She had the perfect life or so everyone thought. Behind the smiles hid monstrous secrets: fake love, dark affairs, and a plan to destroy everything she touched. But when her husband vanished, her daughter disappeared, and the voices started calling at 3:33 AM… the real horror began. Read the confessions she never meant for anyone to hear: until now.
The Perfect Lie Wrapped in Vows
I used to be a wife. A mother. A woman people envied: stable job, stable home, stable marriage. But “stable” is a pretty lie we use to label things that are already decaying. And I?
I was rotting from the inside long before anyone noticed.
I married Mark for money. His family owned multiple properties, and I knew exactly what I was doing. He thought I loved him. I knew I didn’t. I smiled through the wedding. I cried on our honeymoon not from joy, but from the sheer panic of being touched by a man I couldn’t stand. I pretended, every day. And then I stopped pretending.
My daughter was a mistake. A byproduct of manipulation. I never wanted her. Never once felt that maternal ache women talk about in books or on TV. She cried, and I felt nothing. She smiled, and I flinched. She was flesh I didn’t ask for.
But the lies grew bigger.
Also read: The Confessions: A True Tale of Marriage, Betrayal, and a Vicious Legal Scam
Where the Real Horror Began
Six months into our marriage, I met someone in a club. I was already halfway drunk, and the storm outside sounded like it was tearing the sky in half. He didn’t tell me his name, and I didn’t care. I called him The Beast because that’s what he felt like when he touched me: raw, filthy, animalistic. He left bruises I didn’t ask him to stop creating.
That night, the confessions began.
They weren’t words. They were exhalations moaned into a stranger’s neck. I confessed I never loved Mark. That I married him for a house. That I wanted him to suffer. That my daughter was a weight I didn’t want to carry anymore.
And I laughed while I said it.
The Beast didn’t care. He was high, pupils dilated like bottomless pits. We screamed into each other’s flesh like it could undo our lives.
Also read: The Confessions: A Son’s Guilt After Losing His Mother
Plans, Bruises, and Rotten Desires
Mark earned $100K/year. I earned $40K. I told my lawyer I wanted $200K and the house. His house. His father’s land. His mother’s jewelry. I didn’t want the child, so I planned to leave her with him. But I needed to look like the good one. So I started hurting myself: burns on my thighs, bruises under my jaw. I told people Mark was controlling. Violent. Dangerous. They believed me. It was easy. All it took was mascara and a trembling voice.
Every night I returned to The Beast. And every night I spilled more:
- That I wished my daughter would vanish.
- That I wanted to poison Mark’s tea.
- That I’d once tried to strangle my cat, just to see how it felt.
He never flinched. He just pulled me closer.
The Message That Stopped My Heart
One morning, a plain white envelope was slid under my door.
“You think you’re the only one with secrets?”
Inside were photographs of me and the Beast. Me laughing over fake bruises. Audio files of me planning fake abuse, speaking of my child like she was trash. Screenshots. Voice memos. All of the confessions, recorded.
Someone had been watching.
Also read: The Confessions: What They Did To Me After I Won Employee of the Year
The Disappearance, the Death, the Fire
Then things got worse.
- Mark vanished. One day he left for work and never returned. His car was found submerged in a river. But the body? Gone.
- My daughter disappeared from daycare. They said a man claiming to be her uncle picked her up. But we have no uncles.
- The Beast died in front of me. Eyes wide open, mouth bleeding, foaming, twitching. He looked at me like he was trying to speak, but no words came. Only a long, choking rattle.
His skin peeled in places. As if something inside him was trying to get out.
Also read: Abandoned While Pregnant by the Baby’s Father
What Am I Now?
I live in a motel that smells like death. I don’t sleep. I barely eat. My phone rings every night at 3:33 AM. It plays back my own voice:
“I wish she would die.”
“I’d fake anything for money.”
“I don’t love anyone.”
I haven’t told anyone. Who would believe me? I’m not even sure this is punishment. Maybe it’s justice.
Maybe this is hell.
Maybe I deserve worse.
So I write this. My final act. My obituary in digital ink.
Also read: My Wife Refused to Pay for Our Family: Is This What Modern Marriage Looks Like?
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