Signed a Deal to Ruin my Ex-Husband
Plot Summary
After discovering her husband Colton's ultimate betrayal with her best friend Elaine, the protagonist is brutally assaulted and then gaslighted by the police and institutionalized. She overhears Colton and Elaine's plot to frame her as mentally unstable at her upcoming birthday party in order to seize control of her multi-million dollar tech company, Vance Tech. With her life's work and freedom at stake, a cold resolve replaces her despair, leading her to make a secret phone call to an unknown contact from her past.
Search Tags
- Character-Oriented: Colton Vance, Elaine, what happens to Colton in the divorce, Colton and Elaine affair
- Plot-Oriented: attempted rape report, mental institution framing, corporate takeover scheme, revenge plan, hidden burner phone
Character Relationships
Protagonist and Colton Vance: A marriage of ten years built on a devastating lie. The protagonist is the brilliant founder of Vance Tech, while Colton is a manipulative gold-digger who feigned love to use her as a "stepping stone." Their relationship has escalated from infidelity to psychological abuse, physical assault, and a calculated plan to steal her company and have her permanently committed.
Protagonist and Elaine: A profound betrayal of friendship. Elaine was the protagonist's best friend, making her affair with Colton the "hundredth infidelity" that broke the protagonist. Elaine is now Colton's willing accomplice in the scheme to destroy the protagonist, motivated by greed and a twisted relationship with Colton.
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Ninety-nine. That was the number of times my husband, Colton, had betrayed me. But the hundredth infidelity was the one that severed the last thread of my sanity: Elaine, my best friend.
When Colton walked in and saw the dossier of photos spread across the bed, he didn't even look shocked. He just sighed, dismissing my pain as if it were a clerical error.
"I want a divorce," I said, my voice trembling with suppressed rage. "I want you out of my house, and I want you out of my company. I built Vance Tech while you were failing economics. Im taking it all back."
"You aren't going anywhere," he said, stepping closer. "Youre my wife. You don't get to ruin my reputation. You belong to me."
He crossed the room in two strides, grabbing my arm hard enough to bruise and shoving me backward onto the bed. When I screamed, he pinned my wrists, his weight crushing the breath from my lungs.
I tried to resist, but then he forced himself on me. And when I reported it to the police, they laughed at me.
"Mrs. Vance, go home. Sleep it off."
"Excuse me?" I stared at him. "Im trying to file a report for attempted rape."
"Youre married," the officer said, his tone patronizing, as if explaining gravity to a toddler. "You can't rape your wife. Thats part of the deal, sweetheart. Its a domestic dispute. We don't get involved in bedroom quarrels."
"It wasn't a quarrel! It was assault!" I slammed my hand on the desk. "He hurt me!"
Twenty minutes later, Colton walked in.
"Shes been under so much pressure," Colton told the police, holding his hands up in a gesture of helplessness. "Shes been seeing things. Paranoia. She thinks everyone is against her."
"Im not paranoid!" I screamed as two officers grabbed my arms. "Hes lying! Check the bruises!"
"Self-inflicted," Colton said sadly. "She does it for attention."
"Take her to St. Judes," the sergeant ordered. "Psych hold. 72 hours. For her own safety."
I screamed until my throat bled, but no one listened. They dragged me out like a criminal.
I spent five days in a white room until Colton finally came to sign my discharge papers. He brought me back to the mansion I had paid for. He tucked me into bed. He told me to rest.
Until I overheard the worst.
"God, that was close. If she had actually filed for divorce before the gala, wed be screwed, Elaine said.
"She won't," Colton said. I have the power of attorney papers ready. We just need to trigger her one more time."
"The birthday plan?"
"Exactly," Colton said. "Friday is her thirtieth. We throw the party. Ive hired the actor to approach her, claim theyve been having an affair. Ive planted the drugs in her purse. When she starts screamingand she willwell have the witnesses we need. The board will vote to remove her as CEO due to mental instability."
My breath hitched.
"And the company?" Elaine asked.
"Mine," Colton replied smoothly. "She built it, sure. She wrote the code in college while I fetched her coffee. But she signed the prenup. If shes declared incompetent, control of her assets transfers to her spouse. I get the company. I get the money. And I get to commit her to a long-term facility."
"Youre brilliant, baby," Elaine cooed.
"I never loved her," Colton said, his voice dripping with disdain. "She was a useful nerd. A stepping stone. But God, shes exhausted."
I sat on the stairs, the cold wood pressing into my legs.
