The phone's screen went dark, but the silence stretched between us like a taut wire. Ryker's hand still hovered near my throat, the Tiffany box forgotten in his other palm. His green eyes searched my face, looking for cracks in whatever mask I was wearing.
"That was Maren," he said finally, his voice carefully neutral. "Your sister. She's been having a rough time lately, and I promised your mom I'd keep an eye on her."
The lie rolled off his tongue so smoothly I almost admired the craftsmanship. My sister Maren, who lived in Seattle and hadn't spoken to our mother in three years. My sister who would rather eat glass than accept help from Ryker, whom she'd called "soulless" at our wedding reception.
I let my shoulders relax, arranged my features into the expression of a concerned older sister. "Oh no, what's wrong? Is she okay?"
Ryker's relief was almost palpable. His hand dropped from my neck, and he stepped back, already reaching for his phone. "Just some work stress. You know how she gets. I should probably call her back, make sure she's alright."
"Of course," I said, my voice warm with false understanding. "Don't let me keep you. She needs you."
The irony wasn't lost on either of us, though only I seemed to appreciate it. Ryker squeezed my shoulder—a gesture that once would have comforted me, now felt like a spider crawling across my skin—and headed toward the balcony.
"I'll just be a minute," he said, sliding the glass door open. "Then we can have dinner. I've missed your cooking."
Another lie, but I smiled anyway. "Take your time."
The moment the balcony door clicked shut, I was moving. Ninety seconds, maybe two minutes if I was lucky. Ryker's voice was already carrying through the glass, too muffled to make out words but animated in a way he never sounded when talking to my actual sister.
His luggage sat by the front door like an accusation—expensive leather that had traveled first-class from Monaco to New York. The main suitcase was locked, but the smaller carry-on bag had a zipper that gave way under my trembling fingers.
Inside, beneath silk ties and Italian leather shoes, my fingers found it. A manila envelope, thick with documents, the kind of official papers that changed lives and destroyed marriages. My hands shook as I pulled it free, careful not to disturb the careful arrangement of his belongings.
Wedding certificates. Multiple copies in both English and French, embossed with official seals that caught the afternoon light. My breath caught in my throat as I photographed each page with my phone, the camera's silent shutter capturing evidence of my husband's betrayal.
There—the bride's signature. Maren Whitfield-Cooper.
Whitfield. My mother's maiden name, the name I'd legally dropped when I married Ryker. The name that had no connection to the real Maren Cooper, my sister who had kept her ex-husband's surname out of spite.
My phone's camera captured everything: the witness signatures, the officiant's seal, the date that proved Ryker had married another woman while still legally bound to me. Each image was a nail in his coffin, evidence that could destroy him in divorce court.
But more than that—it was proof that this Monaco marriage might not be legally valid at all. If the bride had used a false identity, if the documents contained fraudulent information...
Ryker's voice grew louder on the balcony, laughter mixing with words I couldn't quite catch. Time was running out. I slid the envelope back into place, arranged his belongings exactly as I'd found them, and zipped the bag closed with hands that barely trembled.
By the time he slid the balcony door open, I was in the kitchen, tying an apron around my waist with domestic precision. The ritual of cooking had always calmed me—the methodical preparation, the controlled heat, the transformation of raw ingredients into something nourishing.
Tonight, it felt like armor.
"How's Maren?" I asked without turning around, my voice perfectly pitched with sisterly concern.
"Better now," Ryker said, and I could hear the smile in his voice. "She just needed someone to listen."
I pulled the steaks from the refrigerator—two perfect cuts of filet mignon I'd been saving for a special occasion. The irony wasn't lost on me that I was now using them for what would likely be our last meal together.
"I thought I'd make your favorite," I said, seasoning the meat with salt and cracked pepper. "Garlic herb crusted filet. The way you like it."
Ryker moved behind me, his presence a familiar weight in the small kitchen. "You don't have to go to all this trouble."
"It's no trouble." I heated olive oil in the cast iron skillet, the same pan we'd received as a wedding gift from his grandmother. "I like taking care of you."
The words tasted like ash in my mouth, but they had the desired effect. When I glanced over my shoulder, Ryker's expression had softened, guilt flickering across his features like candlelight.
"Sloane," he started, then stopped. His hand hovered near my shoulder, uncertain. "I—"
"The steaks are ready," I interrupted, sliding them into the hot oil. They sizzled and popped, filling the kitchen with the rich scent of searing meat. "Could you open some wine? The Bordeaux from our anniversary?"
