The clinic specialized in women’s health services, a euphemism that made Isabelle’s hands shake as she realized how thoroughly Marcus had planned her disposal.

This should cover everything, Marcus said.

His voice carrying the same professional courtesy he used with patients families when delivering bad news.

Dr. Sarah Lim is discreet and efficient.

I’ve already spoken with her about your situation.

The clinical detachment in his voice was more devastating than anger would have been.

He had reduced their child, their child, to a medical problem requiring a medical solution, something to be handled with the same efficiency he brought to treating infectious diseases.

Isabelle stared at the money, understanding that Marcus saw this as a generous severance package rather than the complete destruction of everything she had believed about their relationship.

“You discussed my pregnancy with another doctor without my consent”?

she asked, her voice barely above a whisper.

I discussed a hypothetical case with a colleague.

Marcus corrected smoothly.

Patient confidentiality was maintained at all times.

The lie was so practiced, so seamlessly delivered that Isabelle realized this wasn’t Marcus’ first time managing such complications.

How many other nurses, residents, or medical students had received similar envelopes?

How many other hypothetical cases had he discussed with Dr. Lim?

Handle it quickly, he continued, already turning toward his car.

The longer you wait, the more complicated it becomes.

What if I don’t want to handle it?

The question emerged before Isabelle fully realized she was going to ask it.

Marcus stopped walking but didn’t turn around.

Then you’ll be a single mother on a work visa with a child whose father doesn’t exist in any legal sense.

Think about what that means for your immigration status, your family’s financial situation, your career prospects.

The threat was delivered with surgical precision.

Marcus understood exactly how precarious Isabelle’s position was, how dependent she was on his discretion, how little power she possessed compared to his wealth and influence.

He was offering her money to eliminate their problem.

But the subtext was clear.

Cause difficulties and he would eliminate her instead.

Don’t contact me again, Isabelle,” he said, getting into his BMW.

“For both our sakes”.

Isabelle stood in that parking garage holding an envelope full of cash and feeling more alone than she had ever felt in her life.

The money represented 18 months of her salary, more than her family in Cebu would see in 2 years.

But it also represented the complete commodification of her love, her body, her future, and the child growing inside her.

She walked back to her shared HDB flat in a days, the envelope burning in her purse like radioactive material.

Her roommates were watching a Filipino drama on their tablet, the volume low to avoid disturbing neighbors.

They looked up when she entered immediately recognizing something wrong in her expression.

“Isabelle,” Grace asked, pausing the show.

“What happened”?

“Nothing,” Isabelle managed, forcing a smile.

just tired, but lying in her narrow bed that night, staring at the ceiling while her roommates slept, Isabelle felt something cold and hard crystallizing in her chest.

For the first time since Marcus had discarded her, she wasn’t thinking about loss or heartbreak or the impossibility of her situation.

She was thinking about justice.

If you’ve been following this story’s descent into darkness, make sure you’re subscribed because what comes next will challenge everything you think you know about revenge, medicine, and the dangerous intersection where love becomes lethal.

The transformation we’re about to witness proves that sometimes the most dangerous person in any hospital isn’t the one holding a scalpel, it’s the one holding a grudge.

Over the following weeks, as Marcus returned to his perfect family life and pretended their affair had never happened, Isabelle began her psychological metamorphosis from victim to predator.

The process was gradual, almost clinical in its precision, as if she were applying the same methodical approach she used for patient care to the problem of Marcus Tan.

She didn’t immediately decide on murder.

The idea evolved slowly, emerging from sleepless nights where she replayed every moment of their relationship.

searching for signs she had missed, clues that would have warned her about Marcus’ true nature.

She analyzed their conversations like a forensic investigator, identifying the manipulation techniques he had used, the careful way he had positioned himself as her savior, while actually positioning her as his convenience.

The turning point came during a particularly difficult shift in early May.

