Dear Husband, You can never ruin me again!

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Dear Husband, You can never ruin me again!

His first love is back, I said. I won't be needed here anymore.

My husbands mother Eleanor slowly set her teacup down, her sharp eyes narrowing as she studied my face. You know you can't leave our family without punishment, she warned.

I stared at her. I knew exactly what she meant. To leave them meant facing the Severance. It meant a stripping of all dignity, a physical and psychological breaking designed to ensure you crawled away with absolutely nothing.

Usually, the mere threat of the family's punishment was enough to keep me in line.

But tonight, the fear was gone.

I know," I continued, stepping closer to the desk, looking the matriarch dead in the eye. "You can punish me. You can do whatever it takes. As long as you let me disappear from his life."

Eleanor's gaze hardened, laced with a cold disbelief. "How come you're asking for this now?" she asked. "For ten years, you have done nothing but love my son and endure everything for him."

She was right. For ten years, I had been the perfect, invisible wife to Professor Alex Verstappen.

In elite academic circles, he was known for his cold, ascetic, and untouchable demeanor. To pass the prestigious Verstappen familys endless "Wife Assessments," I gave up my own dreams. I spent my nights ghostwriting the brilliant research papers that made him famous.

Ten years ago, Lily had abandoned him, leaving his fragile ego and his academic career in ruins. I was the one who put him back together.

I still remember the night he proposed.

"I can't do this without you, Penelope," he had whispered. "Lily broke me, but you... you are my foundation. Marry me. We'll conquer the academic world together. You'll be my secret weapon, and I swear, I will spend the rest of my life making you proud."

I remembered the grueling "Wife Assessments" orchestrated by his mother, Eleanor Verstappen. For a decade, I was tested. My posture, my pedigree, my absolute silence. I endured endless family dinners where I was treated like an unpaid intern rather than a daughter-in-law. I erased my own name from my research. I gave up my Ph.D. track.

Whenever the humiliation became too much, whenever I begged him to let me publish just one paper under my own name, he would pull me into his arms and kiss my forehead.

"Just one more year, Pen," he would promise, his voice smooth and convincing. "Once I secure the department chair, I'll tell the board everything you've done. I'll make sure you get your doctorate. We're a team. My success is your success."

So, I believed him. I thought if I just passed enough tests, if I wrote enough award-winning papers for him, I would finally be accepted. I would finally be enough. He would finally keep his word.

But looking through the glass tonight, the truth was undeniable. The promises were nothing but calculated lies to keep me working.

Yesterday was the night of our tenth wedding anniversary. I expected hed finally see me, especially that I had done something again for him to receive an honor.

But he abandoned me in our luxury hotel suite. He was distant all evening, eventually claiming he needed to step out to "handle a crisis with a struggling graduate student."

Hours passed, and he still hadn't returned. Feeling suffocated by the silence, I stepped out onto the adjoining balcony for some air.

That was when I heard it.

Passionate, unhinged noises were coming from the suite right next door.

I froze, then slowly looked through the sheer curtains. My world shattered.

The "struggling student" was Lily.

"Don't leave me again. You're the only one who understands my soul.".

"But what about your perfect little wife?" Lily teased, tracing his chest. "Won't she be mad if I get tenure before her?"

"Penelope is just a placeholder," he said smoothly. "She exists to manage the house and write my drafts. She doesn't have the ambition you do."

"Even so," Lily pouted. "My review board is this week. I don't have anything to present."

"I already took her files," Alex said, kissing her shoulder. "Her latest unpublished thesis. The one she's spent two years on."

"I'll put your name on it tomorrow to boost your career," he continued, his tone sickeningly proud. "She won't even notice until it's too late. And even if she does, she'll just write another one for me."

I didn't burst through the glass doors to confront them. Tears wouldn't give me back my decade.

I quietly turned around and walked back into my empty, suffocating suite. I slid the heavy diamond anniversary ring off my finger. Then, I walked out of the luxury suite, leaving my cheating husband and his mistress to their stolen triumph.

Now, standing in the quiet of the study, the memory of his betrayal faded into the cold reality of the present.

I looked at Eleanor, meeting her questioning gaze without a single ounce of hesitation.

"Because my love for him is dead," I said. "So punish me, and forget about me."

I stood in our bedroom, folding my clothes into a suitcase.

At 8:00 AM sharp, the bedroom door opened.

Alex walked in. There was no guilt on his face. No exhaustion from a night of infidelity. He clearly had no idea that I knew everything.

He glanced at the empty nightstand, his brow furrowing in irritation.