Another test. That bottle had been a gift from his business partner, saved for a celebration that never came. If he opened it now, it would tell me exactly how guilty he felt about whatever he'd done in Monaco.
Ryker moved to the wine rack without hesitation, pulling out the bottle worth more than most people's monthly rent. The cork came free with a soft pop, and he poured two generous glasses of wine the color of dark cherries.
"To us," he said, raising his glass.
I turned from the stove, my own glass in hand, and looked at this man I'd once loved enough to promise my life to. His dark hair was perfectly styled, his green eyes warm with what looked like genuine affection. He was handsome, successful, charming—everything I'd thought I wanted in a husband.
Everything except honest.
"To us," I echoed, touching my glass to his.
The wine was perfect—complex and smooth, with notes of blackcurrant and oak. I savored it, knowing it would be the last expensive wine I'd drink as Ryker's wife.
I plated the steaks with practiced efficiency, adding roasted asparagus and garlic mashed potatoes. Domestic perfection, the kind of meal that belonged in a magazine spread about successful couples and their beautiful lives.
Ryker watched me work, his expression growing more troubled with each passing minute. When I set his plate in front of him, he caught my hand.
"I don't deserve you," he said quietly.
My fingers tightened around the steak knife I still held, the blade catching the kitchen light. For a moment, I imagined what it would feel like to drive it between his ribs, to watch the surprise bloom in his green eyes as his blood mixed with the wine.
Instead, I smiled.
"Don't be silly," I said, gently extracting my hand from his grip. "We deserve each other."
As I took my seat across from him, I realized something had shifted inside me. The woman who had stood frozen in her apartment this morning, shattered by the sight of her husband's wedding photos, was gone.
In her place sat someone harder. Someone who could smile while planning revenge.
Someone who had just cooked her last meal for the man who had stolen her life's work and married another woman.
Ryker cut into his steak, the knife sliding through the perfectly cooked meat. "This is incredible," he said, taking his first bite. "I've missed this. Missed you."
I watched him chew, watched him swallow, watched him take another bite of the meal I'd prepared with such care. My own steak sat untouched on my plate.
"I'm glad you're home," I lied, raising my wine glass in another toast. "I'm glad you're here."
But as the words left my mouth, I was already planning how to destroy him.
Three in the morning. The red digits on my bedside clock glowed like angry eyes in the darkness, marking the hours I'd spent lying perfectly still beside my sleeping husband. Ryker's breathing was deep and even, his arm thrown carelessly across the space where I used to curl against his chest.
Now that space felt like a chasm.
I slipped from beneath the covers with practiced silence, my bare feet finding the cool hardwood without a creak. The bathroom door closed behind me with the softest click, and I sank onto the marble floor, my back against the locked door.
The international calling app connected on the second ring.
"Sloane?" Dr. Kessler's voice carried across the Atlantic, tinged with concern. In Zurich, it was nine in the morning—perfect timing for a conversation that could destroy my marriage or save my career. "What's wrong?"
"They forged my signature." The words tumbled out in a whisper. "The patent transfer—it's not real. But Patricia, they did something else. There's a spousal authorization form attached to the application."
Silence stretched across the connection. I could picture him in his pristine office overlooking Lake Zurich, his weathered hands steepled as he processed the implications.
"A spousal authorization," he repeated slowly. "That would explain why the patent office didn't flag the signature discrepancy. If they believed you'd given written consent for your husband to handle the transfer..."
"Can we fight it?"
"If you can prove the authorization is fraudulent, absolutely. Not only can we reverse the transfer, but academic fraud carries serious penalties. Criminal penalties." His voice hardened with the righteous anger I remembered from his Columbia lectures. "But Sloane, we need the original experimental data. The raw research files, the lab notebooks, the preliminary test results—everything that proves you were the sole inventor."
My stomach dropped like a stone. "They're not on my personal drives."
"Where are they?"
I closed my eyes, seeing the familiar blue-and-silver logo in my mind. "Ashford BioTech servers. The family lab in Austin. Everything's backed up there."
Another pause. Longer this time.
"Can you access them remotely?"
"No." The word felt like admitting defeat. "I'd need to be physically present. But Patricia, they revoked my access two months ago. Ryker said it was a security upgrade, that they were updating the entire system."
Now I understood why.
Dr. Kessler's sigh carried the weight of thirty years in academia, thirty years of watching brilliant minds get crushed by politics and greed. "Then you need to get back in there. Whatever it takes."
