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My Ex-Husband's Fatal Ignorance

My Ex-Husband's Fatal Ignorance

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10 Chapters
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Five years ago, I was a world-renowned concert pianist. Now, I'm an auto mechanic with a mangled right hand, hiding from a past my ex-husband, Carter, dismisses as a "tantrum." He drags me to a charity gala where his mistress, Alexandrea, puts me on the spot, demanding I play for the city's elite-a cruel, public humiliation she knows I can't perform. When I refuse, Carter shoves me to the ground in a rage. He still thinks our daughter, Lily, is alive, and he uses her as a weapon. "Behave," he hisses, "and maybe we can bring Lily back home." Bring her home? The sheer ignorance is staggering. He has no idea our daughter froze to death in the same car crash that destroyed my hand. But just before the gala, my best friend uncovered the final, devastating truth. It wasn't an accident. They sabotaged my car and left us for dead. Tonight, I'm not just attending a party. I'm orchestrating a funeral. Theirs.

Contents

My Ex-Husband's Fatal Ignorance Chapter 1

Five years ago, I was a world-renowned concert pianist. Now, I'm an auto mechanic with a mangled right hand, hiding from a past my ex-husband, Carter, dismisses as a "tantrum."

He drags me to a charity gala where his mistress, Alexandrea, puts me on the spot, demanding I play for the city's elite-a cruel, public humiliation she knows I can't perform.

When I refuse, Carter shoves me to the ground in a rage. He still thinks our daughter, Lily, is alive, and he uses her as a weapon.

"Behave," he hisses, "and maybe we can bring Lily back home."

Bring her home? The sheer ignorance is staggering. He has no idea our daughter froze to death in the same car crash that destroyed my hand.

But just before the gala, my best friend uncovered the final, devastating truth. It wasn't an accident. They sabotaged my car and left us for dead.

Tonight, I'm not just attending a party. I'm orchestrating a funeral. Theirs.

Chapter 1

Ellie Armstrong POV:

My phone buzzed against my grease-stained thigh, a digital whisper from a past I' d buried five years deep. It was Carter, my ex-husband, and his message was a punch to the gut: "Done with your tantrum yet?"

The words, so casually cruel, sliced through the grimy peace of the auto shop. It was the same casual dismissal that had always defined him, a man who saw my suffering as an inconvenience, my grief as drama.

I ignored it, my hands deep in the guts of a Ford pickup. The wrench felt heavy and familiar, a comforting weight in my left hand. My right hand, a landscape of twisted scars and numb flesh, lay uselessly on the greasy engine block. Five years. Five years since the music died, since Lily died, since a part of me died with them. And he called it a tantrum.

The phone buzzed again. Reluctantly, I pulled it out, my chest tight. A new message. There was a photo attached this time. It was an old picture of me, from before. Before everything. I was on stage, bathed in the warmth of a spotlight, my hair perfectly coiffed, my fingers graceful on the piano keys. A ghost.

I stared at the image, a faint smile playing on my lips. It wasn't the wistful smile of someone missing what they'd lost. It was the ironic smirk of a survivor, looking back at a forgotten war. What did he expect? Tears? Regret? That girl in the photo was gone, reduced to ash, and the woman holding this phone had risen from those ashes, tougher and far less fragile.

Five years was a lifetime. It was enough time to forget the feel of silk against my skin, to trade concert halls for concrete floors, to swap Chopin for engine oil. He probably thought I' d been pining, waiting for his grand return. He probably pictured me wasting away in some forgotten corner, still clinging to the wreckage of our past. He was always so good at writing his own narratives, casting himself as the benevolent king.

I imagined him in his sleek Seattle high-rise, a smug smirk on his perfect face, the one that used to charm millions and, for a time, charmed me. He' d be leaning back in a ridiculously expensive chair, tailored suit pristine, probably sipping some artisanal coffee. He' d think this was a mercy, a grand gesture.

A drop of oil, black and viscous, landed on the screen, obscuring my ghostly past. I wiped it away with the back of my good hand, the motion brisk, unthinking.

Another buzz. Then another. He was impatient.

I opened the message. "I need you to come to the gala next week. Alexandrea needs help with the arrangements. Don't disappoint me."

A command, not an invitation. His usual style. My stomach churned, but my mind was a blank slate. Disappoint him? That ship sailed five years ago when he left me to die. Lily and I.

I typed a reply. Short. Brutal. "No."

I hit send, then immediately blocked his number. The tiny satisfaction was fleeting, barely a ripple in the ocean of my indifference. I tossed the phone back into my tool caddy, the dull clatter echoing the hollow feeling in my chest.

"Armstrong! You deaf, or just ignoring me?" Colt' s voice, a roar over the clanging of metal and the whine of air tools, cut through the shop. "The transmission on that old Civic isn't going to fix itself! If it' s not done by end of day, you' re staying late, or else."

A drop of lukewarm, oily liquid splattered onto my cheek as I slid back under the truck. It ran down my face, mixing with the sweat and grime, blurring my vision. My shirt was already soaked through, clinging to my back. My world was a symphony of metallic scrapes, engine fumes, and the constant, dull ache in my mangled hand. Colt' s threats, Carter' s messages-they were just more noise in the cacophony.

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