"Where is my coffee, Penelope?" he asked. Then, he noticed the suitcase. He let out a heavy, condescending sigh. "Are you packing? Really? I expected you to be a bit sensitive about me staying out to help a student, but this level of jealousy is pathetic, even for you."

"I'm not jealous, Alex," I said, my voice dead flat. "I am divorcing you."

He froze. For a second, the ascetic mask slipped. But then, he let out a cold, dismissive laugh.

"Divorce?" He leaned against the doorframe, crossing his arms. "Don't be dramatic. You could never leave me. But since you want to throw a tantrum, let me give you a real reason to be upset."

He walked over to his dresser, pulling off his watch. "I transferred the deed to your late fathers botanical greenhouse to Lily yesterday."

My hands stopped. The air in my lungs vanished.

"You did what?"

"Lily needs a quiet place to study for her review board," he stated dismissively, not even looking at me. "You just sit at home all day. You don't need it."

That greenhouse was the last piece of my father I had left. It was my sanctuary.

"Give it back," I demanded, my voice shaking with a sudden, violent rage.

"It is already done," he said smoothly. "Its just a dirty glass building, Penelope. Lily is doing real, important academic work. She needs the space more than you do."

The heartbreak hit me so hard my knees nearly buckled. He had taken my decade, my thesis, and now, he was giving away the only memory of my dead father to his mistress.

"Alex, please," I begged, my voice cracking as desperation clawed at my throat. "Take the penthouse. Take the cars. Take my bank accounts. But please, not the greenhouse. Its my father's. You know what it means to me. Please."

"When you are ready to apologize and act like a rational, obedient wife, I will consider asking Lily for it back," he said coldly, picking up his briefcase. "Until then, grow up."

Without another word, he turned and walked out the door, heading to the university as if he hadn't just ripped my heart out of my chest.

I stood alone in the quiet bedroom. My tears dried instantly.

I zipped up my suitcase, walked out of the penthouse, and took a car straight to the Verstappen ancestral estate.

"I gave you the night to think over what you want, Penelope. I assumed you would have cooled down by now."

"I am not cooling down," I said, my voice steady. "I want a divorce. And I want the deed to my father's greenhouse back from your son."

"You know this family despises divorce," Eleanor said slowly, standing up. "In the Verstappen household, there is a punishment for wives who wish to break their vows. The Kneeling Punishment. You must kneel in the courtyard on a bed of broken porcelain. If you can endure it, I will grant your divorce and force Alex to return your assets. But if you cry, or if you beg to stop... you leave with nothing."

"Show me the courtyard," I said.

Ten minutes later, I was on my knees.

The gray sky opened up, pouring freezing rain over the stone courtyard. Beneath my bare knees were hundreds of jagged, shattered pieces of porcelain. The pain was immediate and blinding, slicing through my skin and biting into the bone.

One hour passed. The freezing rain soaked me to the core.

Three hours. The porcelain dug deeper, and a pool of crimson blood began to spread across the wet gray stones.

But I didn't cry. I didn't make a single sound. I stared straight ahead, my jaw locked, drawing on the same silent endurance I had used to survive ten years in this suffocating family.

Up in the dry, warm corridor, Eleanor stood watching me.

She had expected me to break within twenty minutes. But as the hours dragged on, and my blood continued to stain the stones, the strict matriarchs expression began to change.

Eleanor had always secretly liked me. She respected my intellect and my quiet strength. Seeing me nowwilling to bleed out in the freezing rain without shedding a single teara deep, unsettling pity washed over her.

She turned to her head butler, who was holding an umbrella. "Find out exactly what Alex did to her this morning to make her this desperate."

The butler made a quick phone call. Disgust, profound and absolute, flashed in the matriarch's eyes.

The heavy courtyard doors opened. Eleanor walked out into the freezing rain, the butler holding the umbrella over her head.

She stopped right in front of me, looking down at my mangled, bleeding knees, and my pale, tearless face.

"Oh, poor child," Eleanor whispered, her voice breaking with genuine sorrow. "It seems he really, truly hurt you."

Before I could say a word, Eleanor dropped to her knees right there in the wet courtyard, ruining her expensive silk dress. She reached out and gently, firmly wrapped her arms around me, helping me stand up off the bloody porcelain.

My legs gave out, but she held me up.

Eleanor looked at the ring, her eyes hardening with a terrifying, protective fury directed entirely at her own son.

"Fine," Eleanor said, her voice a fierce, unwavering vow in the freezing rain. "I will help you disappear from my son. And he will never know where you went."

I sat on the edge of the bed, staring blankly ahead. Two of Eleanors private doctors knelt in front of me, their gloved hands carefully picking shards of bloody porcelain from my knees with small tweezers.

I didn't feel the pain.

