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Chapter 4 New Job

Auteur: Sacha Taryn
My new job was cleaning up places where people had died alone, taken their own lives, or been left undiscovered for days until their bodies began to rot.

The owner was blind in one eye. One look at my hands, and he knew they were built for writing. The household chores had roughened them up, but not rough enough to look like those who'd gone through manual labor.

"This job's filthy. It reeks, and you'll be dealing with the dead. Sure, you can do this, girl?"

I said nothing.

I put on my gloves, stepped into the room where a body had been lying, and without hesitation shoved a comforter crawling with maggots into a disposal bag.

The owner hired me on the spot.

It was a buried history, but I was the law school's most brilliant student five years ago. My mentor once told me, "You're born to uphold justice, Natalie. You'll be the best judge we've ever seen!"

And now I was cleaning up the mess the dead had left behind. Still, the stench of rotting corpses felt more tangible than the resplendent but ultimately cold mansion Christopher called home.

Five days had gone by.

That afternoon, my coworkers and I were cleaning up after a suicide in a rundown apartment when a familiar voice drifted down the corridor.

"My God, the stench is unbearable! How can anyone live here, Christopher?"

I would have recognized that sugary, cloying voice anywhere. I was carrying a bucket of blackened wastewater out of the apartment when I ran straight into Rachel.

She was pinching her nose in disgust, and Christopher stood behind her.

He was dressed in a perfectly tailored tuxedo, so polished and expensive that he looked completely out of place in that broken-down apartment building.

The moment he saw me, shock flashed across his face. Rage replaced it soon enough. I was in a white and bloated protective suit covered in brown stains. The dead's bathwater was in my hands.

"Natalie!" Christopher strode up to me and grabbed my wrist. "Have you lost your mind? You'd rather throw away your place as my wife and come work in this filthy dump? How much lower are you planning to sink? Do you have any idea how embarrassing this is for me?"

The waste water sloshed around in the bucket, and droplets splashed onto his leather shoes.

Rachel let out a yelp and jumped away. "This is revolting! I can't believe this is your job now! Are you doing this on purpose? For Christopher?"

I looked at Christopher calmly and pulled back my arm with all my strength. "Don't get too comfortable with me, Mr. Lutherson. I'm working."

"What?" Christopher pointed at the reeking room, his whole body trembling with rage. "You call this work? Even if your cards are frozen, this isn't decent work! It's filthy and vile! You're coming home with me!"

"You think it's vile?" I took my mask off. There was no makeup on my face. "The smell isn't the best, Christopher, but it's miles better than the stench scum like you give off! I'd call this heaven!"

That stunned him.

The old Natalie had only ever loved him and doubted herself. Even when I was hurt, there had never been much hatred in me. But now, whatever he saw in my eyes made him falter.

"Very well." Christopher laughed mirthlessly. He called the warden of the west side's prison right away and turned on speakerphone, but before he spoke to the warden, he warned me coldly, "You have a lot of pride, Natalie, but let's see how it holds up when your father's very life is on the line! I'll move him into high-security and have the residents… give him a good welcome."

The call went through. "Mr. Lutherson, what is it?"

Christopher never took his eyes off me. He was waiting—waiting for fear, for panic, for pleading.

In a calm, icy voice, he said, "Mr. Westfield, I need your assistance. You have an inmate named Harold Shayman—"

The warden interrupted Christopher, "But Mr. Lutherson…"

"What is it?" Christopher frowned.

When the warden spoke again, his voice trembled, as though he could not understand how Christopher had not already heard. "Has no one informed you, Mr. Lutherson?"

"Informed me of what?"

"Hector Shayman took his own life seven days ago."
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    It was total defeat, and Christopher knew it. He staggered to his feet, unsteady, then walked out into the rain like a hollow shell, as if his soul had already left him behind.The divorce went smoothly enough. Christopher gave me half of his company's shares and three mansions in the city center, perhaps to atone for his crimes or to get a moment of my attention.The amount was so staggering that even the divorce lawyer could not hide the envy in his eyes as we signed the papers.However, I signed another agreement that would sell off all my assets and founded a charity specializing in legal aid. I named it The Hector Foundation, after my father. The foundation would help the underprivileged who were imprisoned unjustly, just like my father was.An army of reporters came for the opening. I cut off the long hair I'd kept for five years and changed into professional attire before taking to the stage.No longer was I the cowardly and timid Mrs. Lutherson. Before the cameras, I w

