Chapter 2

Three days. That's how long it took for my world to crumble completely.

I stood before my jewelry box, my hands trembling as I searched through velvet compartments that had once held my most precious possessions. The diamond earrings Damien gave me for our first anniversary sat untouched. The pearl bracelet from my wedding day remained in its silk-lined slot. But the one piece that mattered—the delicate silver chain with my mother's pendant—was gone.

"Mrs. Song!" My voice cracked as I called for the housekeeper, panic rising in my throat like bile. "Mrs. Song, please come quickly!"

She appeared in the doorway within moments, her kind face creased with concern. "What is it, Mrs. Turner?"

"My mother's necklace—it's missing." I pulled out every drawer, upended every compartment, my movements growing more frantic with each empty space. "The silver one with the small diamond pendant. Have you seen it?"

Mrs. Song's expression shifted to alarm. She knew what that necklace meant to me—the last tangible piece of my mother I had left. Without hesitation, she began helping me search, checking under the bed, behind the dresser, anywhere it might have fallen.

But deep in my gut, I already knew we wouldn't find it.

We tore apart my room for an hour. Mrs. Song even checked the laundry, thinking perhaps it had gotten caught in bedsheets. Nothing. The necklace had simply vanished, as if it had never existed at all.

That evening, Damien informed me we would be attending the Blackwood Foundation's charity gala. His tone was clipped, businesslike, as if I were an employee receiving orders rather than his wife.

"Evangeline will be joining us," he added, not meeting my eyes as he adjusted his cufflinks in the mirror. "She's never been to one of these events. I want to show her how our social circle operates."

Our social circle. As if I were merely a tour guide for his real life.

I chose a black evening gown that night—appropriate, I thought, for mourning everything I was losing. The dress hung loose on my frame; I'd lost more weight in recent days, though Damien hadn't noticed. He was too busy texting Evangeline to pay attention to his dying wife.

The Blackwood mansion blazed with golden light, its ballroom filled with the cream of society. I moved through the crowd like a ghost, smiling and nodding at familiar faces while my husband escorted another woman on his arm. Evangeline wore a stunning emerald dress that complemented her auburn hair perfectly, and she clung to Damien's side as if she belonged there.

Then I saw it.

The delicate silver chain caught the chandelier light as Evangeline laughed at something Damien whispered in her ear. My mother's pendant—the small diamond that had once rested against my mother's throat, then mine—now adorned the neck of my husband's first love.

The room tilted. Sound became muffled, distant. I watched Evangeline's fingers play with the pendant absently, twisting it between her manicured nails like it was nothing more than a trinket.

I waited until Damien stepped away to speak with business associates before approaching her. She stood near the dessert table, sampling chocolate-covered strawberries with the satisfied air of a woman who had everything she wanted.

"That's a beautiful necklace," I said, my voice steady despite the storm raging inside me.

Evangeline's hand flew to the pendant, her emerald eyes widening with practiced innocence. "Oh, this? Thank you. It was a gift."

"From whom?"

Her smile was sugar-sweet and poisonous. "Damien, of course. He said you wouldn't mind sharing." She fingered the pendant possessively, making sure I could see every detail of my mother's jewelry adorning her throat. "He told me it wasn't that important to you anyway. Just something taking up space in your jewelry box."

The words hit me like physical blows. Not important. Taking up space. My mother's final gift to me, dismissed as easily as yesterday's newspaper.

"You stole it." The accusation escaped before I could stop it.

Evangeline's laugh was like breaking glass. "Stole? How dramatic. Damien gave it to me freely. He said I should have beautiful things, and that you had plenty of jewelry already." She leaned closer, her voice dropping to a whisper only I could hear. "Besides, it looks better on me, don't you think? Your mother had excellent taste."

The mention of my mother sent white-hot rage coursing through my veins. I stepped forward, my hands clenching into fists, when Damien's voice cut through the air.

"What's going on here?"

I turned to face my husband, this man I'd loved with everything in me, this stranger who was systematically destroying my life. "She's wearing my mother's necklace. The one that went missing from my jewelry box."

Damien's expression hardened, but not with the anger I expected—not anger directed at Evangeline for theft, but at me for causing a scene.

"It's just a necklace, Maren." His voice was ice-cold, cutting. "Don't embarrass me in public. Evangeline admired it, and I thought she should have it. You have plenty of jewelry."

Just a necklace.

The casual cruelty of those words, the ease with which he gave away my mother's memory to another woman, cut deeper than any blade ever could. This was the man who had once promised to cherish me, to protect what mattered to me, to love me until death parted us.

Death was coming for me, but it seemed love had already fled.

I didn't speak. Couldn't speak. I simply turned and walked away, my heels clicking against the marble floor with funeral precision. Behind me, I heard Evangeline's delighted laughter and Damien's soothing murmurs, but their voices faded as I made my way through the crowd toward the bathroom.