Isabelle was caring for a young mother, Lisa Wong, who had contracted HIV from her husband’s affair.

Lisa was pregnant with their second child, desperate to prevent vertical transmission while processing the betrayal that had infected not just her body, but her entire future.

“He said it meant nothing,” Lisa whispered to Isabelle during a quiet moment between treatments.

“Two years of lying, and he said it meant nothing.

How do they do that?

How do they destroy our lives and then act like we’re overreacting”?

As Isabelle held Lisa’s hand and offered comfort she didn’t feel, something clicked into place with terrifying clarity.

Marcus hadn’t just broken her heart.

He had infected her life with the same kind of devastating consequences that HIV brought to families like Lisa’s.

The difference was that HIV could be treated, managed, even prevented.

But the virus Marcus had introduced into her life.

the destruction of her dreams, her financial security, her ability to trust, had no cure.

That’s when Isabelle realized she had access to something that Marcus didn’t know she possessed.

Intimate knowledge of exactly how to weaponize the viruses they treated every day.

Working in Mount Elizabeth’s infectious disease lab had given Isabelle access to HIV positive blood samples from across Southeast Asia.

The lab stored specimens for research purposes, tracking viral loads and resistance patterns that inform treatment protocols throughout the region.

Security protocols existed, but they were designed to prevent accidental exposure, not intentional theft by someone with legitimate access and comprehensive knowledge of storage procedures.

The plan began to form with the same careful attention to detail that Marcus had used to compartmentalize their affair.

Isabelle started staying late after shifts, volunteering for additional lab duties that gave her unsupervised access to specimen storage.

She researched viral loads and infectivity rates, understanding exactly how much contaminated material would be needed to ensure transmission while remaining undetectable in wine or food.

The science was straightforward for someone with her training.

HIV survived outside the body for limited periods under specific conditions, but blood plasma could be preserved and concentrated to maintain viral loads sufficient for transmission.

The key was finding a delivery method that would seem natural, unthreatening, something Marcus would consume without suspicion.

His favorite Merllo became the obvious choice.

During their months together, Marcus had often brought expensive wine to their apartment, educating Isabelle about vintages and regions with the same pedagogical enthusiasm he brought to medical training.

She remembered his preferences clearly.

2015 Chateau Marggo for special occasions, but for regular evenings, he favored a particular Australian Merllo that cost $200 per bottle.

The psychological preparation was more complex than the technical aspects.

Isabelle had to transform herself from someone who saved lives into someone who could deliberately destroy them.

She spent hours rationalizing the decision, constructing moral frameworks that justified what she was planning.

Marcus had infected her life with lies, betrayal, and abandonment.

She would infect his life with consequences that matched the devastation he had caused.

The extraction process required three separate visits to the lab over 2 weeks.

Isabelle selected samples from patients with the highest viral loads using proper medical techniques to draw plasma while maintaining the chain of custody that would make her theft undetectable.

She stored the material in her refrigerator at home hidden in medication vials that her roommates assumed contained insulin for a diabetic patient.

The psychological toll of planning murder, because that’s what this was, regardless of how she rationalized it, manifested in subtle changes that only someone with medical training would recognize.

Isabelle lost weight.

Her appetite disappeared.

Her sleep became fractured and filled with dreams that felt more like tactical planning sessions than rest.

Her work performance remained flawless.

But colleagues noticed a hardness in her demeanor, a clinical detachment that seemed excessive even for someone dealing with terminal patients.

“You’ve been different lately,” Grace observed one evening as they prepared dinner in their shared kitchen.

“Distant.

Are you okay”?

“Just tired,” Isabelle replied.

The same response she had given for weeks.

The new medication protocols require a lot of additional training.

Grace accepted the explanation because it fit the pattern of their lives, long hours, continuing education, the constant pressure to maintain standards that could mean the difference between life and death for their patients.