My entire lifethe late nights coding, the sacrifices, the love I had poured into him for ten yearsit was all a lie. He had been planning this. He was going to steal my lifes work and lock me away in a padded cell to rot.
I didn't cry. The tears were gone. In their place was a cold, hard resolve.
I crept back to bed.
I reached under the loose floorboard beneath the nightstandmy old hiding spot for emergency cash and a burner phone I used for two-factor authentication on secure servers. Colton didn't know it existed.
I pulled out the phone. My hands were steady.
I dialed a number I hadn't called in seven years.
"Hello?" The voice was sharp, imperious.
"Auntie," I said.
Silence stretched on the line. My aunt, the matriarch of the Blackwell family, the woman who had disowned me when I married Colton. She had called him a snake the day she met him.
"Samantha," she said, her tone unreadable. "To what do I owe the pleasure? Finally tired of playing house with the pauper?"
"You were right," I said. "About everything. Hes... hes trying to destroy me, Auntie. Hes trying to steal my company and have me committed."
"What do you want?"
"Ill marry the guy you want me to. Ill sign whatever contract you have. Just get me the best lawyer in the city and help me destroy my husband."
I marched into the lobby of Vance Tech. I reached the executive suite, but the double doors were blocked.
Elaine stood there. She was wearing a dress I had bought her months ago, back when she called me crying because she couldn't make rent. I had created the position of "Executive Assistant" just to give her a salary. Now, she was guarding my office like a sentry.
"You can't go in, Sam," she said.
"Move, Elaine," I said, my voice cold. "I have a meeting with Ms. Jones and the investors in ten minutes."
"Colton said youre on medical leave," she replied, not budging. "Hes handling the meeting. You need to go home and rest. Youre not... well."
"I am the majority shareholder and the founder of this company," I stepped closer. "Get out of my way, or youre fired."
"You can't fire me," she smirked, dropping the act for a split second. "Colton signs the checks now."
I didn't have time for this. I stepped around her, reaching for the handle.
Elaine threw herself to the side.
It was a pathetic performance. I barely brushed her arm, but she let out a high-pitched shriek and collapsed onto the carpet, clutching her ankle.
"Ow! Samantha, stop! Please!" she wailed.
The boardroom door flew open. Colton rushed out, followed by Ms. Jones and two other board members.
"Elaine?" Colton dropped to his knees beside her, playing the hero. "What happened?"
"She pushed me," Elaine sobbed, looking up at him with wide, tear-filled eyes. "I told her she couldn't disrupt the meeting, and she just... she shoved me down."
"I did not," I said, staring at them in disbelief. "She threw herself on the floor."
Colton stood up, his face contorted in practiced anger. "Samantha, look at yourself! Youre attacking my staff? Youre attacking your best friend?"
"Shes not my friend," I snapped. I looked at the investors. "Ms. Jones, I apologize for the scene. My husband is attempting a hostile takeover by questioning my competency. I am ready to lead this meeting."
Ms. Jones looked uncomfortable. She glanced from Elaine, who was whimpering on the floor, to me. "Samantha... we heard about the incident at the police station. And the hospital stay."
"It was a misunderstanding," I said firmly. "I am perfectly sane."
"Shes not," Colton interrupted, his voice grave. "Shes having another episode. Look at her eyes. Shes manic." He turned to the board members. "Im so sorry. Ill handle everything. Please, lets continue inside. I need to get my wife some help."
"Security!" Colton barked.
Two guards I had known for years hesitated by the elevator.
"Ms. Jones," Colton said smoothly, "given Samanthas current... condition... the bylaws state that decision-making power reverts to the spouse until she is deemed fit. I am acting as interim CEO."
"I see," Ms. Jones said, stepping back. She looked at me with pity. "Samantha, perhaps its best you go home. We cant have this volatility during the merger."
I looked at the faces around me. They didn't see a CEO; they saw a liability. If I screamed, I proved Colton right. If I fought, I proved him right.
I unclenched my fists.
"Fine," I said, my voice icy. "Have your meeting, Colton. But this isn't over."
I turned on my heel and walked away, ignoring Elaines victorious smirk as Colton helped her limp into my office.
I spent the afternoon in the empty silence of the mansion, packing boxes. The front door opened at six.
"Samantha?" Coltons voice echoed from the foyer.
I walked to the landing. Colton was there, supporting Elaine. She was leaning heavily on him, her ankle wrapped in an ace bandage that looked brand new.
"What is she doing here?" I asked.
