“No,” I whispered, staring into his cold, calculating eyes. “We wouldn’t.”
The moment Bruno left for his evening tennis match, the submissive housewife persona shattered.
I tore off the yellow rubber gloves, throwing them into the sink as if they were coated in acid. The tears finally came, hot and furious, pouring down my cheeks as I dragged myself upstairs to our bedroom. I dropped to my knees, reached under the bed, and pulled out the old Nike shoebox.
Inside were twelve envelopes. Three months of my blood, sweat, and absolute humiliation. Exactly $1,800.
To Bruno, this was a joke. A trivial amount of money to keep his “fool” of a wife occupied while he plotted to steal an estate worth nearly a million dollars. He had been watching me. He knew about the shoebox. He was letting me keep it because, in his twisted mind, it was the ultimate evidence of my greed and deception.
“You think I’m trapped?” I whispered to the empty room, wiping my face with the back of my hand. “You think I’m the one who’s going to lose everything?”
A cold, sharp clarity replaced the sorrow. If Bruno wanted to play a game of shadows, I would give him a masterclass. He thought he was playing chess against a pawn, completely unaware that the pawn had already reached the other side of the board.
I didn’t stop cleaning. In fact, over the next four days, I became obsessed. But I wasn’t cleaning for Bruno anymore. I was searching.
If Bruno’s notary had already prepared the dummy paperwork, it had to be somewhere in this house. Bruno was meticulous, but he was also profoundly arrogant. He believed I was too stupid to look, and too submissive to question him. He kept his important legal documents in a locked mahogany filing cabinet in his home office—a room I was strictly forbidden from entering unless I was “doing my chores.”
On Thursday morning, while Bruno was at a corporate luncheon, I entered the office with my vacuum cleaner. I shut the door and locked it from the inside.
I didn’t waste time trying to pick the lock of the filing cabinet. Instead, I went straight to his desk. I knew Bruno’s habits. He was lazy with his security. I checked the small decorative tray where he kept his spare coins and cufflinks. Nothing. I checked the hollowed-out dictionary on his bookshelf. Nothing.