
Chapter 1 of After My Wife Foils My Schemes, I'm Ruined
The wind howled around me like a hungry beast as I plummeted through the clouds. One moment I'd been soaring peacefully above the Rocky Mountains, Stone's voice crackling through my helmet radio with instructions on catching the next thermal. The next moment, my paraglider's lines had snapped with a sickening sound that couldn't possibly be accidental.
"Stone!" I screamed into my radio, the wind tearing the word from my lips. "My lines are breaking! Help!"
Static answered me. Then silence.
The primary canopy collapsed above me, fabric flapping uselessly as I spiraled downward. Training kicked in through the panic—the training Stone had insisted upon with unusual thoroughness before this "romantic adventure." My fingers fumbled for the emergency chute release, yanking it with desperate strength.
For one heart-stopping moment, nothing happened. Then the reserve parachute exploded open, jerking me upward with enough force to knock the breath from my lungs. I was still falling, but slower now, drifting toward a valley between two towering peaks.
My husband had just tried to kill me. Again.
The realization settled into my bones with the same certainty as the knowledge that I would survive—I had to. This wasn't the first "accident" during our two-year marriage. The scuba tank with contaminated air. The fishing boat that mysteriously began sinking miles offshore. Each time, Stone's concern afterward seemed genuine, his relief at my survival palpable. I'd believed him.
I was done believing.
The ground rushed up to meet me. I bent my knees, preparing for impact, but nothing could have readied me for the explosion of pain as my leg twisted beneath me. The crack of breaking bone echoed through the valley as darkness swallowed me whole.
* * *
I spent three days alone in that valley, dragging myself to a sheltered overhang, rationing the single energy bar and half-bottle of water in my pack. The pain in my leg became a living thing, a monster gnawing at me day and night. When the rescue helicopter finally appeared, I wept with relief—and with the knowledge that Stone must be wondering why I wasn't dead.
The hospital room was quiet except for the steady beep of monitors and the occasional squeak of nurses' shoes in the hallway. My leg, encased in plaster from ankle to hip, throbbed beneath the thin blanket. Bruises painted my body in shades of purple and yellow, a canvas of survival.
"You're lucky to be alive, Mrs. Williamson," the doctor had told me, his eyes reflecting professional concern without the personal warmth I might have expected for a woman who'd survived three days alone with a broken femur. The Williamson name commanded respect, not compassion.
I reached for the remote, flicking on the television for distraction from the pain medication's foggy embrace. The local news flickered to life, and I froze at the sight of my husband's face filling the screen.
"...after the tragic accident that claimed the life of his wife, Della Williamson," the reporter was saying, her voice professionally somber.
Claimed my life? I was right here, very much alive.
The camera panned out to reveal Stone at a podium, his arm wrapped protectively around my sister Carolina's shoulders. Her eyes were downcast in a perfect imitation of grief, though I could see the slight upturn at the corners of her mouth.
"Carolina has been my rock through this devastating time," Stone was saying, his voice breaking with emotion that twisted my stomach. "We've found comfort in each other, and I'm honored to announce our engagement. Life is too precious, too fragile to waste a moment."
The room tilted around me as Carolina raised her left hand to display a massive diamond—my grandmother's ring, the one Stone had proposed to me with, now resized for my sister's slender finger.
They thought I was dead. They wanted me dead.
I switched off the television, my heart hammering against my ribs. For the first time since the accident, I was grateful for the pain. It anchored me, kept me from floating away on a tide of betrayal and rage.
* * *
Two weeks later, I sat at the Williamson family dining table, my leg propped on a cushioned stool, watching my husband feed my sister a bite of chocolate mousse from his own spoon. The shock on their faces when I'd returned from the "dead" had been quickly masked with false relief and hollow welcomes.
"Della," Stone's voice cut through my thoughts, cold and commanding, "Carolina needs more wine. Be useful and serve her."
Silence fell over the table. Even Myra, Stone's perpetually disapproving mother, looked uncomfortable at the blatant cruelty.
I reached for the wine bottle, my fingers trembling slightly as I pushed myself up with my crutch. Carolina's smug smile as I hobbled toward her made my blood boil, but I kept my face carefully blank.
"Actually," Stone continued, setting down his fork with deliberate precision, "I think Carolina would look lovely in your sapphire necklace. The one I gave you for our anniversary. Take it off and give it to her."
My fingers froze on the wine bottle. "Stone, I don't—"
"Now, Della." His voice was soft, dangerous. "And your wedding ring too. Carolina deserves these things more than you ever did."
The dining room blurred through my tears as I fumbled with the clasp of my necklace, feeling the weight of the Williamson family's gazes. Not one of them spoke in my defense as Stone systematically stripped me of dignity along with my jewelry.
As I placed my wedding ring in Carolina's outstretched palm, her fingers closed around mine for just a moment, her nails digging into my skin.
"Thank you, sister," she whispered. "It looks much better on me anyway, don't you think?"
In that moment, as humiliation burned through me like acid, something inside me hardened into diamond-sharp resolve. They wanted me broken. They wanted me dead.
They would regret underestimating what a broken woman could do.
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