Follow
Chapters
Share
A Birkin For Every Lie Novel Cover

A Birkin For Every Lie

There are ninety-nine Hermès Birkins sitting in my walk-in closet. To the world, it' s a collection worth millions. To me, it' s a tally of ninety-nine times my husband, Harris, betrayed me. Each bag was a silent apology I accepted to keep our hollow marriage alive. But the hundredth betrayal wasn't fixed with crocodile leather. On the anniversary of my mother's death, I tracked Harris to my family' s private cemetery. He wasn't alone. Jessica, his "first love," was there, standing over the empty plot reserved for my living father, right next to my mother' s grave. They were digging a hole. Jessica smirked, holding a velvet box containing her dead cat and a plaque that read To Arvel, my eternal companion. "It' s just a cat, Cecily," she laughed, tossing her hair. "Don't be so dramatic. Your father won't mind the company. Besides, it shows who Harris really listens to." For years, I accepted the bags and the lies. But desecrating my family's sacred ground? The submissive wife died in that moment. I walked toward them, clutching the evidence that would destroy Jessica' s life and shatter Harris' s world. "Dig it up," I commanded, my voice colder than the grave. "Or I will bury you both right here."
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

Cecily McNeil POV:

The venom of Jessica' s words, her casual disdain for my family' s sacred ground, festered in my mind. Buttons. The deceased cat. A grotesque parody of a funeral, a perverse assertion of ownership. The memory of her smug voice, the triumphant laugh, twisted my gut. I had to understand how Harris, a man who once seemed genuinely kind, could be so utterly blind, so completely manipulated.

I started digging, not in the ground, but into Jessica' s past. I knew the basics. Jessica Casey, Harris' s high school sweetheart. The girl he' d been madly in love with, the one his formidable mother, Mrs. Shepherd, had disapproved of. The narrative Harris had fed me for years was that his mother, a notoriously snobbish old-money matriarch, had deemed Jessica "unsuitable" due to her working-class background. She' d paid for Jessica to study abroad, effectively removing her from Harris's life, leaving him heartbroken and adrift.

He' d spent years mourning her, a ghost at every meal, a phantom in our bed. I had, in my youthful naiveté, believed I could heal him, that my love could fill the void Jessica left behind. His melancholy, his occasional distance, I' d attributed to that deep, unrequited first love, a wound I hoped to eventually mend. I had truly believed he was a victim of his mother's snobbery, a man who had loved and lost due to circumstances beyond his control.

How foolish I had been. How utterly, completely blind. Now, looking at Jessica' s carefully curated online presence, her flawless influencer facade, a different picture began to emerge. There was a subtle arrogance in her posts, a predatory gleam in her eyes that I had once dismissed as ambition. My past self, so desperately wanting to believe in Harris' s inherent goodness, had painted Jessica as a tragic figure, a victim of class prejudice. My current self, hardened by years of quiet betrayal, saw a different kind of monster. I had been wrong about everything.

I pulled up the photos again, the ones I' d found on Harris' s phone, and that unsettling image from Jessica' s Instagram. My gaze sharpened, focusing on the details. One picture, in particular, stood out. Jessica, smiling, holding what looked like a framed certificate. It was blurry, but the distinctive crest of the McNeil family cemetery association was unmistakable. A permit. A burial permit.

My heart pounded. This wasn't some spur-of-the-moment, emotional decision Jessica had coerced Harris into. This was planned. Someone had applied for and received permission to use a plot in my family cemetery. And given the context, the only plot that would make any sense, any sense at all, was my father's. The sheer audacity was mind-boggling. It was a deliberate, calculated act of aggression.

The next morning, Harris walked through the front door, looking surprisingly refreshed, despite his supposed "business trip." He spotted me in the living room, a flicker of apprehension in his eyes, quickly masked by a practiced smile. "Cecily, darling. You're up early. You look... well, better than yesterday, at least." His eyes scanned my face, searching for signs of reconciliation, for the familiar cracks where he could insert his apologies and expensive gifts.

I felt a cold distance settle over me. His words, his fake concern, they were just props in his ongoing play. "I am," I replied, my voice bland. "I slept well." Another lie. I hadn't slept a wink.

He stepped closer, reaching out to touch my arm. "I'm so sorry about your mother's memorial, Cecily. Truly. It was completely inexcusable." His fingers brushed my skin, an attempt at intimacy.

I pulled away, a subtle but firm movement. "It's fine, Harris," I said, my voice flat. "I handled it." I wasn't just rejecting his touch; I was rejecting his entire performance.

"You must be hungry," he said, shifting gears, trying to find a point of connection. "Let me get you something. Chef can make your favorite omelet."

He was still trying to fix things with food, with comfort, with anything but genuine remorse for his actions. "That would be... acceptable," I said, giving nothing away.

He smiled, a flicker of relief crossing his face. He thought he was winning me back, one meal at a time. "Good. I'll go tell him." He turned and walked towards the kitchen, leaving his phone on the coffee table.

This was it. The second chance I needed. As soon as he was out of sight, I grabbed his phone. My fingers flew across the screen, reopening the monitoring app. I scrolled through the recent messages, my heart a cold, hard knot in my chest.

And there it was. A string of texts from Jessica, timestamped from late last night, after the audio had cut out.

