LOGINSarah Vance watched the front door slam shut behind Victoria Vance. It was a clean sweep. The movers had finished their harvest, taking her jewelry, her cash, her bank cards, her property deeds, and even the keys to her cars. They had even found her wedding ring—the one she had taken off and hidden in a drawer—proving they had come with a detailed map of her life.Arthur had taken the warmth. Victoria had taken the wealth.Sarah was now, in the most literal sense, penniless.She walked back to her bedroom. It was a skeletal ruin. The closet doors swung open to reveal empty shelves; the vanity was stripped of its designer perfumes. She sat on the edge of the mattress, staring at the chaos, and felt a wave of agonizing grief wash over her.She had once been a woman of brilliance, a star in her own right. For Arthur Vance, she had extinguished her own light, trading her ambition for the quiet life of a wife and mother. Why was she now living such a wretched existence? Why had she been so
As the movers continued to strip the walls, Sarah Vance looked at the woman who had spent ten years trying to erase her existence. The memories surfaced like bitter bile.When Maddy was born, the moment Victoria Vance discovered the baby was a girl, she didn't even wait for Sarah to leave the delivery room. She had feigned a sudden "illness" to Arthur Vance and vanished. During the entire month of Sarah's recovery, Victoria hadn't visited once.Then, the moment the recovery period ended, Victoria had stormed into the house—not with a gift for the baby, but with a stack of prescriptions. "Drink these," she had commanded. "They will ensure the next one is a son."Sarah, who was still breastfeeding Maddy, had refused to take unknown chemicals that could harm her child. Victoria’s response had been a cold order to switch to formula immediately. It wasn't that Sarah didn't want more children; she just wanted to wait until Maddy was older. But Victoria didn't care about a mother's bond—she
The fever burning through Sarah Vance was no longer just a symptom; it was a fire consuming her from within. Ever since Yvonne Blue had fractured her life, Sarah had been unable to eat or sleep. Her body, once a portrait of grace, was now skeletal. Her hair fell out in clumps, and her skin had lost all its luster, looking as gray as the walls of the mansion that felt more like a tomb every day.She hated this version of herself—broken, withered, and drowning—but she couldn't find the strength to claw her way back to the light.Gritting her teeth, she forced herself to swallow the last few pills in her cabinet. Her stomach cramped with a sharp, gnawing hunger. She stumbled into the kitchen, hoping for a crust of bread, but the refrigerator was a sterile white void.Then she saw the trash can.It was overflowing. Fresh pastries, organic vegetables, and prime cuts of meat—all discarded. Arthur Vance hadn't just moved out; he had performed a scorched-earth evacuation. He had ensured that
Arthur’s Voice (from the recorder): "I’ve been fed up with her dominance for a long time. Everything she has, I gave to her. Without me, Sarah Vance is nothing. Why should I still have to coax her and cater to her?"What does it mean for a heart to truly die? This is the sound of it.When they married, Arthur Vance had sworn to cherish her forever. He promised she would never suffer a day of hardship, that her hands would never touch the grime of the world. For years, he had kept those vows. Sarah Vance had allowed herself to believe she had found a sanctuary—a powerful man she could depend on while she dedicated her life to being his wife and the mother of his child.But now, those once-sacred promises had been weaponized into a ledger of debt.Because she ate his food and wore the clothes he bought, he believed he was the only one contributing. In his mind, her labor didn't exist. The thousands of days and nights she spent managing his home, raising Maddy, and supporting his social
Arthur Vance was gone. He had taken every servant, every driver, and every shred of his presence with him, leaving Sarah Vance alone in a mausoleum of marble and cold echoes.Sarah stood in the center of the hollow foyer, the silence ringing in her ears. She knew Arthur’s patterns; he was a shark in the boardroom, and he would apply that same predatory ruthlessness to their divorce. He would strip her of her dignity, her assets, and her name without a second thought for the decade they had shared.But Sarah wasn't afraid. When the heart has already been executed, what is left to fear from the hangman?That afternoon, the doorbell rang. Sarah opened it to find Yvonne Blue standing on the threshold.Seeing that "pure," triumphant face made Sarah’s pulse spike with a primal urge—to tear the smugness right off her skin. She wanted to draw blood, but the thought of staining her own hands with someone so filthy kept her rooted to the spot. The rage passed, replaced by a terrifying, absolute
Arthur Vance no longer bothered to mask the layers of loathing and contempt in his voice. "Sarah, don't be greedy. Push too hard and you’ll end up with nothing. Those millions you moved? I’ll have them back in my accounts before the sun sets."Sarah Vance met his gaze with a chillingly calm smirk. "Try me.""Fine. You forced my hand."Right there in the foyer, Arthur dialed his lead counsel, demanding a full police investigation into "unauthorized asset diversion." He then called Secretary Lee, barking orders to hire the best cyber-security hackers in Haicheng to track the digital trail of the missing funds. "I want a report on my desk in one hour," he commanded, his eyes never leaving Sarah’s face.Sarah didn't even blink. She turned and walked up the stairs, leaving him to his digital warfare.While he waited for the results, Arthur went into the master suite to pack. This wasn't a temporary move; he was stripping his presence from the house. He cleared out his side of the walk-in c