The physical ache was completely covered by the heavy, suffocating emptiness in my chest.

I lowered my head and looked at my hands.

My fingers were scarred from years of typing late into the night, stained with ink and the invisible weight of my own lost dreams.

I wasn't just mourning the end of a ten-year marriage.

I was mourning the brilliant, ambitious twenty-two-year-old girl I used to be.

I had been a top student. I had a clear future.

But I took every bit of my talent and used it to build a perfect pedestal for a man who only saw me as a tool to be used and thrown away.

I had erased my own name just to make him shine.

I suddenly remembered the night I finished the research paper that won him his first major academic award.

My eyes were red from staying awake for three days straight, my back aching from leaning over the keyboard.

He had walked up behind me, gently wrapping his arms around my shoulders, pressing a soft, warm kiss to the top of my head.

"You are brilliant, Pen," he had whispered, his voice so gentle, so full of what I thought was deep love. "I know it hurts to take your name off this. But just wait a little longer. Once I secure the department chair, I promise Ill make it up to you. Well publish the next one together. I'll tell the whole world how amazing my wife is."

I had leaned back into his warmth, smiling tiredly, foolishly believing every single word. I believed that his success was our success.

But looking back now, it was all just a lie. A patient, calculated lie designed only to keep me working, to keep me quiet, and to keep me under his control.

A single tear slipped down my face, quiet and cold.

I wept silently under the bright lights. Not for Alex, but for the degree I never finished, the father I let down, and the ten years of my youth I could never get back.

The door pushed open.

Eleanor walked in. Her face was calm, her posture straight. She looked at my tears and immediately waved a hand at the doctors.

"Leave us."

The doctors packed their things and walked out without a word.

Eleanor stepped closer. She didn't offer soft comfort. Instead, she handed me a thick envelope.

"Inside," she said, her voice even, "is a new, untraceable passport. Offshore bank accounts with enough money to settle anywhere."

Then, she pulled out a crisp paper and placed it in my hand.

My breath stopped for a second.

It was the deed to my father's greenhouse.

"My lawyers went to Lily an hour ago," Eleanor said, a cold sharpness in her tone. "They told her the transfer was illegal and threatened her with years of lawsuits. She cried and signed it back. It belongs to you again."

I held the deed tight, my fingers brushing over my father's name.

"My private jet is ready on the tarmac," Eleanor added. "You can just walk away, Penelope. Leave all of this behind."

I looked at the deed, then turned my eyes to the laptop resting on the table.

Slowly, the tears stopped.

The deep sorrow in my chest began to cool, turning into a hard, quiet rage.

If I just walked away, Alex would still be the perfect Professor Verstappen. He and Lily would still stand on the stage, taking the praise and the future that I built with my own hands.

I could not let my ghost stay behind to decorate their success.

"Give me two hours," I said. My voice was completely flat.

Eleanor followed my look toward the laptop. A small, cold smile showed on her face.

"Take your time."

Once the door closed, I pulled the laptop over. I held the master access to his university cloud, his private emails, and the departments presentation system.

I pulled out ten years of raw data. I gathered the original drafts of his most famous papers, clearly showing the timestamps that proved they lived on my computer long before he ever claimed them.

Finally, I pulled out the original, untouched files of the thesis he had just stolen for Lily. My name, my notes, my two years of hard work, all clearly marked.

I packed everything into one massive file.

I opened the university's mass email system and drafted a message to the Dean, the review board, and every person in the department.

I set the timer for exactly 2:00 PM by tomorrow.

Eleanors driver took me to the penthouse one last time. The glass-walled apartment was suffocatingly quiet. I walked to the kitchen island and set down my house keys next to a dusty wooden box of unsent anniversary letters, leaving one final note on top.

Before I could leave, the front door chimed.

Panic seized me. I darted into the shadows of the hallway just as Alex and Lily walked in. Alex casually tossed the physical copy of my stolen thesis onto the entryway table.

"What if Penelope notices?" Lily purred.

"She always forgives me," Alex scoffed dismissively.

Lily smiled, stepping back to guide his hand down to her flat stomach. "Good. Because we have more important things to worry about now. I went to the doctor this morning, Alex... I'm pregnant."

I couldn't stay in the dark anymore. The suffocating weight of his betrayal demanded the light.

I stepped out of the shadows.

Alex froze, his hands instantly dropping from Lilys stomach. He scrambled to his feet, his face pale for a fraction of a second before his mask of smooth arrogance slid perfectly back into place.

Lily merely crossed her arms, a cruel, knowing smirk playing on her lips.

I ignored her and looked down at the heavy leather binder on the entryway table. "What is this, Alex? What's happening with my papers?"