"Shes staying," Colton said, helping Elaine to the living room couch. "She can't walk up the stairs to her apartment with that sprain you gave her. Plus, I need someone here to watch you while Im at work."
"Watch me?" I laughed, a harsh sound. "Im not a child, and Im not a prisoner."
"Youre unstable," Colton said, taking off his jacket. "Elaine volunteered to help. Shes going to cook and make sure you take your meds."
"Im not taking any meds, and I don't want her in my house."
"Its our house," Colton corrected. "And why are you being such a pain in the ass? Shes your best friend, Sam. You guys have been inseparable since kindergarten."
He looked at me with that gaslighting innocence, as if the last week hadn't happened. As if he hadn't pinned me to the bed. As if I hadn't seen the photos.
A memory flashedElaine and I in our dorm room, eating cheap noodles. Elaine holding my hair back while I puked from morning sickness during the first pregnancy. Elaine hugging me when I lost the baby.
Ill always be here, Sam. Sisters before misters, right?
The betrayal twisted in my gut like a knife.
"We aren't friends," I said, walking down the stairs slowly.
"Oh, stop it," Elaine said from the couch, propping her 'injured' foot up. "I know you're stressed, Sammy, but you don't have to be cruel. I forgive you for the push."
"You forgive me?" I stopped in front of her.
"Yes," she smiled sweetly. "I know you didn't mean it."
"I stopped being your best friend the moment you spread your legs for my husband," I said.
The room went dead silent.
Colton froze halfway to the liquor cabinet. Elaines smile faltered.
"I don't know what you're talking about," Elaine stammered, looking at Colton for help. "Colton, shes doing it again. Shes hallucinating."
"I saw the texts, Elaine," I said, my voice rising. "I saw the photos. 'Frigid bitch,' wasn't it? Thats what you called me?"
"You're crazy!" Elaine cried out, shrinking back into the cushions. "I never did that! You're making things up because you're sick!"
"Enough, Samantha!" Colton shouted, slamming his hand on the bar. "Stop attacking her! Youre hysterical!"
"I am not hysterical!" I yelled. "I am the woman who paid your rent, Elaine! I am the woman who gave you a job when no one else would! And you repay me by sleeping with him?"
"Shes dangerous, Colton!" Elaine shrieked, fake tears streaming down her face. "Shes going to hurt me again!"
Something inside me snapped. Hurt you? Fine!
My palm connected with Elaines cheek with a force that echoed through the high ceilings.
The lock clicked, sealing me in the guest bedroom.
My cheek still stung where Colton had backhanded me. It was a reflex, he claimeda way to "snap me out of my hysteria" after I slapped Elaine. But the bruise blooming on my skin told a different story.
I sat on the edge of the bed, staring at the door. My phone was gone. My laptop was gone. I was a prisoner in my own home, guarded by the man I had married and the woman I had called sister.
Hours passed. The sun dipped below the horizon, casting long, menacing shadows across the room. My stomach growled, a traitorous reminder that I hadn't eaten since yesterday.
Finally, the lock turned.
Elaine walked in, carrying a tray. She had an ice pack pressed to her cheek, but her eyes were bright, almost triumphant.
"Dinner," she said, setting the tray on the nightstand. It was soupchicken noodle, my favorite comfort food. Or it used to be.
"I'm not hungry," I said, turning away.
"Oh, come on, Sam," she sighed, sitting on the edge of the bed as if nothing had happened. "Don't be like this. You need to eat. You're looking... gaunt."
"Get out."
"Look," she said, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. "I know you're upset. But maybe we can work this out? Truce?"
I looked at her. Really looked at her. The woman who had been my maid of honor. The woman who had held my hand while I cried over negative pregnancy tests.
"Truce?" I repeated, incredulous. "You're sleeping with my husband."
"So?" she shrugged, picking at a loose thread on the quilt. "We've shared everything since kindergarten, haven't we? Clothes, makeup, secrets... why not him? We could be a family, Sam. Just the three of us. Like old times."
My stomach churned. The sheer audacity, the casual cruelty of her suggestion made me want to scream. But then I remembered the lawyer's advice. Document. Wait. Survive.
Fighting her now would only get me locked up tighter. Or worse.
I forced myself to take a breath. I forced the bile down.
"You really think that would work?" I asked, my voice trembling but controlled.
"Why not?" Elaine smiled, a predatory glint in her eyes. "Colton loves us both. In different ways, of course. He needs my... energy. But he respects your brain. We balance him out."
I wanted to vomit. But I nodded.
"Okay," I whispered. "Okay. Maybe... maybe you're right. I'm just tired of fighting."