I ended the call and sat in the darkness of my bathroom, marble cold against my spine, planning my next move. The woman who'd cooked dinner for her cheating husband last night felt like a stranger. In her place sat someone harder, someone who could smile while laying traps.
By the time I returned to bed, Ryker hadn't moved. But his breathing had changed—lighter, more conscious. He was awake.
Pretending to sleep, just like I was.
---
Morning light filtered through the kitchen windows as I arranged fresh berries on Ryker's Greek yogurt, the domestic ritual feeling like performance art. He sat at our marble breakfast bar, scrolling through emails on his phone, designer glasses perched on his nose.
The picture of a successful husband. If you didn't look too closely.
"I've been thinking," I said, keeping my voice light as I slid the bowl across to him. "Maybe I should go back to the lab."
Ryker's thumb froze over his phone screen. For just a moment, his carefully composed expression flickered.
"The lab?" He looked up, green eyes searching my face. "Sloane, you haven't worked there in two years. I thought you were happy focusing on your writing."
I laughed, the sound bitter even to my own ears. "Writing restaurant reviews and lifestyle pieces? Come on, Ryker. I'm a neuroscientist. I have a PhD from Columbia, not a degree in food blogging."
"You're brilliant at everything you do." His voice carried that familiar warmth, the honey-smooth tone that had once made me believe I was special. "But the lab... it's stressful. The pressure, the long hours. I don't want you burning out again."
Burning out. His euphemism for the nervous breakdown I'd had when my research funding was mysteriously pulled, when three years of work had been deemed "not commercially viable" by the Ashford board.
The same board his father chaired.
"I miss it," I said simply. "The research, the discovery. I feel like I've been sleepwalking for two years. My hands are getting rusty—I can barely remember the protocols I used to know by heart."
Ryker set down his spoon, yogurt forgotten. His expression had shifted into something I recognized—the calculating look he wore during business negotiations.
"If that's what you really want," he said slowly, "I could talk to security. Have them restore your access."
Too fast. Too eager.
The response I'd expected, but his tone sent ice through my veins. If Ryker had successfully transferred my patents, if Maren now legally owned my life's work, then he needed me to appear complicit. He needed witnesses who could say Dr. Sloane Ashford had voluntarily returned to research, had willingly collaborated on projects that were no longer hers.
"Would you?" I let hope creep into my voice, the breathless excitement of a woman grateful for her husband's support. "I know it's a lot to ask..."
"It's not asking too much." He reached across the counter, his fingers closing over mine. "I want you to be happy, Sloane. I want you to have everything you deserve."
The irony was suffocating.
"I'll make the calls today," he continued, already pulling out his phone. "Get you full access restored by tomorrow. You can start whenever you're ready."
I squeezed his hand, playing the role of the grateful wife. But inside, warning bells were screaming. This was too easy. Too convenient. Ryker was many things, but he wasn't careless.
If he was this eager to get me back into that lab, there was something there he wanted me to find. Or something he was certain I'd never discover.
Either way, I was walking into a trap.
But for the first time in months, I felt alive. The prey was finally ready to hunt.
Twenty minutes after Sloane left for her Pilates class, I sat in my study, turning the 3D-printed replica of that damned sapphire necklace over in my hands. The weight was wrong—too light, too plastic—but the shape was perfect. Every curve and setting matched the original she refused to take off.
The original that contained a micro-camera.
I'd had it installed months ago, back when I still thought I was protecting her. Back when I believed the biggest threat to our marriage was some other man catching her eye. The irony tasted bitter now—I'd been so focused on imaginary rivals that I'd missed the real enemy.
My laptop hummed to life, connecting to the cloud storage where six months of footage waited. I told myself I was just checking for signs of infidelity, looking for evidence that would justify what I'd done in Monaco. But as the first video loaded, my blood turned to ice.
The timestamp read three months ago. Sloane's apartment, but she wasn't there. Instead, a woman with auburn hair moved through the space like she owned it—Maren. The woman I'd married in Monaco, the woman who'd convinced me that Sloane was having an affair, that she was planning to steal the patents and run.
Maren rifled through Sloane's desk drawers with methodical precision, photographing documents with her phone. She moved to the laptop, her fingers flying over the keyboard as she accessed files that should have been protected. But what made my stomach clench was how comfortable she looked, how familiar she was with every corner of my wife's private space.