None of them questioned why Isabelle had suddenly developed an interest in wine appreciation, why she spent her free time researching vintages and storage techniques, why she had purchased expensive bottles that seemed inconsistent with her usual frugal lifestyle.

The final phase of preparation involved convincing Marcus to meet with her one last time.

This required careful psychological manipulation, appealing to his ego and his need to maintain control over their narrative.

Isabelle crafted a message that would seem reasonable, even admirable.

A request for closure that would allow both of them to move forward professionally without awkwardness.

I’ve been thinking about our conversation.

She texted him from a new phone number she had purchased specifically for this purpose.

You were right about maintaining professional boundaries.

I respect that, but I need closure to move forward properly.

One final conversation to end things with dignity.

The appeal to dignity was calculated.

Marcus saw himself as sophisticated, ethical, someone who handled difficult situations with class rather than drama.

The suggestion that Isabelle wanted to end their relationship maturely would appeal to his self-image while addressing his concern about workplace complications.

His response came 6 hours later.

River Valley apartment tomorrow 700 p.

m.

This is final.

The messages curtis revealed Marcus’ confidence that he remained in control, that this meeting would proceed according to his terms and achieve his objectives.

He had no way of knowing that Isabelle had spent weeks planning his destruction with the same methodical precision he had used to plan her discardment.

That night, Isabelle sat in her narrow bed holding the vial of HIV positive plasma that would transform her from victim to executioner.

In 18 hours, she would either find the courage to poison the man who had destroyed her life, or she would discover that love, even betrayed love, still carried enough power to stay her hand.

The countdown to catastrophe had reached its final phase, and neither Marcus nor Isabel fully understood that once the wine was poured, there would be no possibility of return for either of them.

The transformation was nearly complete.

Tomorrow, Dr. from Marcus Tan would discover that some people when pushed beyond their limits don’t just break, they become something infinitely more dangerous.

The River Valley apartment felt different when Isabelle arrived at 6:45 p.

m.

15 minutes before their scheduled meeting.

She had kept the spare key Marcus didn’t know she had copied months earlier, when their relationship still felt permanent, and she had imagined a future where such details mattered.

Now, as she let herself into the space where they had once made love, the sterile luxury felt like a mosselum.

Beautiful, cold, and designed for forgetting.

The wine sat chilling in an ice bucket she had brought from home.

A 2018 Penfolds Graange that had cost her 3 weeks salary.

Marcus would recognize the vintage, would appreciate the gesture, would see it as evidence that Isabelle understood the sophisticated tastes he had tried to cultivate in her during their 18 months together.

What he wouldn’t see was the microscopic addition she had made to the bottle’s contents using a sterile syringe and techniques she had perfected during countless nights of practice.

The HIV positive plasma had been extracted from three different patients over two weeks, concentrated and preserved using methods that maintained maximum viral load while ensuring the mixture would be undetectable by taste or appearance.

The science was elegant in its simplicity.

A few milllers of infected blood plasma introduced into 750 ml of wine.

The alcohol content insufficient to neutralize the virus, but strong enough to mask any subtle changes in flavor or consistency.

Isabelle arranged the apartment with the same attention to detail she brought to patient care.

Soft lighting from table lamps rather than overhead fluoresence.

Classical music playing quietly from Marcus’ expensive sound system.

The Valdi’s Four Seasons.

Something romantic but not overly sentimental.

Cheese and crackers arranged on the coffee table creating the atmosphere of a civilized goodbye between sophisticated adults rather than the confrontation Marcus was expecting.

She had chosen her outfit carefully.

A simple black dress that Marcus had complimented months earlier, professional but elegant, suggesting someone who had moved past their affair rather than someone consumed by revenge.

Her makeup was subtle, her hair pulled back in the style she wore for important presentations at the hospital.

Every detail was calculated to present the image of a woman who had accepted reality and was ready to move forward with dignity.

The vial of HIV positive plasma sat empty in her purse.

