He Left His Pregnant Wife To Die, Then Signed At Her Funeral-Aurelle - Chainityai

He Left His Pregnant Wife To Die, Then Signed At Her Funeral-Aurelle

Snow makes a strange sound when it is falling hard enough.

It does not simply fall.

It hisses against your coat, taps your eyelashes, seals the world in white, and makes even a scream feel small.

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That was the sound around me the night my husband pushed me off Blackthorn Cliff.

Victor Hale had told me we were going for a short drive.

I was nine months pregnant, tired in the deep, bone-heavy way only the last days before birth can make a woman tired.

My ankles were swollen.

My back ached.

Our son had spent the whole evening pressing one small foot beneath my ribs as if he already wanted out of the life Victor and I had built.

The hospital bag was waiting beside our bedroom door.

A blue blanket I had washed twice was folded on top.

Victor knew all of that.

He knew the due date circled on the kitchen calendar.

He knew the route to the hospital.

He knew which side of the bed I slept on because the OB nurse said it was better for the baby.

He also knew about the insurance policy.

That was the part I had not understood until much later.

Cross Atlantic Insurance Group had issued the policy after Victor insisted we needed protection for our growing family.

Fifty million dollars.

He had called it security.

He had smiled across our kitchen island with his thumb resting near the beneficiary line and told me that responsible husbands planned ahead.

Marriage teaches you the difference between sharing a life and handing someone a weapon.

The cruel part is that the handle often feels warm at first.

At 9:47 p.m., the dashboard clock glowed blue as Victor pulled the SUV onto the shoulder near the cliff overlook.

Snow blew sideways across the windshield.

The heater clicked softly at my feet.

The cliff sign rattled on its post outside, warning drivers to stay behind the rail.

“Come on,” Victor said.

He opened my door before I answered.

“I don’t want to,” I told him.

“You need air.”

“I need to go home. The baby’s been kicking weird.”

His face shifted then.

It was not anger at first.

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