He didn't miss a beat. He stepped forward, taking my hands in his, his thumbs rubbing my knuckles just like he always did when he was about to feed me a lie.

"Pen, sweetheart," he said, his voice dripping with fake sincerity. "I was just telling Lily. Tomorrow is the day. I finally convinced the board. Youre going to present your thesis tomorrow afternoon, under your own name. I brought the physical copy home so you can practice tonight."

He was looking right into my eyes, lying with such effortless perfection. He was fooling me again, just as he had for ten years, fully intending to hand my work to his pregnant mistress the very next day.

I looked at him. I looked at the man who had stolen my youth, my dreams, and my future.

And I smiled.

"Really?" I said softly, playing the part of the grateful, naive wife one last time. "Thank you, Alex. I'll prepare right away."

He exhaled, a visible wave of relief washing over him. "Let's celebrate," he declared, his voice regaining its usual booming confidence. "I'll order from that Italian place you love. We'll make a night of it."

That evening was a masterclass in psychological torture.

Alex played the role of the devoted, proud husband flawlessly.

He poured my favorite red wine, his eyes crinkling at the corners as he toasted to "my" success.

"I always knew you had it in you, Pen," he murmured over dinner, reaching across the table to squeeze my hand. "This is just the beginning for us."

Then, he reached into his suit pocket and pulled out a long, velvet box. He flipped it open to reveal a delicate diamond necklace.

"I'll deal with Penelope later. She'll cry, I'll buy her a necklace, and she'll go right back to typing..." His words from the hallway echoed in my mind, sickening and precise.

"To show you how much I appreciate you," he whispered, standing up to clasp the cold chain around my neck. I forced myself to reach up and touch the diamonds, forcing a tear of fake gratitude to my eyes. He kissed the top of my head, completely satisfied that his manipulation had worked. He had bought my silence, and my labor, for the price of a trinket.

I didn't sleep that night. I lay awake in the dark, feeling the cold diamonds against my collarbone, counting down the hours.

The true audacity, however, came the next morning.

Alex was in the shower, the water running loudly through the master suite. I was in the kitchen, packing my briefcase, when Lily strolled in.

She was wearing one of Alexs oversized dress shirts, her hand resting casually on her stomach.

She walked over to the kitchen island and picked up my leather-bound thesis.

"Alex said you're a genius with this predictive model," Lily said, flipping to the middle of my life's work. She looked up at me, her eyes wide with feigned innocence. "I'm just so curious... how would you defend the regression analysis on page forty-two? You know, just in case the board asks you a tough question during the Q&A."

She wasn't trying to help me practice. She was stealing my answers for her Q&A this afternoon.

I looked at the woman who was carrying my husband's child, the woman who was about to stand on a stage in a few hours and claim my genius as her own. I felt a cold, absolute calm wash over me.

"Of course," I said smoothly. I walked over and pointed at the graph. "The key is the secondary variable. If they ask about the anomaly in the third quarter, you just explain that the algorithm accounts for the metadata shift..."

I fed her the exact explanation, word for word, knowing full well that my "Digital Nuke" contained the original timestamped code proving I had written that exact algorithm three years ago. I was handing her the rope she would use to hang herself.

"Wow," Lily smiled, her eyes gleaming as she memorized my words. "That's brilliant, Penelope. Truly."

"I'm glad I could help," I replied, zipping up my bag.

When Alex emerged, dressed in his sharpest suit, he looked between the two of us with a smug, satisfied glint in his eye, completely convinced he had both of his women perfectly under his control.

"I'll go to the auditorium first to set up the projector," I told him, picking up my bag and heading for the door.

"Good luck, Pen. I'll be right behind you," he lied, kissing my cheek.

I walked out the door, took the elevator down to the basement, and got straight into Eleanors waiting car. I didn't go to the university. I went to the airstrip.

The private jet moved smoothly through the clouds.

At exactly 2:00 PM, my phone vibrated violently. The Dean. Department heads. Then, Alex.

I let them all go to voicemail, watching his academic empire burn.

Voicemail 1:"Penelope, fix the server immediately! The projector is showing some ridiculous files. You're embarrassing me."

Voicemail 2: "Penelope, pick up! What did you do?! The Dean has my emails. They're suspending me. Lily is screaming that I set her up. Did you send those files?!"

I looked out the window, thinking of the dusty wooden box I had left on the penthouse kitchen island.

Ten years of unsent anniversary letters, ending with one final note: "I'm done being your ghost. Marry whoever you want to marry now."

After a few more minutes, I opened the smart-home app on my screen for the very last time.

I pulled up the live security feed just as Alex burst through the penthouse doors.

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