On our wedding anniversary, my husband put something in my glass, I decided to replace it with his sisters glass

On our wedding anniversary, as we sat around the table, my husband raised his glass with a solemn smile. I followed suit, but just before the toast, I noticed something that made my skin crawl—he had slipped something into my drink. My instincts screamed. I didn’t wait to find out what it was. Quietly, while everyone was momentarily distracted, I swapped my glass with his sister’s.

Ten minutes later, glasses clinked and we all sipped. Moments after, she collapsed. Panic erupted. People shouted, rushed to help. My husband’s expression twisted in shock—as if he couldn’t believe what had just happened.

He stammered, “She wasn’t supposed to drink! I switched the glasses!”

That was the moment it hit me. I was right. That drink was meant for me. My own husband had planned to poison me.

I said nothing. I returned home and sat down, barely able to breathe. He came in later, pretending nothing was wrong.

“How are you feeling?” he asked with a forced smile.

“I’m fine,” I replied, my voice even. “You?”

He hesitated. I saw it in his eyes—he knew I knew. Everything had changed, and he could feel it.

The next morning, I visited his sister in the hospital. Pale and weak, but alive. The doctors said it had been a serious case of poisoning. Just a slightly higher dose and she wouldn’t have made it. I silently thanked fate—and my own instincts.

That night, when I got home, he greeted me casually. “How is she?”

“Alive,” I answered. “And I remember the glasses weren’t where they started.”

He froze. His hands trembled.

“What’s that supposed to mean?”

“Nothing. Yet. Just something to consider—especially if I speak to the police.”

He didn’t sleep that night. But I didn’t stop. I began collecting everything—phone records, receipts from the pharmacy, screenshots of texts. I needed proof.

Days passed. He tried to act like I was still his “perfect wife.” I played along—cooked dinner, smiled, nodded. But inside, I was building a case.

Then I found it. The message from an unknown number. My husband had written, “Everything ends after the anniversary.”

One evening, while we sat by the fire, he raised a glass. “To us,” he said.

“To us,” I echoed, not touching mine.

There was a knock at the door. I stood and opened it. A detective and a plainclothes officer stepped forward.

“Citizen Orlov, you are under arrest for attempted murder.”

His eyes darted to mine. “You set me up?”

“No,” I replied coldly. “You did that to yourself. I just survived it.”

Two months later, life moved forward. The evidence against him was overwhelming. His lawyer had nothing to work with. He sat in a detention center, awaiting trial.

Then I received a call. “He wants to see you. Says he’ll only talk to you.”

I hesitated. But curiosity won.

When I walked into the room, he leaned in and said, “You’ve got it all wrong. It wasn’t meant for you.”

I felt ice rush through my veins. “What?”

“It was her. My sister. She knew too much. She was blackmailing me.”

“You’re lying,” I whispered.

“Check her phone,” he said. “See who she was talking to. Then we’ll talk.”

I left in a daze and returned home. I found her old tablet. Inside were saved messages, voice memos, and call logs. Conversations with someone listed only as “M.O.” One message chilled me to the bone: “If she doesn’t leave on her own, we’ll need to arrange an accident.”

My world flipped again. She wasn’t innocent. She’d been spying. Manipulating. Planning.

It wasn’t just betrayal from one side—it was from both. But at least now, I knew the truth. And I had survived it.

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