The Vow He Broke Twice

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.

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