I woke up in a bedroom that screamed old money, but the body I occupied felt sluggish and fragile. I was now Chris Olson, a man known as a pathetic failure who spent his marriage groveling at his wife's feet for a single look of approval. Elizabeth didn't even wait for me to clear my head before she threw the divorce papers on the nightstand. She stood there in her silk robe, eyes cold as ice, demanding I sign them before breakfast so she could finally go public with her "White Moonlight," Greg. "You're walking away with nothing," she snapped, her voice full of the disgust she'd harbored for years. She reminded me that my family had disowned me and that I'd be on the streets within a week without her charity. As I sat up, a metallic, garlic-like scent on my breath confirmed a terrifying truth: the Olson family hadn't just disowned me; they had been micro-dosing me with arsenic for years. They wanted me weak and mentally unstable so they could split the inheritance without a fight. The original Chris would have cried and begged for her to stay, but I just looked at her like she was a target. I realized then that my "loving" family and my "faithful" wife had been watching me die in slow motion, and neither of them had lifted a finger to stop it. I signed the papers without reading a single line and walked out with nothing but a duffel bag and a rusted sedan. I didn't need her alimony; I had already called her greatest rival, Adelia Cherry, to discuss a merger that would rock the city. "I'm not here to save this marriage," I told Elizabeth as I moved into the mansion right next door to hers. "I'm here to bury it, along with everyone who thought they could poison me and get away with it."
Chris opened his eyes. The ceiling was unfamiliar-an expanse of cream-colored plaster with intricate crown molding that screamed old money. His head throbbed, a dull, rhythmic ache behind his temples, but his senses were screaming. The air smelled of expensive lavender detergent and the faint, cloying scent of a woman's perfume on the pillow next to him, not the musky, post-coital scent of shared intimacy.
He sat up. The movement was fluid, instinctive. His body felt lighter, weaker than he was used to, but the frame was good-broad shoulders, long limbs-just soft and unused. The muscle memory of a thousand fights was still there, coiled in his brain, waiting to override the sluggish reflexes of this new vessel.
A flood of memories that weren't his crashed into his skull. Chris Olson. The failure. The husband who begged. The man who was terrified of his own shadow.
He looked to his left. Elizabeth Washington was asleep, her blonde hair fanned out over the silk pillowcase. Even in sleep, her brow was furrowed, a permanent etching of dissatisfaction. The "original" Chris had worshipped this woman, groveling for scraps of affection.
Chris looked at his hands. They were uncalloused, soft. He clenched them into fists, watching the tendons shift. He could work with this.
Elizabeth stirred. Her eyes fluttered open, blue and cold as a winter sky. She saw him sitting there, staring at the wall, and her expression immediately hardened.
"Don't start," she said, her voice raspy with sleep but sharp with annoyance. She sat up, clutching the sheet to her chest, expecting the usual routine: Chris apologizing for existing, Chris asking if she loved him, Chris crying.
Chris turned his head slowly. He looked at her. He didn't blink. He looked at her not as a wife, but as a target assessment. Heart rate steady. Pupils dilated. Defensive posture.
"Start what?" Chris asked. His voice was deeper than she remembered, stripped of the whining cadence she loathed.
Elizabeth paused, her hand tightening on the sheet. She felt a sudden, inexplicable shiver crawl up her spine. The way he was looking at her made the air in the room feel thin.
"The begging," she snapped, swinging her legs out of bed and reaching for her silk robe. She tied the belt tight, armor against a man she no longer respected. "The divorce papers are in the study. I want them signed before breakfast."
Chris let out a short, dry sound. It might have been a laugh.
He stood up, completely naked. He didn't hunch his shoulders or try to cover himself as he usually did. He stretched, his back arching, the muscles shifting with a predatory grace that seemed alien on his frame.
He walked over to the nightstand. There was a pack of cigarettes there-hers. He shook one out and lit it. The flame flared, illuminating the sharp angles of his face.
"You don't smoke," Elizabeth said, the statement hanging in the air like a question she was afraid to ask.
Chris took a long drag, the cherry glowing bright orange. He exhaled a stream of grey smoke toward the ceiling. "I do now."
He turned and walked toward the bathroom. He didn't look at her. He didn't ask if she was okay. He moved with a terrifying economy of motion.
Elizabeth stood by the bed, barefoot on the plush carpet, feeling a sudden, sharp pang of displacement. It was her room, her house, her husband, yet she felt like the intruder.
"Chris!" she called out, her voice rising. "Did you hear me? The papers."
He stopped at the bathroom door. He didn't turn around.
"I heard you, Elizabeth," he said. "Stop screaming. It ruins the decor."
The door clicked shut.
Elizabeth stared at the wood grain, her mouth slightly open. Her heart was hammering against her ribs, a frantic, confused rhythm. She had expected tears. She had expected a fight. She hadn't expected to feel... small.
Inside the bathroom, Chris stared at the stranger in the mirror. Dark circles under the eyes. A weak jawline he would have to harden. But the eyes-the eyes were his. Cold. Calculating. Dead.
"Chris Olson," he whispered to the reflection. "Rest easy. I'll take it from here."
He turned on the faucet, splashing cold water on his face. He dried off, wrapped a towel around his waist, and walked back out.
Elizabeth was pacing the length of the room, her arms crossed. She stopped when he emerged.
"You're acting strange," she accused, trying to regain the upper hand. "Is this some new tactic? Ignoring me won't save this marriage."
Chris walked past her, his shoulder brushing hers with enough force to make her stumble back a step. It wasn't violent, just dismissive. Like she was a piece of furniture in his way.
"Save it?" Chris asked, walking into the hallway. "I'm here to bury it."
He headed straight for the study. Elizabeth followed, her footsteps quick and uneven, struggling to keep up with his long strides.
The study was dark, smelling of old paper and lemon polish. The stack of documents sat on the mahogany desk like a tombstone.
Chris picked up a heavy fountain pen. The metal was cool against his skin.
"Read them," Elizabeth said, breathless as she entered the room. "The settlement is generous. You get the apartment in the city and-"
Chris didn't look at the text. He flipped to the last page. He signed Chris Olson with a jagged, aggressive scrawl that tore through the paper.
He capped the pen and tossed it onto the desk. It rolled and hit the stack of papers with a final, hollow thock.
"Done," he said.
Chapter 1 1
Today at 17:40
Chapter 2 2
Today at 17:40
Chapter 3 3
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Chapter 4 4
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Chapter 5 5
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Chapter 6 6
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Chapter 7 7
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Chapter 8 8
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Chapter 9 9
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Chapter 10 10
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Chapter 11 11
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Chapter 12 12
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Chapter 13 13
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Chapter 14 14
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Chapter 15 15
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Chapter 16 16
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Chapter 17 17
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Chapter 18 18
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Chapter 19 19
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Chapter 20 20
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Chapter 21 21
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Chapter 22 22
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Chapter 23 23
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Chapter 24 24
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Chapter 25 25
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Chapter 26 26
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Chapter 27 27
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Chapter 28 28
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Chapter 29 29
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Chapter 30 30
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Chapter 31 31
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Chapter 32 32
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Chapter 33 33
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Chapter 34 34
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Chapter 35 35
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Chapter 36 36
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Chapter 37 37
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Chapter 38 38
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Chapter 39 39
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Chapter 40 40
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