Pregnant Wife Returns At Her Funeral To Face Her Smirking Husband-heuh

My husband shoved my nine-month-pregnant body off an icy cliff, believing a £50 million life insurance payout was worth my death.

At my “funeral,” he stood beside his mistress and smirked.

“They both froze to death,” he sneered.

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“That useless woman deserved it.”

The first thing I remember is the sound of snow against my coat.

Not soft snow, not the pretty sort that makes roofs look gentle, but hard wind-driven snow that stung like thrown salt.

Victor Hale had said he wanted one last quiet walk before our son arrived.

I should have known there was nothing quiet about the way he held my arm.

His fingers were too tight around my wrist.

His smile was too still.

Blackthorn Cliff vanished and appeared through the weather, a steep white edge under a sky the colour of old tin.

I was nine months pregnant, heavy and exhausted, with one hand braced beneath my belly and the other trying to keep my scarf from whipping across my eyes.

“Victor,” I said, “please. This is ridiculous. Let’s go home.”

He looked over my shoulder at the drop.

For a moment, he almost seemed relieved.

Then he said, “Home was never really yours, Elena.”

I did not have time to understand it.

His palm struck my chest.

There was no dramatic scream.

The wind took everything.

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