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    He carefully handed me the food, his eyes filled with anticipation. Suddenly, my stomach churned, and I retched before I could stop it.I slapped the box away, and the food splashed all over the ground, some of it getting on Christopher's trousers. That stunned him for a moment, and he watched the mess helplessly."I can get another if you don't like—""Do you think you're actually a loving man, Christopher?" I wiped my mouth with the back of my hand, my eyes resting on him icily. "I'm severely allergic to seafood. One bite is enough to send me into shock."Christopher froze, as if I'd just slapped him. "What? So why'd you…""It was Rachel!" I interrupted sharply. "She told me you needed food therapy for your gastrointestinal problems! She said seafood chowder helped, and for that, you made me wake up early just to make that exact dish. I had to wear gloves the whole time and hold my food down just to cook the godforsaken chowder!"I rolled my sleeves up and showed him my arms.

  • The Night Our Love Died   Chapter 5 The Truth

    Everything slowed down as something froze in the air. Christopher's hand was petrified, but he kept going on. "I beg your pardon?" His voice was raw and raspy.The warden quickly explained, "Do you remember the downpour a week ago? We called the firm, and Ms. Riviera was the one who picked up. She told us you were handling the celebration and didn't need to have your day ruined by Hector's death. 'Just tell his family to collect his remains,' she said. The body has since been claimed! Do you know nothing about that?"Christopher's phone slid out of his hand, the screen cracking when it smashed into the concrete ground. All color drained from his face as he trembled, but he quickly turned to look at Rachel.Rachel looked even paler than he did. Her eyes darted around in panic as she stepped back, guilt written all over her face."You were exhausted, Christopher. That old man was already dying. I thought you'd hate getting disturbed by news of someone's demise."Christopher's chest

  • The Night Our Love Died   Chapter 4 New Job

    My new job was cleaning up places where people had died alone, taken their own lives, or been left undiscovered for days until their bodies began to rot. The owner was blind in one eye. One look at my hands, and he knew they were built for writing. The household chores had roughened them up, but not rough enough to look like those who'd gone through manual labor."This job's filthy. It reeks, and you'll be dealing with the dead. Sure, you can do this, girl?"I said nothing. I put on my gloves, stepped into the room where a body had been lying, and without hesitation shoved a comforter crawling with maggots into a disposal bag. The owner hired me on the spot.It was a buried history, but I was the law school's most brilliant student five years ago. My mentor once told me, "You're born to uphold justice, Natalie. You'll be the best judge we've ever seen!"And now I was cleaning up the mess the dead had left behind. Still, the stench of rotting corpses felt more tangible than th

  • The Night Our Love Died   Chapter 3 Natalie's Message

    "Get the door, Natalie."Christopher was met with nothing but silence. That was a reminder that I'd never come home. Frustrated, he got out of bed to answer the door himself. It was a courier, and he handed Christopher a hefty package. "Wedding anniversary package from a Ms. Shayman."Christopher frowned upon hearing that. He hauled the package into the house and sliced the tapes open with a box cutter. He expected scarves or handmade figurines, but none came out. Only the scent of mildew hit him. The package housed piles of receipts, all neatly tied up.Christopher scooped up the uppermost receipt. It had details about my blood extraction and dated back five years ago, on the 12th of October. I had 400ccs taken and was paid 30 dollars.He froze for a moment, but he broke out of his reverie and went on reading. The receipts showed letters of consent that came from pharmaceutical companies regarding drug testing, underground blood selling, and more.There were hundreds of t

  • The Night Our Love Died   Chapter 2 Christopher's Disdain

    It was a photo. Christopher's hand was wrapped around Rachel's as they sliced the cake open. His tenderness was something I'd never seen in our marriage. Rachel's caption read, 'Justice runs late because it has a surprise for me: Christopher. I'm such a spoiled girl!'Christopher bought out the time slots for all the screens in the city just to celebrate Rachel's victory in a rights to reputation case, or so that was how they called it. All I did was mention Rachel being the financial director for the project that ended up framing my father.To defend her, Christopher mobilized his whole legal team and painted me as a deranged woman who loved to slander everyone around her.I tapped the like button under the photo. Moments later, my phone exploded with messages from Christopher."I know that's sarcasm, Natalie! Go change and get here right now! If you're even one second late, I'm never taking that case, you hear me?'Though separated by screens, I could imagine the disgust on

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