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The Fifty-Year Plan Dorothy Chambers, a 67-year-old widow, thought she'd found a second chance at love when she married Harold six years ago. But when a stranger on a bus whispers a desperate warning—"He planned everything"—Dorothy's world shatters. She discovers that her mysterious illness isn't age or bad luck. It's arsenic. Her devoted husband has been slowly poisoning her, just as he did to three previous wives over the past thirty years. Each woman died within seven years of marriage, leaving Harold their entire estates. Dorothy is next. But Dorothy isn't like the others. Armed with evidence, a network of survivors, and the fierce determination of women who refuse to be erased, she turns the tables on her would-be killer. Hidden cameras capture Harold's crimes. A lawyer whose mother was his second victim builds an airtight case. And the sister of his first victim, now 87 years old, finally gets to see justice after waiting two decades. As Dorothy grows weaker from the poison accumulating in her system, she must make an impossible choice: escape to safety or continue the dangerous game long enough to gather evidence that will stop Harold forever. One wrong move could mean her death. But backing down could mean more victims. In a heart-pounding final confrontation, with Harold breaking down her bedroom door and police sirens wailing in the distance, Dorothy proves that it's never too late to fight back. That age doesn't mean weakness. That the women society overlooks are often the strongest of all. What happens when Dorothy walks into that courtroom to face the man who spent six years trying to kill her? How many lives does she save by refusing to become another silent victim? And what does true justice look like when you've survived the unthinkable?