Elaine clapped her hands together, delighted. "I knew you'd see reason! I'll go tell Colton. He'll be so relieved."
She bounced out of the room, leaving the door unlocked.
Ten minutes later, Colton appeared. He looked wary, searching my face for signs of another outburst. When he saw my calm demeanor, his shoulders relaxed.
"Elaine says you're ready to apologize," he said.
"I am," I lied. "I'm sorry, Colton. I... I don't know what came over me. The stress... I just snapped."
"I know, baby," he said, walking over to hug me. I stiffened but didn't pull away. "It's okay. We're going to fix this. We're going to be a family."
He pulled a small velvet box from his pocket.
"I got you something," he said, opening it. Inside was a diamond necklace. It sparkled under the room's dim light. "To show you how much I love you. A fresh start."
"It's beautiful," I said, letting him fasten it around my neck.
"And I got one for Elaine too," he added, almost as an afterthought. "Since she's been helping out so much."
We went downstairs for dinner. Elaine was already seated, wearing a matching necklace. But as the light caught the stones, I noticed something. Mine had a dull, glassy sheen. Hers refracted the light with the sharp, brilliant fire of real diamonds.
He had given his mistress the real gems and his wife the fake.
I sat down, my hands clenched in my lap.
"To us," Colton toasted, raising his wine glass. "To new beginnings."
"To us," Elaine echoed, clinking her glass against his.
I raised my glass but didn't drink. I picked up my spoon and took a sip of the soup.
It tasted metallic. Bitter.
I took another spoonful, trying to be polite, trying to play the part. But my stomach rebelled instantly. A wave of nausea hit me so hard I doubled over.
"Sam?" Colton asked, his voice distant.
"I... I don't feel well," I gasped, clutching my stomach.
Pain, sharp and searing, ripped through my abdomen. I tried to stand, but my legs gave out. I collapsed onto the floor, retching.
"Oh my god," Elaine said, but she didn't move to help. She just watched, sipping her wine.
"Call an ambulance!" I screamed, the room spinning. Darkness encroached on the edges of my vision.
Colton hesitated. For a second, I saw him weigh the options. Let me die here, or save me and deal with the mess.
I woke up to the beep of machines. The smell of antiseptic was overwhelming.
My eyes felt heavy, glued shut. I could hear voices nearby.
"Is she dead?" Elaine's voice. Bored. Impatient.
"Stabilized," a man's voice replied. A doctor. "It was a severe reaction. Likely food poisoning or an interaction with her medication."
"Ugh," Elaine groaned. "Bitch is hard to kill."
"Careful," Colton hissed. "Keep your voice down."
"What now?" Elaine asked. "She's going to wake up and blame the soup."
"We'll say it was the stress," Colton said smoothly. "Her body is shutting down. It fits the narrative."
"And the... other thing?" Elaine asked.
There was a pause. A heavy, suffocating silence.
"She doesn't know," the doctor said quietly. "She was eight weeks along."
My heart stopped.
"Was?" Colton asked.
"She lost the baby," the doctor confirmed. "The trauma to her abdomen... the toxicity... her body couldn't hold on."
A baby.
I hadn't known. After three miscarriages, after years of trying, after giving up hope... I had been pregnant. And they had killed it.
Tears leaked from my closed eyes, hot and silent. I didn't move. I didn't scream. I lay there, listening to the monsters discuss my tragedy like a logistics problem.
"Well," Elaine said, her voice devoid of any emotion. "At least that's one problem solved. No heir to complicate the divorce."
"True," Colton agreed. "It's for the best. Lets just now prepare to finally ruin the bitch at her own birthday party.
No, I wont let it happen, because Ill be sure to be gone before that day.
I stared at the ceiling of the hospital room, the sterile white blurring into a canvas for my revenge. My hand rested on my flat stomach, an empty cradle where a life had flickered and died.
The burner phone vibrated under my pillow.
"It's done," my aunt's voice was crisp, devoid of sympathy but heavy with efficiency. "The divorce papers are filed. We used the emergency clause citing domestic abuse and financial misconduct. Colton won't be notified until the process server hands them to him."
"And the marriage?" I asked, my voice raspy.
"Arranged. The family is expecting you. Their son needs a wife to secure his inheritance before his thirty-fifth birthday next week. You need protection. It's a business transaction, Samantha. Pure and simple."
"I understand," I said. "Who is he?"
"You'll meet him at the chapel on 4th and Main in an hour. He's... formidable. He controls half the shipping lanes in the country and has his hands in tech, real estate, everything. Colton is a minnow compared to this shark."
