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After spending two years in prison for a crime she didn’t commit, Elena walked free while her husband celebrated his engagement to the woman he used to destroy her.
What Marcus didn’t know was that Elena had spent every day collecting evidence, waiting for the perfect moment to tear his empire apart.
That was fine.
I hadn’t survived two years behind bars to be saved by the man who put me there.
In court, he held the hand of his mistress, Vivian Cross, and whispered to the jury:
“She attacked Vivian out of jealousy. She caused the miscarriage.”
Everyone believed them.
Marcus was rich, charming, admired.
And I was the cold wife who refused to cry for an audience.
The night I was arrested, Marcus visited my holding cell once.
“Why are you doing this?” I asked.
He crouched beside the bars with a smile that made my skin crawl.
I stared at him in disbelief.
“No one likes a proud woman in a cage, Elena.”
After that night, he disappeared completely.
No visits.
No phone calls.
No replies to my letters.
But prison taught me things.
Patience.
Silence.
Discipline.
I learned that revenge is not loud anger.
It’s paperwork filed at the perfect moment.
A witness protected before trial.
A bank account frozen before sunrise.
Marcus thought prison would destroy me.
Instead, it stripped away everything soft.
Before I married him, I worked as a forensic accountant for the Attorney General’s office. I understood hidden money, shell companies, forged contracts, and how powerful men panic when the evidence finally surfaces.
Marcus forgot that.
Or maybe he simply underestimated me.
The morning I was released, a black sedan stopped beside the curb.
Inside sat my former mentor, attorney Celeste Mora, sharp-eyed and elegant as ever.
“Ready?” she asked.
I stepped into the car without looking back at the prison.
“Not yet,” I replied quietly. “First, I want him comfortable.”
Marcus celebrated loudly.
Three days later, photos of his engagement party with Vivian flooded social media. They smiled beneath crystal chandeliers at the top of Vale Tower — my father’s building, now carrying Marcus’s name like stolen property.
The headlines called it:
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