a document with my name written in red.
It didn’t say “lawsuit.” It didn’t say “divorce.” It said: “Deceased Beneficiary.”
I felt the glass slipping from my hand. “What is this?” Alex asked, his voice cracking. The woman in the black suit didn’t blink. “An investigation for fraud, identity theft, and attempted life insurance collection.”
The pregnant mistress brought her hands to her belly. “Alex… what does that mean?” He didn’t look at her. He looked at me. For the first time in months, not with annoyance. With fear.
Nicholas stood up slowly beside me. “It means your husband wasn’t just cheating on you, Valerie. It means he’s spent weeks planning your death.”
The restaurant ran out of air. The Upper East Side, with its elegant window displays and ridiculously expensive restaurants near Madison Avenue, suddenly felt like a cheap theater. People pretended not to look, but everyone was staring.
The woman in the suit approached me. “Mrs. Valerie Montgomery, I’m Investigator April Chambers. I need you to come with us.” “Am I under arrest?” “No. You’re alive. And that just ruined a lot of your husband’s plans.”
Alex stood up. “This is insane.” One of the officers took a step forward. “Sit down.” “I’m a corporate lawyer, I know my rights.” April turned to another page. “Then you know that forging medical documents, taking out a policy using your wife’s information, and reporting a non-existent death isn’t exactly an administrative mix-up.”
The pregnant woman started to cry. “You told me you were already divorced.” I let out a laugh. I couldn’t help it. “How funny. He told me he was stuck at work.”
Alex closed his eyes. “Valerie, please.” “Don’t say my name.”
April placed a copy in front of me. There was my signature. My Social Security Number. My birth certificate. A fake death certificate. And a life insurance policy where Alex was listed as the primary beneficiary.
I felt nauseous. “How much was my death worth?” No one answered. Except Nicholas. “Five million dollars.”
The number hit me harder than the kiss. Five million. Two years of marriage. A life together. My Sunday mornings making pancakes. My texts asking if he’d eaten yet. My nights waiting for him to come home. Five million.
“Who are you?” I asked Nicholas. He looked at Alex. “The brother of the first woman he tried to erase.”
The pregnant mistress stopped crying. “First?” Alex yelled: “Shut up, Nicholas!” That’s when we all knew it was true.