I barely made it inside before my composure shattered completely. The violent coughing fit seized me without warning, doubling me over the marble sink as my body convulsed. When I finally pulled the handkerchief away from my mouth, bright red blood stained the white fabric like accusation.

In the mirror, a dying woman stared back at me—pale, hollow-eyed, and utterly alone. The cancer was eating me alive from the inside, but it was nothing compared to the destruction my husband was wreaking on what remained of my heart.

Chapter 3

The penthouse felt like a mausoleum when I returned from the gala, my heels echoing through empty marble halls. Damien had stayed behind with Evangeline, claiming they needed to "catch up properly" after so many years apart. The excuse tasted like acid in my mouth, but I'd smiled and nodded like the perfect, understanding wife.

I made it to my bathroom before the next coughing fit seized me. This one was worse—violent spasms that doubled me over the sink as my body tried to expel the poison growing inside me. When it finally subsided, I stared at the handkerchief in my trembling hands. The blood was darker now, more abundant. Even to my untrained eye, it looked wrong.

I stuffed the stained fabric deep into the wastebasket, burying it beneath tissues and cotton pads. Mrs. Song couldn't see this. No one could see this. I had to maintain the illusion of strength, of dignity, even as my body betrayed me piece by piece.

But when I emerged from the bathroom, Mrs. Song stood in my bedroom doorway, her kind face etched with concern.

"Mrs. Turner, are you all right? I heard..."

"I'm fine." The lie came automatically, practiced. "Just tired from the evening."

She nodded, but her eyes held doubt. "Can I bring you anything? Some tea, perhaps?"

"No, thank you. I just need rest."

After she left, I sat by the window in my silk nightgown, staring out at the city lights that blurred through my unshed tears. Somewhere out there, my husband was with another woman, wearing my mother's necklace like a trophy. The pendant that had once caught the light as my mother read me bedtime stories now adorned the throat of my destroyer.

The next morning brought a peculiar emptiness to the penthouse. Damien had left early—another "business meeting" that I knew involved Evangeline. I attempted breakfast, but the scrambled eggs Mrs. Song prepared turned to ash in my mouth. Every bite triggered waves of nausea that left me gripping the edge of the dining table.

"You're not eating," Mrs. Song observed quietly, refilling my untouched coffee cup.

"I'm not very hungry lately." I pushed the plate away, noting how my wedding ring had grown loose on my finger. When had I lost so much weight?

The days blended together in a haze of hidden suffering. I learned to time my coughing fits, rushing to bathrooms or empty rooms where I could muffle the sounds with pillows. The dizziness came without warning—sudden episodes that left me clutching staircases and doorframes, waiting for the world to stop spinning.

One afternoon, while climbing to the second floor, my legs simply gave out. I grabbed the mahogany banister with both hands, my knuckles turning white as I fought to stay upright. The marble steps seemed to tilt and sway beneath me, and for a terrifying moment, I thought I might tumble backward.

"Breathe," I whispered to myself, the word echoing in the empty stairwell. "Just breathe."

When the episode passed, I found myself sitting on the steps like a child, my designer dress wrinkled and my carefully styled hair disheveled. This was what dying looked like—not the peaceful fade of movies, but a gradual stripping away of everything that made me myself.

That evening, I discovered Mrs. Song in my bathroom, frozen like a statue beside the wastebasket. In her hands was my bloodied handkerchief from the night before, the one I'd thought safely buried beneath other refuse. Tears streamed down her weathered cheeks as she stared at the crimson evidence of my deterioration.

"Mrs. Song..." I began, but the words died in my throat.

She looked up at me with such profound sadness that my own composure finally cracked. Without speaking, she set the handkerchief aside and moved to the window seat, patting the cushion beside her in silent invitation.

I sat down heavily, my body feeling ancient despite my twenty-eight years. For a long moment, we simply existed in the silence of shared understanding.

"How long have you known?" she asked finally, her voice barely above a whisper.

"Three weeks." The confession escaped like a held breath. "Terminal stomach cancer. Three to six months, they said."

Mrs. Song's hand found mine, her fingers warm against my cold skin. "And Mr. Turner?"

"He doesn't know." I stared out at the darkening sky, watching the first stars appear. "He won't know. I won't give him the satisfaction of my weakness."

"Oh, my dear girl." Mrs. Song's voice broke, and suddenly I was sobbing—great, heaving sobs that I'd held back for weeks. She pulled me against her shoulder, her hand stroking my hair as she whispered soothing words in Mandarin.

"I loved him so much," I choked out between tears. "I would have died for him. And now I am dying, and he's with her."

"I know, child. I know."

"Promise me," I gripped her arm desperately. "Promise me you won't tell him. Promise me you'll let me face this with dignity."

Mrs. Song held me tighter, her own tears falling into my hair. "I promise. Whatever you need, I'll be here."

In that moment, surrounded by the only genuine love left in my world, I made my choice. I would not be a victim. I would not beg for scraps of attention from a man who had already chosen someone else. I would face death on my own terms, with my secrets intact and my pride unbroken.

Even if it killed me.

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