She Survived Her Husband’s Mountain Betrayal, Then Came Home-eirian

My name is Alina Voss, and I was twenty-eight years old the morning my husband pushed me off a mountain.

I remember the sound before I remember the pain.

Not a scream.

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Not even Owen’s voice.

I remember gravel skittering under my boots, tiny stones striking stone below me, and the thin Colorado air burning the back of my throat as my balance disappeared.

A person thinks betrayal will announce itself.

A raised voice.

A confession.

A final cruel sentence delivered by someone who has stopped pretending.

But betrayal can be warm hands at your waist.

It can be your husband laughing softly behind you while you stand at the overlook, thinking he is steadying you for a photograph.

It can be the last voice you trust saying your name.

“Alina.”

Then the push.

Before that morning, I believed Owen Mercer was the safest thing that had ever happened to me.

That is the ugliest part to admit.

Not that he fooled my mother.

Not that Victor Hale smiled too widely whenever Owen entered a room.

Not that Brielle had been standing in my dressing room wearing my silk robe two weeks before the wedding with Owen’s lighter sitting on my vanity.

The ugliest part is that he fooled me by studying exactly where I was broken.

I grew up in Colorado in a house that smelled like cedar polish, fireplace ash, and the expensive leather folders my father used to bring home from meetings.

Arthur Voss built an outdoor gear company from nothing but stubbornness, intelligence, and the kind of charm that made investors forget they were being asked for money.

He loved mountains the way some people love churches.

When I was little, he used to put an old brass compass in my palm and tell me, “A person who knows where north is can survive being lost.”

I did not understand then that he was teaching me something larger than navigation.

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