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The Secrets She Died To Protect

The Secrets She Died To Protect

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My wife, Ava, was dead. I felt nothing but relief. For five years, I had orchestrated her downfall-ruining her family and her reputation-as payback for trapping me in a marriage and tearing me away from the woman I loved. My revenge was complete. Then, a week after she died alone in a park, my investigator called. He told me Ava had been secretly battling a terminal brain tumor for our entire five-year marriage. Suddenly, everything made a horrifying kind of sense. Her constant hospital visits weren't for an affair. The child I accused her of aborting was a pregnancy her dying body couldn't handle. My every act of cruelty had been inflicted on an innocent, dying woman. But why? Why endure my hatred in silence? Why let me believe she was a monster when she was the one suffering? The final piece of the puzzle arrived in a second phone call, revealing the one secret she died to protect. The woman I thought she'd stolen from me, Angella, was never my lover. She was my sister. And I had destroyed my wife for a lie.

Contents

The Secrets She Died To Protect Chapter 1 Chapter 1

My wife, Ava, was dead. I felt nothing but relief. For five years, I had orchestrated her downfall-ruining her family and her reputation-as payback for trapping me in a marriage and tearing me away from the woman I loved. My revenge was complete.

Then, a week after she died alone in a park, my investigator called. He told me Ava had been secretly battling a terminal brain tumor for our entire five-year marriage.

Suddenly, everything made a horrifying kind of sense. Her constant hospital visits weren't for an affair. The child I accused her of aborting was a pregnancy her dying body couldn't handle. My every act of cruelty had been inflicted on an innocent, dying woman.

But why? Why endure my hatred in silence? Why let me believe she was a monster when she was the one suffering?

The final piece of the puzzle arrived in a second phone call, revealing the one secret she died to protect. The woman I thought she'd stolen from me, Angella, was never my lover.

She was my sister. And I had destroyed my wife for a lie.

Chapter 1

Ava Berry POV

My face, unblurred, flashed across every news screen. They called me a fraud, a gold-digger. Accusations of trying to extort my ex-husband, Elliott Hoover, filled the airwaves. He had just served me the divorce papers, severing the last thread of a five-year marriage I entered to save my family. My father's desperate social media campaign, meant to manipulate Elliott with lies about my 'illness,' backfired spectacularly. Now everyone believed the illness itself was a fabrication, another tool in a con artist's arsenal. I was supposedly sick, but not a single person believed it was real. They only saw a greedy woman, exploiting a powerful man. My family was bankrupt, my reputation destroyed, and my future, already cut short by a terminal brain tumor, felt even colder. Elliott's revenge was complete. I was left with nothing but silent suffering.

I should have told him the truth. But the truth came with a cage. And I had been locked inside it long before I ever met Elliott Hoover.

I married Elliott Hoover five years ago. My family's real estate empire crashed. My grandmother needed an experimental treatment. My father, Arnold Patton, brokered a deal: I marry Elliott, his rival firm injects capital. Elliott and I had a prior agreement. He would pay me a large sum of money to refuse the arranged marriage. He had a woman he loved, Angella Olson. I agreed. He paid the money. But then, my grandmother's condition worsened, and the cost skyrocketed beyond what Elliott paid. My father refused to help. I had no choice but to break my word to Elliott. I accepted the marriage. Elliott returned from abroad, trapped. He saw my acceptance as a betrayal. He believed I tricked him, using his money and his absence to secure the marriage.

He was wrong. But I could never tell him why.

For five years, I lived with Elliott's cold fury. He systematically orchestrated the downfall of my family's company. He made sure everyone knew about his relationship with Angella. He publicly humiliated me. I endured his emotional cruelty. My frequent hospital visits for my brain tumor became gossip. He saw my friendship with my oncologist, Dr. Harmon Terry, as proof of an affair. My silence about my terminal illness only fueled his rage and misinterpretations. He saw my quiet endurance as indifference.

The silence was never indifference. It was the only weapon I had left. And every day, it cut deeper into me than any word he could throw.

The day my family officially declared bankruptcy, Elliott served me the divorce papers. We stood in the sterile white office of his lawyer. He looked relieved. A quiet satisfaction settled on his face. This was the end. He wanted to finalize it quickly. He made it clear he never wanted to see me again. I simply nodded. My world already felt empty and cold, like the barren white walls around us.

I signed the papers. My hand did not shake. My signature marked the official end of our union. Elliott looked at me with a detached gaze. He probably found my calm unsettling. He expected a fight, tears, a desperate plea. He did not get it. Freedom came for him, swift and sudden, faster than he imagined.

If only he knew that every heartbeat I had left was counting down to a different kind of freedom entirely.

Outside, a late winter snow fell, mirroring the chill inside me. Memories of our first meeting, five years ago, flickered in my mind. The lawyer pushed the signed agreement across the table. I whispered my consent. Elliott watched me, his eyes guarded, distrustful. He scanned the document for any hidden traps. His expression softened slightly when he found none.

"A clean break," he stated, a transaction. "A sizable settlement, to ensure no future entanglements."

The lawyer explained the one-month cooling-off period before finalization. Elliott added, "No contact after this. Ever."

I understood his intention. The money was to buy my silence, to guarantee I would not come back. My palms tightened. My fingernails dug into my skin, drawing blood. I simply said, "Agreed."

He left, stirring only a faint current of air in his wake. He did not look back. I turned, watching his retreating figure. The doctor's words about my diminishing survival time echoed in my head. This was likely the last time I would ever see Elliott Hoover. He walked out quickly, never once glancing back. I knew exactly who he rushed to meet.

He rushed to protect her. That was what he always did. What he never knew was that I had been protecting her too. For five years. At the cost of everything.

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