Control. It was the absolute center of his universe. He used that word when he convinced me to lock my passport in his safe after our honeymoon. He used it when he discreetly told my doctors I suffered from postpartum anxiety, laying the groundwork for a narrative of mental instability. He used it when he slowly, methodically alienated me from my friends, painting me as a delicate, dramatic woman who needed his steady hand.
But David had made a critical, catastrophic miscalculation.
He believed he had married a docile, wealthy heiress. He did not realize that before I became his quiet, accommodating wife, I was a senior financial crimes attorney at one of the most ruthless firms in the state. And he conveniently forgot that before my father retired to become “Grandpa William with the rose garden,” he had spent thirty-two formidable years as a Federal District Judge.
We understood control far better than he ever would.
“The security system,” David muttered to himself, pacing the floor near my legs. “The kitchen camera. It caught the fall. It’ll prove she slipped. I didn’t hit her. I just… grabbed her. It’ll look like an accident.”
He looked up at the small, discreet black dome mounted above the refrigerator. He had installed it ostensibly to “keep an eye on the contractors,” but we both knew it was to monitor my movements.
What David didn’t know was that six months ago, I had hired a private cyber-security contractor to clone the system. The camera was no longer his private toy. Every single frame of footage, every audio recording, bypassed his local hard drive entirely. It was encrypted and uploaded in real-time to a secure cloud account registered under my law firm’s remote evidence vault.
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