"Sign it." Shane's voice cut through the frigid air like a blade, the divorce papers trembling in his gloved hand. The gun in his other hand remained steady, pointed directly at my chest.
I could feel Estelle's shallow breathing beside me, her body trembling from more than just the cold. Albert's face had gone ashen as he stared at his son—this stranger wearing his child's face.
"Shane, please," Albert's voice cracked with a pain that went deeper than any physical wound. "This isn't who you are. This isn't who we raised."
"Isn't it?" Shane's laugh was bitter, hollow. "You raised me to take over the company, didn't you? Well, this is me taking control. Charlotte signs these papers, and we can all pretend this was just a tragic accident. The unstable ex-athlete couldn't handle the pressure, caused an avalanche..."
"You orchestrated this." The words came out steadier than I felt. My Olympic training had taught me to find calm in chaos, but nothing had prepared me for this betrayal. "The explosions, the resort workers—you planned to kill us all."
Shane's smile was cold as the ice surrounding us. "Valentina said you were smarter than you looked. Too bad that won't save you now."
The mention of Valentina's name sent rage coursing through my veins. I thought of her Instagram post, the calculated timing, the cryptic message about burying the past. She'd known. She'd helped plan this.
"Son, think about what you're doing." Albert's voice was pleading now, desperate. "Your mother and I, we love you. We can work through this together."
"Love?" Shane's voice cracked. "You love your precious company more than me. You love your reputation, your legacy. Well, guess what? I'm about to become your only legacy."
I saw Albert's muscles tense, saw the decision forming in his weathered features. My father-in-law had spent his life protecting what mattered most to him, and in this moment, I realized that included me.
"Albert, don't—" I started, but he was already moving.
With a roar of paternal fury, Albert lunged at his son, his hands reaching for the gun. "You will not hurt these women!"
The struggle was brief but violent. Shane, younger and desperate, had the advantage of surprise as Albert's charge knocked them both toward the edge of our snow prison. I heard Estelle's sharp intake of breath as the two men grappled near the cliff face that bordered our trapped space.
"Dad, stop!" Shane's voice had lost its cold calculation, reverting to something almost childlike in its panic.
But Albert's grip was firm on Shane's wrist, trying to wrestle the weapon away. "You want the company so badly? You'll have to go through me first!"
Then Shane did something that shattered the last piece of my heart: he pushed. Hard.
Albert's eyes went wide with shock and betrayal as he felt himself falling backward. The cliff edge crumbled under his weight, sending rocks and ice cascading into the abyss below.
"Charlotte," Albert's voice carried up to us, growing fainter with each word. "Save the company... from him. Don't let... don't let everything we built..."
The silence that followed was deafening.
Estelle's scream was raw, primal—the sound of a mother watching her world collapse. She lurched toward the edge where her husband had disappeared, but I caught her arm, pulling her back from the unstable ground.
"Albert! ALBERT!" Her voice echoed off the mountain walls, but there was no answer.
Shane stood frozen, staring at the spot where his father had vanished. The gun hung loose in his grip, forgotten. For a moment, I saw a flicker of the man I'd married—horrified, broken, human.
Then Estelle was moving, her business instincts overriding her grief with startling clarity. From her jacket's inner pocket, she pulled out a folded document, her hands shaking as she pressed it against the ice-covered rock.
"Charlotte," she whispered, her voice barely audible. "This... this makes you primary heir. I've been carrying it... in case Shane..."
Her words came in gasps now, and I realized she was hurt worse than I'd thought. Blood was seeping through her jacket from where the avalanche had struck her.
"Estelle, stay with me," I pleaded, but she was already pressing a pen into my hand.
"Sign it. Before he..."
Shane's head snapped up at her words, his eyes focusing on the document with laser intensity. "What is that?"
"Your replacement," Estelle said, her voice gaining strength from somewhere deep inside. "I'm transferring controlling interest in Bishop Industries to Charlotte. She's more worthy of your father's legacy than you'll ever be."
The betrayal in Shane's eyes was absolute. "Mother, you can't—"
"I can. And I will." Estelle's signature joined mine on the document, her handwriting shaky but legal. "Albert and I built this company. We decide who inherits it."
Shane's face contorted with rage and desperation. Before I could react, he was grabbing both of us, his strength fueled by panic.
"Then you can both rot together," he snarled, dragging us toward a maintenance entrance I hadn't noticed before—a steel door set into the mountainside. "Let's see how long the new CEO lasts in cold storage."
The underground ice cellar was a nightmare of concrete and frost, designed to preserve the resort's food supplies. Shane shoved us inside, Estelle collapsing against the wall as her injuries took their toll.
"Shane, please," I tried one last time. "Your father—"
"Is dead because he chose you over me." Shane's voice was eerily calm now, as if he'd found peace in his madness. "Don't worry, darling. I'll make sure everyone knows the truth about what really happened here. My version of the truth."