I fast-forwarded through hours of footage, my hands shaking as the pattern emerged. Maren had been here dozens of times, always when Sloane was out. Always searching, always documenting, always stealing pieces of my wife's life.
The worst video was from two months ago. Maren stood in Sloane's bathroom, holding a small vial of clear liquid. She used a syringe to pierce the bottom of Sloane's daily serum bottle—the expensive French formula Sloane had used religiously for years. Drop by drop, Maren replaced the contents with whatever poison she'd brought.
My throat closed as memories crashed together like colliding trains. Sloane's insomnia. Her headaches. The way she'd grown distant and forgetful, the mood swings I'd attributed to stress. I'd watched my wife slowly deteriorate and done nothing, believed every lie Maren fed me about Sloane's supposed betrayal.
I bolted to the bathroom, my knees hitting the marble floor as I grabbed Sloane's serum bottle. There—barely visible unless you knew to look—a tiny puncture mark in the glass bottom, sealed with what looked like clear nail polish.
The bottle slipped from my numb fingers, shattering against the marble. Golden liquid spread across the white stone like spilled blood.
I stumbled back to the laptop, scrolling to an earlier video. This one showed Maren alone in the apartment, standing before Sloane's vanity mirror. She spoke to her reflection, unaware that the pendant's camera was recording every word.
'Poor little Sloane,' Maren's voice was honey-sweet with malice. 'So brilliant, so accomplished. But brilliance means nothing when everyone forgets you exist.' She picked up one of Sloane's lipsticks, testing the color on her wrist. 'Once the patents are transferred and she's been properly... adjusted... she'll fade away like she was never here at all. And Ryker will finally see what he really needs.'
Maren smiled at her reflection, and for the first time I saw her clearly—not the vulnerable woman who'd cried in my arms about Sloane's cruelty, but a predator wearing my wife's face. A parasite who'd been systematically destroying the woman I'd promised to protect.
My phone was in my hand before I realized I'd grabbed it. Sloane's number rang once, twice—then went straight to voicemail. Her voice, bright and professional, asked me to leave a message.
'Sloane, it's me. Call me back immediately. I know about Maren. I know everything. Please—'
The line went dead. I tried again. Straight to voicemail.
Panic clawed at my chest as I dialed my driver's number. Marcus answered on the first ring.
'Mr. Ashford? How can I help you?'
'Where did you take my wife today?' The words came out sharp, demanding.
'To Equinox for her Pilates class, sir. But...' Marcus hesitated. 'She cancelled her membership this morning. Asked me to wait while she cleaned out her locker, then dismissed me. Said she'd find her own way home.'
'Find her own way how?'
'An Uber, sir. She seemed... different. Determined. She had luggage with her.'
Luggage. The word hit me like a physical blow.
I dropped the phone and ran to our bedroom, throwing open Sloane's walk-in closet. Empty hangers swayed like accusatory fingers. Her dresser drawers gaped open, stripped of the silk lingerie and cashmere sweaters I'd bought her over the years.
The safe in our bedroom stood open, its digital lock blinking green. Inside, where Sloane kept her grandmother's jewelry and important documents, only one item remained.
A manila envelope with my name written in Sloane's careful script.
Inside were divorce papers—signed, notarized, dated yesterday. Every page bore her signature, clean and decisive. But it was the sticky note attached to the final page that made my knees buckle.
In Sloane's handwriting: 'You said I was the only woman who could make you beg. Now you can beg someone else.'
I sank onto our bed—my bed now—clutching the papers that dissolved six years of marriage with surgical precision. The prenup we'd signed protected her family's money, but these papers went further. She was claiming fraud, demanding an investigation into the patent transfers, requesting criminal charges for corporate espionage.
She knew. Somehow, despite the drugs, despite Maren's manipulation, despite my betrayal, Sloane had figured it out.
And now she was gone.
My phone buzzed with a text from an unknown number: 'JFK Airport. Terminal 4. Gate A3. Flight 447 to Zurich, departing in two hours. If you hurry, you might catch her. But ask yourself—after what you've done, why would she want to see you?'
I stared at the message, my hands trembling. Outside our bedroom window, Manhattan glittered in the afternoon sun, indifferent to the wreckage of my marriage. Somewhere in that maze of steel and glass, Maren was probably celebrating her victory, unaware that her carefully laid plans were unraveling.
But it was too late for any of us.
Sloane was already gone, and I was finally kneeling—just like she'd predicted.