The Story
…”Wow, Dad looks like a real chef,” Ryan had beamed, eagerly reaching for his fork.
I had caught the strange, metallic tang of the sauce just as the food approached my lips. A mother’s instinct isn’t just a feeling; it’s a roaring siren. I deliberately knocked my heavy water glass over, sending ice and water crashing across the pressed tablecloth. “Ryan, quick, get the towels from the kitchen!” I yelled, creating the perfect, chaotic distraction.
In the five seconds Ethan spent cursing and dabbing his shirt, I swapped Ryan’s poisoned chicken with a plain, un-sauced piece I had cooked for his school lunch earlier that day. I forced myself to take one minuscule bite of my own plate—just enough to sell the act. Within minutes, the room began to spin. I slumped to the floor, pulling Ryan down with me, his eyes already heavy from the mild allergy medicine I had slipped into his juice beforehand to keep him safely asleep and out of the crossfire.
Now, lying on the cold hardwood, I listened to Ethan’s footsteps.
He stood over us, calmly adjusting his tie in the hall mirror. “Yes,” he whispered into his phone, stepping right over my legs. “I’m leaving for the ‘business trip’ now. By the time the neighbor checks in tomorrow, it’ll look like a tragic food-borne illness. I’ll see you at the airport.”
The front door clicked shut. The deadbolt turned.
I waited exactly sixty seconds, letting the heavy silence settle over the house. Then, I opened my eyes.
The tiny dose of poison I ingested made my limbs ache, but pure, white-hot adrenaline burned through the fog. I crawled to the table and pulled myself up. Ethan thought he was a mastermind. He thought I was just a naive housewife who didn’t know about his secret offshore accounts, or the other woman in Denver, or the life insurance policy he bumped up by two million dollars last month.
He also didn’t know I had discovered his stash of poison weeks ago and replaced it with a heavy, but non-lethal, muscle relaxant. We weren’t dying; my body was just temporarily sluggish.
But the best part? Ethan didn’t know I had installed hidden cameras in the dining room the very day I found those life insurance papers.
I reached into my pocket, pulled out my phone, and ended the live stream I had been broadcasting directly to the local police department. As I heard the distant, echoing wail of sirens closing in on his route to the highway, I stroked Ryan’s hair and smiled.
Ethan was right about one thing. He was about to be gone for a very, very long time.