"Good," I said. "I need a shark."
"Be there," she commanded, and the line went dead.
I sat up, swinging my legs over the side of the bed. My body ached, a dull throb in my abdomen reminding me of what I had lost. But the pain was fuel now.
The door creaked open.
I shoved the phone under my thigh just as Colton walked in. He was dressed in a sharp navy suit, looking every bit the concerned husband.
"Who were you talking to?" he asked, his eyes narrowing.
"No one," I said quickly, then caught myself. "Actually... a psychologist."
Colton raised an eyebrow. "A psychologist? I thought you didn't believe in therapy."
"I've been thinking," I lied, forcing a tremor into my voice. "About everything. About the... the baby." I choked on the word, using the genuine grief to sell the lie. "Maybe you're right. Maybe I am crazy. Maybe I need help. I was calling to see if I could admit myself to a facility. Somewhere quiet. Somewhere I can heal."
Colton's face relaxed. A slow, satisfied smile spread across his lips.
"Oh, Sam," he said, walking over to pat my shoulder. "That's... that's really mature of you. I'm so glad you're finally seeing reason. It'll be so much easier for everyone if you just get the help you need."
"I know," I whispered, looking down. "I just want to get better."
"Of course you do," he said, checking his watch. "Well, that works out perfectly. Elaine and I have a meeting with a clientbig merger talks. We'll be gone for a few hours. You go see your doctor. Get yourself checked in."
"Okay," I said.
"And Sam?" He gripped my shoulder, his fingers digging in slightly. "Don't make a scene. Don't try anything stupid. If you run, I'll find you. And next time, the doctors won't be so nice."
"I won't," I promised, looking him in the eye. "I'm done fighting, Colton. You win."
"Good girl," he said, kissing the top of my head. It took everything in me not to recoil.
He left, whistling a tune as he walked down the hall.
I waited five minutes. Then ten.
I dressed in the clothes Elaine had broughta simple grey dress that hung loosely on my frame. I walked out of the hospital, ignoring the nurses at the station. I hailed a cab.
"4th and Main," I told the driver. "The old chapel."
The city blurred past the window. I saw the billboard for Vance Tech, my face still on it, smiling confidently. Soon, that face would be replaced by Colton's. Unless I stopped him.
The chapel was small, stone, and ancient. It looked like a fortress against the modern skyline.
I paid the driver and stepped out. The heavy wooden doors were open.
Inside, it was cool and dim. Candles flickered on the altar. A figure stood near the front, his back to me. He was tall, broad-shouldered, wearing a suit that cost more than my car.
"Hello?" I called out, my voice echoing in the empty space.
The man turned.
My breath hitched.
It wasn't a stranger. It wasn't some cold, faceless tycoon.
Dark hair, piercing blue eyes, a jawline that could cut glass. He looked older, harder than I remembered, but the recognition was instant.
"Dominic?" I whispered.
Dominic. My childhood best friend. The boy who had lived next door until his family moved away when we were twelve. The boy I had secretly loved, the one who had promised to marry me on the playground with a ring made of grass.
He looked at me, his expression unreadable.
"Hello, Samantha," he said, his voice deep and smooth like aged whiskey. "It's been a long time."
"You... you're the husband?" I stammered, walking closer.
"I prefer 'strategic partner'," he said, a ghost of a smile touching his lips. "But yes. My family needs an heir. You need a weapon. It seems our interests align."
I stared at him. The boy who had once pushed me on the swings was now the most powerful man in the city. And he was offering me a lifeline.
"Dominic," I breathed, tears pricking my eyes. "Colton... he..."
"I know," Dominic interrupted, his gaze hardening. He stepped forward, closing the distance between us. "I know everything, Sam. And I'm going to help you destroy him."
He held out his hand. On his finger was a simple gold band.
"Ready to get married?" he asked.
I returned to the house that evening. For the next three days, I was a ghost in my own homequiet, compliant, and seemingly medicated. I cooked their meals. I listened to Elaine prattle on about the "party of the century" she was planning for my birthday.
"It's going to be amazing, Sam," she gushed over dinner on Thursday, pouring wine for herself and Colton. "All the investors will be there. We want everyone to see how... recovered... you are."
"Thank you," I whispered, staring at my plate. "You're so good to me."
"We just want you happy," Colton said, squeezing my hand. His touch made my skin crawl, but I didn't flinch.