The steel door slammed shut with a finality that echoed through my bones. In the darkness, I heard the mechanical whir of Shane's phone camera starting to record, and his voice, now smooth and practiced, beginning to weave the lies that would define my fate.
"This is Shane Bishop, reporting a tragic accident at Whistling Pines Resort..."
The ice cellar was a tomb of concrete and frost, our breath forming ghostly clouds in the frigid air. My Olympic training had taught me to survive in extreme conditions, but this was different—this was survival against my own husband's betrayal.
"Estelle, stay awake." I pressed my hands against her wound, feeling the warmth of her blood seeping through my fingers. "Tell me about hypothermia protocols. Keep talking."
She managed a weak smile despite her pain. "You sound like Albert when he was teaching Shane about business... always testing, always preparing for the worst."
I guided her to the warmest corner I could find, using my body heat to shield her from the worst of the cold. My mind raced through survival techniques—conserve energy, maintain core temperature, find a way out. But Estelle's next words stopped my tactical thinking cold.
"Charlotte, there's something you need to know about Shane." Her voice was getting weaker, but her eyes burned with urgent intensity. "He's been embezzling from the company for months. I have proof."
My hands stilled on her wound. "What?"
"Five hundred million dollars, funneled through offshore accounts." She reached into her jacket with trembling fingers, pulling out a waterproof envelope. "Bank statements, transaction records, everything. I've been investigating since the discrepancies started showing up."
The documents were damning—Shane's signature on transfer authorizations, account numbers traced to shell companies, a systematic theft that had been going on for nearly a year. But it was the last page that made my blood freeze: a wire transfer to V. Ramirez for "consulting services" dated just three days ago.
"Valentina," I whispered.
"There's more." Estelle's breathing was becoming labored. "Her real name isn't Valentina Ramirez. It's Valerie Rodriguez, from a trailer park in Nevada. Everything about her online presence is fabricated—the wealthy family, the luxury lifestyle, even her accent."
I studied the background check documents with growing horror. Photos of a rundown mobile home, school records showing academic failure, a history of petty theft and fraud. The woman who had destroyed my career and seduced my husband was nothing but an elaborate lie.
"How long have you known?"
"Since the skiing accident." Estelle's confession hit me like a physical blow. "Something about her story never added up. The way she appeared right after your injury, how quickly she and Shane connected... I hired a private investigator."
Three years. Three years of living with the woman who had orchestrated my downfall, watching her manipulate my husband while I struggled to rebuild my shattered life.
The sound of metal scraping against concrete interrupted my thoughts. I moved toward the source—a section of the wall where the frost was lighter, indicating warmer air behind it. My fingers found the edges of what felt like a maintenance panel.
"There's a weakness here," I told Estelle, pressing my shoulder against the panel. Years of Olympic training had built strength in my core and legs that even the injury couldn't fully diminish. "If I can get leverage..."
The panel groaned under pressure, ice cracking around its edges. With a final surge of strength born from desperation and rage, I felt it give way.
We tumbled into a service tunnel, the air marginally warmer but filled with the mechanical hum of resort equipment. I helped Estelle to her feet, her injury making every movement painful but manageable.
"The main building is this way," she whispered, pointing down the dimly lit corridor. "These tunnels connect all the resort facilities."
As we moved through the maze of pipes and electrical conduits, I heard voices echoing from somewhere ahead. Shane's voice, clear and confident, speaking to someone on the phone.
"...everything went perfectly. The avalanche looks completely natural, and I have witnesses who'll testify that Charlotte was acting erratically all morning..."
I pressed against the tunnel wall, motioning for Estelle to stay silent. Through a ventilation grate, I could see into what looked like a security office. Shane was pacing, his phone pressed to his ear.
"Val, baby, you should have seen it. My father actually tried to protect her. Can you believe that? After everything I've done for this family, he chose some washed-up athlete over his own son."
Valentina's voice came through the speaker, tinny but unmistakably cold: "Did you get the divorce papers signed?"
"Not yet, but it doesn't matter now. With them both dead, I inherit everything anyway. The company, the fortune, all of it."
"Good. Because I'm tired of playing the long game, Shane. Three years of pretending to care about your pathetic family, three years of building this perfect little romance... I want what we agreed on."
My heart stopped. Three years. The same timeframe as my accident.
"You've been perfect, Val. That skiing accident was genius—taking out Charlotte's career while making it look like equipment failure. And the way you've been slowly turning me against my parents... brilliant."
Valentina's laugh was like ice cracking. "Your parents were always going to be a problem. They actually believed in merit, in earning things. So inconvenient when you're trying to inherit an empire."
"Well, they won't be a problem much longer. By tomorrow, I'll be the grieving son who lost his family in a tragic accident. The media will eat it up."
Beside me, Estelle's face had gone white with understanding. The woman we'd welcomed into our family, the woman Shane claimed to love, had been systematically destroying us from the inside for years.
And now I knew exactly how deep this conspiracy went.