Its contents now mixed seamlessly with wine that would taste exactly as Marcus remembered from their previous evenings together.

The transformation was complete.

She had become someone capable of murder disguised as closure.

Marcus arrived precisely at 7 p.

m.

His punctuality a reminder of the control he exercised over every aspect of his life.

He looked tired but confident, dressed in the same tailored suits that had once made Isabelle’s pulse quicken, now serving as armor against any emotional appeals she might attempt.

His BMW’s engine echoed through the parking garage like a countdown timer, marking the beginning of his destruction.

“This is unexpected,” he said, noticing the wine and the carefully arranged atmosphere.

“I thought we were having a conversation, not a social gathering.

I wanted us to end things properly, Isabelle replied, her voice carrying just the right amount of wistful sadness.

18 months deserves more than a 5-minute conversation in a parking garage.

Marcus remained standing near the door, his body language suggesting someone ready to leave quickly if the situation became complicated, but his eyes lingered on the wine, recognizing the vintage, calculating the expense Isabelle had undertaken for their final meeting.

Penfolds Graange, he observed.

That’s quite an investment for goodbye.

You taught me to appreciate good wine, Isabelle said, pouring two glasses with steady hands.

I wanted to show that I learned something valuable from our time together.

The compliment was perfectly calibrated.

Marcus’ ego responded to evidence that his sophistication had influenced someone from a less privileged background.

He accepted the glass she offered, settling into the leather armchair where he had once held her while discussing their shared cases and imagined futures.

To closure, Isabelle said, raising her glass.

To moving forward, Marcus replied, touching his glass to hers.

The wine was perfect, rich, complex, with the subtle tannins that Marcus had taught her to identify and appreciate.

He took a generous sip, then another.

his professional tension beginning to ease as the alcohol and the familiar environment worked their intended effect.

Isabelle matched his consumption sip for sip.

The clean glass in her hand containing only genuine wine while his contained their mutual doom.

I’ve been thinking about what you said.

Isabelle began settling into the sofa where they had spent countless evenings discussing everything from medical ethics to childhood memories about our relationship being convenient for both of us.

Marcus nodded, encouraged by what seemed like acceptance of his position.

I’m glad you understand.

Emotional complications would have made our professional relationship impossible to maintain.

I do understand, Isabelle agreed.

You were managing a difficult period in your marriage, and I was lonely in a new country.

We helped each other through challenging times.

The conversation continued for 47 minutes.

recorded later by investigators as a masterpiece of psychological manipulation disguised as mature discussion.

Isabelle guided Marcus through a careful review of their relationship that reinforced his sense of superiority while gradually extracting admissions that would later prove devastating.

“Did you ever feel genuine affection for me”?

she asked during one particularly intimate moment, her hand resting lightly on his knee.

Of course, Marcus replied, the wine loosening his usual caution.

You’re in remarkable woman, Isabelle.

Intelligent, compassionate, beautiful in different circumstances.

What circumstances would have been different?

Marcus paused, considering his words carefully, despite the alcohol’s influence.

If I hadn’t been married, if our professional situations had been more equal, if the cultural expectations hadn’t been so complicated.

Each admission was another nail in the coffin of his future denials.

Isabelle was building a record of emotional involvement that would contradict any claims that she had misunderstood their relationship significance.

But more importantly, she was watching him consume the wine that carried his destruction, calculating dosages and timing with the precision she had learned from years of administering medications.

“I want you to know that I don’t regret what we shared,” she said as he finished his second glass.

“Even knowing how it ended.

I’m grateful for the experiences, the education, the way you made me feel valued.

You should be grateful,” Marcus replied.

his usual diplomatic filter compromised by alcohol and the comfortable assumption that he remained in control.

Most nurses in your position never get exposure to the kind of research, the level of medical sophistication, the cultural experiences I provided.

The condescension in his voice was breathtaking, revealing exactly how he had always viewed their relationship.

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