I spent the days gathering intelligence. While they were at the office, I accessed the home server. I copied every email, every illicit transaction, every text message between them onto an encrypted drive. I found the offshore accounts Colton had opened in my name to siphon company funds.
On Friday morningthe day before the partyI made my move.
Colton was in his study, rushing to finish a conference call. He looked stressed. Perfect.
I walked in with a stack of papers.
"Colton?" I asked softly.
"Not now, Samantha," he snapped, covering the phone.
"I'm sorry," I said, my voice trembling. "It's just... the facility. St. Jude's. They need the admission forms signed by my guardian before I can check in tomorrow night. If we don't send them now, I lose the bed."
He sighed, annoyed. "Fine. Give them here."
I handed him the clipboard. The top page was indeed the admission form for the psychiatric ward. But underneath, carefully aligned so only the signature lines were visible, were the documents my aunts lawyers had drafted. A transfer of deed for the house. A revocation of his Power of Attorney. And a confession of infidelity and fraud, disguised as a liability waiver.
He didn't read a word. He just wanted me gone. He scribbled his signature on page after page, his eyes still glued to his computer screen.
"There," he said, shoving the clipboard back at me. "Now go pack."
"Thank you, Colton," I said. "You're saving my life."
"Yeah, yeah," he waved me off.
That night, I lay awake in the guest room. The house was quiet, but voices drifted from the master bedroommy bedroom.
I crept to the door, pressing my ear against the wood.
"Is she asleep?" Elaine's voice.
"Out cold," Colton replied. "She took the sedatives I gave her."
I hadn't. I had flushed them.
"Tomorrow is the big day," Elaine giggled. "Cant believe she finally chose to go to the facility herself. Shes just weak but wait, what about the divorce? I don't want to be the mistress forever, Colt. I want a baby. I want us to be a real family."
"We will be," Colton promised. I heard the rustle of sheets. "Once I have full control of Vance Tech, I'll divorce her in absentia. We'll have everything, Elaine. The money, the company, the house. Just be patient."
"I love you," she whispered.
"I know," he replied.
I walked back to my room, not with tears, but with a cold, hard satisfaction. They were celebrating a victory they hadn't won yet.
The next morning, the house was a flurry of activity. Caterers were setting up in the garden. Elaine was barking orders at the staff.
"We're heading to the venue to check the sound system," Colton told me around noon. He looked dashing in his tuxedo, already dressed for the kill. "You stay here and rest. The driver will bring you at six."
"Okay," I said, sitting on the couch in my bathrobe. "Have fun."
"See you tonight, birthday girl," Elaine smirked, linking her arm through his.
As soon as their car disappeared down the driveway, I moved.
I didn't wait for the driver. I called a private car.
I grabbed the encrypted drive and the signed documents. I left the engagement ring Colton had given me on the counter.
Forty minutes later, I was walking across the tarmac at the private airfield. Dominic was waiting by the steps of the jet, checking his watch.
"You're late," he said, though his eyes were smiling.
"Had to take out the trash," I replied.
I pulled out my phone. It was 5:55 PM. The party was starting.
I dialed Colton.
He answered on the first ring. "Samantha? Where are you? The driver says you're not at the house."
"I'm sorry, Colton," I sobbed into the phone, channeling every ounce of panic I could muster. "I... I can't do it."
"What do you mean you can't do it?" His voice dropped to a harsh whisper. "The guests are arriving. Ms. Jones is here. Get in the car, Samantha."
"No!" I cried. "I'm having an attack! The walls are closing in! I don't want to embarrass you, Colton. I don't want to ruin your night."
"You are ruining it right now!" he hissed. "Where are you?"
"I'm going to the facility," I lied. "I'm checking myself in early. It's for the best. I'm not well."
Silence on the other end. Then, a sigh of relief. He thought he had won. He thought I was doing his work for him.
"Okay," he said, his voice softening into that fake concern. "Okay, Sam. Maybe you're right. If you think you need to go, then go. We'll handle the guests. We'll tell them you had a medical emergency."
"Thank you," I sniffled. "Oh, and Colton? I sent a package to the party. A courier should be delivering it for everyone to see right now."
"A package?" He sounded suspicious. "What is it? A resignation letter? Are you giving me the company?"
I looked up at Dominic, who offered me a hand to board the plane.
"Even better," I said, my voice dropping the act, turning crisp and cold.
"What?"
"Goodbye, Colton."
I hung up.
As the jet engines roared to life, I imagined the scene unfolding at the party. The courier handing them everything that would ruin Colton and Elaine.
I smiled. The party was just getting started.
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