her eyes burned with the promise of absolute, scorching retribution.

She typed her final message.

I need to activate the Phoenix Protocol.

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