I hadn’t even finished removing my makeup when my father-in-law knocked on the door.

In that luxurious 5-star hotel room, everything suddenly felt cold and suffocating.


He didn’t look at me. Just shoved a bundle of cash into my hand — ten $100 bills — and stammered:

“If you want to live, leave now. Tonight.”

I froze. Like my heart had been doused in ice water.

My name is Anjali, 26 years old, an accountant at a construction firm in Delhi. I met Raghav, my husband, during a corporate partnership meeting between our companies. Raghav is three years older — a young, handsome, charming CEO, and the only son of a wealthy and well-known family from Lucknow. Our relationship moved quickly. Within six months, he proposed.

My family is ordinary. Both my parents are retired government clerks. When Raghav asked for my hand, my mother cried with happiness, and even my strict father gave his blessing. I’d always been the obedient daughter — never once believing I’d make the wrong choice.

The wedding was grand — held in one of Delhi’s finest hotels.
Everyone admired me for “marrying rich.”
But I wasn’t marrying him for the money.
He made me feel safe.

Until the wedding night…

My father-in-law — Mr. Rajendra Mehta — was a quiet, reserved man. From the first time we met, I’d felt he didn’t like me.
But never did I imagine he’d say something like that — on the night of his son’s wedding.

“I… I don’t understand. What do you mean, uncle?” I stammered, still in shock.

He tightened his grip on my hand and whispered like someone terrified of being overheard:

“Don’t ask questions. The moment you step outside, someone will be waiting. Don’t come back.
This is all I can do for you.”

Then he looked at me — haunted, frightened — as if doing this might cost him his life.

And then… he left.

I stood there, trembling, a thousand questions swirling in my mind.

In the other room, Raghav was laughing on the phone with his friends — oblivious to what had just happened.

I panicked. I didn’t know who to trust.
Then I called the only person I could — my best friend, Priya.

“Have you lost your mind?! Run away on your wedding night? Did someone threaten you?” she yelled.

I told her everything.
She went quiet. Then said:

“If your father-in-law said that, it’s serious.
I’m coming to get you.”

Ten minutes later, Priya was waiting outside the hotel lobby.
I pulled my suitcase behind me, head down like a fugitive.
It was 2:17 a.m.
A gentle drizzle was falling over Delhi.

I hid at Priya’s apartment.
Turned off my phone.
Thirty missed calls from my mother. Countless from my in-laws. From Raghav.

But I was terrified.
I didn’t know what I was afraid of — Raghav… or his entire family.

The next morning, while Priya was at work, I finally turned my phone back on.
Hundreds of messages flooded in — some scolding, some pleading, some threatening.

But one stood out.

A message from an unknown number:

“My father is a good man. But he won’t be able to save you. If you return, you’ll discover the truth — or disappear forever.”

That night, Mr. Mehta messaged me directly:

“If you’re still in Delhi, meet me. One time only. 8 p.m.
Cafe Imperial, second floor. I’ll tell you everything.”

I had to go.

The cafe was old, tucked inside a quiet alley in Old Delhi.
I climbed the wooden stairs. He was already there, waiting — his eyes tired.

He spoke fast, in hushed tones:

“You know Raghav is our only son. But do you know how his first wife died?”

I froze.

“He… he was married before?”

He nodded.

“No one told you. She died two months after the wedding.
Fell down the stairs, they said. But everyone in this house knows… it wasn’t an accident.
I never dared say anything. But I’m telling you now — because you’re next.”

My blood ran cold.

Then he pulled out a USB drive.

“Take this. It has a voice recording and a few documents. See for yourself.
But don’t let anyone know.”

“Why don’t you take this to the police?” I asked.

He gave a bitter laugh.

“Because even the police won’t touch this family.”

Back at Priya’s apartment, I opened the USB.

There were several files:

An 8-minute audio recording.

Scanned copies of medical documents.

A partially redacted handwritten report.

I played the audio first.

A woman’s voice — clear, trembling with fear:

“I can’t stay here. Since the wedding, Raghav hasn’t let me leave the house.
He changes the locks every week.
His mother says I must give birth to a son — or else I’ll be ‘taken care of,’ like the others.
I don’t even know what I did wrong…”

It was the voice of Neha — Raghav’s previous wife. Her name appeared in some of the documents.

The recording was dated two days before her death.

The written report was from Mr. Mehta himself — describing years of strange behavior, family obsessions, and a dark family history:

A lineage of psychological instability.
A great-grandfather who murdered his wife, believing “a virgin’s blood preserves family fortune.”
A mother-in-law obsessed with astrology and ritual, who believed that a daughter-in-law must bear a male heir within the first year or face “elimination.”

Neha had died within 3 months of marriage — from a fall.
Another unnamed ex-wife had reportedly taken her own life.

Everything had been swept under the rug.

I felt nauseous.

Raghav — the man who kissed my forehead just a day earlier —
was at the center of something horrifying.

I wanted to run. But Priya stopped me:

“You can’t just disappear. They’ll know.
We need a plan. I’ll help you.”

With the help of Priya and a journalist friend, I compiled the documents, submitted them anonymously to authorities, and contacted a lawyer.

Three days later, an official investigation was launched.
It wasn’t headline news — but it was serious enough.
Raghav’s family was summoned.
And for the first time, Mr. Mehta agreed to testify.

A few weeks later, I officially filed for divorce.
Raghav didn’t react like I’d expected.
He just stared at me and said:

“So you’re leaving too. Just like the others.”

I shivered.

There wasn’t a trace of regret in his eyes.

A month later, the investigation was quietly closed.
His family used money and influence to silence the press —
but the legal community wasn’t so easy to suppress.

I don’t know what will happen to Raghav.
I no longer care.

I left Delhi and moved to Mumbai.
Starting over.
My parents were heartbroken — but they supported me.

I don’t trust easily anymore.
But I know one thing: I survived.

Some time later, I received a handwritten letter. No name. Just a message:

“You did the right thing.
Thank you for giving me the courage.
— Your father-in-law”

I broke down crying.

There are things you never imagine could happen — until they happen to you.

I’m no longer the Anjali who believed in fairytale love.

But I do believe one thing:

No truth is ever scarier than living a lie.