My name is Lauren Mitchell, and for most of my marriage, I believed my husband was the kind of man people write anniversary cards about. Ethan remembered every little thing—how I liked my coffee, which side of the bed I slept on, the fact that I touched my necklace whenever I was nervous. He was patient when we started trying for a baby and nothing happened. He held me through doctor appointments, blood tests, hormone shots, and the quiet kind of grief that settles into a house after too many negative pregnancy tests.
So when Ethan suggested we take a weekend trip to Colorado, I didn’t question it.
“We need to reset,” he told me. “Fresh air, hard climbs, strong body. It’ll be good for you. Good for us.”
He smiled when he said it, that calm, warm smile that had made me trust him from the beginning. He said exercise could help reduce stress, improve circulation, maybe even make pregnancy easier. I wanted to believe him. I wanted to believe there was still an “us” worth saving.
The first warning came before we even left. I found a life insurance envelope in the kitchen drawer while looking for pain relievers. I knew Ethan had a policy through work, but this one had my name on it. A large policy. Recently updated. When I asked him about it, he laughed and kissed my forehead.
“I’m planning for our future, Lauren. That’s what husbands do.”
I let it go, because that’s what wives do when they’re tired of being disappointed and terrified at the same time.
The second warning came at the lodge. Ethan insisted on checking in for both of us and kept me away from the front desk while he talked to the clerk. Later, when I asked why our room key sleeve had only his name on it, he said the printer must have messed up. He said a lot of things that weekend that sounded reasonable just long enough for me to ignore the feeling in my stomach.
On the morning of the hike, the air was thin and sharp, and the trail looked more dangerous than the easy route he had promised. It was steep, narrow, and mostly empty. Ethan said that was the point.
“No crowds. No noise. Just us.”
About an hour in, I noticed fresh rope marks on one of the trees near a drop-off, like someone had secured equipment there recently. When I asked about it, Ethan didn’t even turn around.
“Probably climbers.”
Then I heard voices below us. Male voices. Low. Waiting.
I stopped walking.
“Ethan,” I said, my throat suddenly dry, “who else is out here?”
He turned slowly, smiling too calmly, and stepped closer.
“Just one step closer,” he whispered, “and it’ll all look like an accident.”
For a second, I honestly thought I had misheard him.
The wind was loud, my heart was louder, and nothing about the man standing in front of me matched the words that had just come out of his mouth. Ethan looked the same—same hiking jacket, same wedding ring, same careful expression—but something in his eyes had gone flat. Empty. Like whatever part of him used to love me had already been removed.
I took a step back instead of forward.
He kept coming.
“Lauren,” he said, voice low and controlled, “don’t make this harder than it has to be.”
That was the moment my fear turned into clarity. He wasn’t angry. He wasn’t snapping under stress. This wasn’t a fight that had gotten out of hand. He had planned this.
The insurance policy. The isolated trail. The voices below. The fact that he had insisted I leave my phone in the lodge because “we should disconnect.” The way he had packed my bag himself that morning. It all slammed together at once so hard I almost felt dizzy.
“Who’s down there?” I asked.
He exhaled, irritated now that I wasn’t cooperating. “It doesn’t matter.”
“It matters to me.”
His jaw tightened. “A guide. Someone who’ll say you slipped. Someone who saw you push too hard because you were desperate to get healthy enough to have a baby.”
My whole body went cold.
I stared at him, trying to find the man I married in his face. “Why?”
He actually looked offended by the question.
“Because you were never going to give me the life I wanted,” he said. “Because I’m tired of pretending this is enough. Because I already have someone else waiting for me, and I’m not starting over broke.”
Someone else.
That hurt more than I expected, maybe because betrayal sounds sharper when spoken out loud at twelve thousand feet.
I should tell you I did something brave and cinematic next. I didn’t. I did something desperate. I dropped to the ground like my ankle had twisted and grabbed a fist-sized rock with both hands. Ethan lunged toward me, probably afraid I was going to crawl away, and I swung hard into his knee.
He shouted and stumbled sideways.
I ran.
The trail blurred beneath me. Gravel skidded under my boots. I could hear him behind me, swearing, calling my name in that same fake-gentle voice he used when we were around other people.
“Lauren! Stop! You’re going to fall!”
Then another voice shouted from below, “What’s happening up there?”
So there really was someone.
I rounded a bend and saw a man climbing fast toward us from a lower ledge, wearing outdoor gear but no official park markings. He froze when he saw my face.
“Help me!” I screamed. “He’s trying to kill me!”
The man looked up at Ethan, then back at me, and in that one second of hesitation, I knew he was part of it.
He reached for my arm.
I jerked away, lost my footing, and slid toward the edge. My hands scraped against rock, skin tearing open, and I caught myself on a stunted pine growing out of the dirt. My body hung halfway over open air.
Above me, Ethan limped closer.
Below me, the other man said, almost impatiently, “Do it now. She won’t hold on much longer.”
And Ethan knelt down, looked me straight in the eye, and reached for my fingers.
I thought he was going to pry my hands loose.
Instead, Ethan leaned in so close I could smell his breath and said, almost gently, “You should have let this be easy.”
Then he started peeling my fingers off the branch one at a time.
I screamed—not because I thought someone would hear me, but because pain and terror force sound out of you whether it helps or not. My left hand slipped first. My right hand held for another second, maybe two. Long enough for my wedding ring to cut into my skin. Long enough for me to look at Ethan and finally understand that none of the last few years had meant to him what they meant to me.
Then a voice cracked through the air behind us.
“Park service! Step away from her!”
Everything happened fast after that.
Ethan jerked back. The man below swore and tried to scramble down the slope, but a uniformed ranger came into view from the upper trail with another hiker behind him—a woman in her sixties, breathless and furious, pointing straight at Ethan.
“I heard him,” she shouted. “I heard exactly what he said!”
Later, I found out she had been farther up the ridge taking photos when she heard my scream. She had already reported two men acting strangely near the restricted ledge area earlier that morning, and a ranger had been tracking the route when she flagged him down.
The ranger dropped flat on his stomach and grabbed my wrist. Another hiker helped pull me up. I collapsed on the trail, sobbing so hard I could barely breathe. Ethan tried to switch back into the role of worried husband immediately.
“She panicked,” he said. “She slipped. I was trying to save her.”
But he said it too quickly, too smoothly, like he had rehearsed it. The other man was caught fifty yards down the slope with a burner phone, cash, and a written map of the trail. Ethan had deleted messages, but not all of them. Investigators later recovered enough to build the whole thing: the insurance increase, the affair with a woman in Arizona, the payments to stage witnesses, the plan to make my death look like an overexertion accident on a fertility-focused wellness trip.
At trial, the prosecutor said something I still think about: “Some crimes begin with hatred. This one began with convenience.”
That was the hardest truth. Ethan didn’t try to kill me because he lost control. He tried to kill me because he believed my life was an obstacle to the one he wanted.
I moved back to Ohio after the case and started over in the least dramatic way possible. Therapy. A small apartment. A remote job. Long walks. Silence that no longer felt threatening. People ask if I’ll ever trust anyone again. The honest answer is I don’t know. But I trust myself now, and that saved me long before the ranger did.
So here’s what I’ll say: if a person who claims to love you keeps explaining away your fear, listen to the fear. It may be the only honest voice in the room.
And if this story shook you, tell me this—what was the first red flag you noticed? I think a lot of women are taught to ignore their instincts, and maybe reading each other’s answers is one way we stop doing that.