Jessica: "Darling, I've got the permits. It was surprisingly easy. Just a few calls to the old family friend who works at the association. He owes me a favor. He thinks it's for a distant relative's ashes. So sweet!"

Jessica: "And the plot is perfect! Right next to Cecily's mother. It'll be such a statement. A permanent mark. Buttons will be so happy there."

Harris: "Jess, are you sure about this? It feels... wrong. Arvel will be furious if he ever finds out."

Jessica: "Oh, relax, my love. He won't. And if he does, what can he do? The permit's already issued. Besides, it's just a cat. And Arvel's got one foot in the grave anyway. Honestly, Cecily needs to learn her place."

My breath hitched, a strangled sound caught in my throat. The audacity. The sheer, unadulterated evil. Not just burying her cat in my father's plot, but securing a permit under false pretenses. The casual cruelty of her words about my aging father, the disdain for my family, for me. This wasn't just a mistress trying to stake a claim; this was a calculated, malicious assault on my personal history, on my very identity.

A searing pain shot through my head, so sharp it made my vision swim. It wasn't just betrayal; it was desecration. A desecration of family, of memory, of everything sacred.

What kind of monster did this? What kind of man enabled it?

Harris returned, holding a tray with a perfectly cooked omelet and a steaming cup of tea. He placed it carefully on the table. "I'm going to head into the office now, darling. Got a big meeting. Should be back late."

My gaze was steady, unwavering. "Of course, Harris. Big meeting." I knew where he was going. Not to the office. Not for a meeting. He was going to the cemetery. To oversee the burial of Jessica Casey's cat in my father's reserved plot.

I stood up. My hand went to the antique mahogany cabinet in the corner of the room, pulling out a hidden drawer. From it, I retrieved a thick, leather-bound folder. It was old, yellowed at the edges. A private investigator's report, commissioned years ago by Harris's mother, Mrs. Shepherd. A document I' d inherited after her passing, and one I had never fully understood until now. The pieces of the puzzle were finally clicking into place, forming a picture far more sinister than I had ever imagined.

"I need to take care of something," I said, my voice calm, almost emotionless. I took my car keys from the hook by the door.

My hands gripping the steering wheel, I drove. The silence in the car was broken only by the low hum of the engine. My destination was clear. The McNeil family cemetery. The place where my mother rested. The place where my father would one day join her. The place where Jessica Casey planned to spit on our legacy.

You may also like

Against his will: His unwanted Omega Novel Cover
9.3
Eliza Harrington's world shattered the day she married the cold and powerful Romano Alessandro Visconti, a stunning half-Italian Alpha. Their marriage, a year and a half of passionate intensity and devastating coldness, has left her desperate. She wants out. She wants a divorce. But Romano has a counter-offer, one that binds them together even tighter: an heir. Before he grants her freedom, she must give him a son. Trapped in a high-stakes bargain, Eliza uncovers a shocking truth: her own cruel father has a hand in Romano's heartless behavior. Can she find a way to trust the man who calls her his "cara," his beloved, even as he pushes her away? Or will she lose herself in this tangled web of love, lies, and betrayal?
Captured and claimed by the mafia Don Novel Cover
9.0
I'm wanted, Kimberly. Wanted by the Mafia..." Those were my father’s final words before he died in my arms. Moments later, I saw those legs step out of the shadows, marking the beginning of my nightmare. Leonardo Fiore, a cold Mafia Don,who is determined to use Kimberly as a tool in his game for power. His world is cruel and his words are like ice. "There's no love here, Kimberly,” he whispered. It's not part of the deal.” But Kimberly isn't one to accept whatever fate brings, without a fight. “If your love is not part of the deal, I'll make it mine to claim” she declared, feisty, crashing her lips onto his. As tension arises, Kimberly must decide : will she melt Leonardo's icy heart or lose herself trying to survive in his dangerous world.
Discarded Heiress: Reborn from Mafia Prison Novel Cover
7.6
Seven years ago, my fiancé, Don Dante Moretti, sent me to prison to take the fall for my adopted sister, Chiara. He called it a gift—a way to protect me from a worse fate. Today, he picked me up from prison only to abandon me at my family's estate. His reason? Chiara was having another one of her "episodes." My parents then informed me I'd be staying in the third-floor storage room, so as not to disturb the fragile girl who stole my life. They celebrated her "recovery" with a lavish dinner party, while I was treated like a ghost. When I refused to join, my mother hissed that I was ungrateful, and my father called me jealous. They assumed I couldn't understand their venomous whispers. But prison was my university. I learned Spanish. I understood every word. It was then I realized I wasn't just a sacrifice; I was disposable. The love I once felt for all of them had turned to ash. That night, in the dusty storage room, I logged onto an encrypted channel I'd set up years ago. A single message was waiting: "The offer stands. Do you accept?" My hands, scarred and steady, typed back, "I accept."
Dooming the mafia devil  Novel Cover
7.3
She was sent to destroy him. A man feared in the shadows, a mafia lord whose name alone commanded power and blood. Serafina Dunes had one mission: send Rapheal Dekoms to hell. Murdered by her husband's mistress, Yuanita Serra was ripped from life before her time-only to be reborn as a missionier, and her first task was to kill Rapheal Dekoms. But fate had other plans. What was meant to be a deadly mission became a dangerous game of desire and hate, where every glance and every touch ignited a fire she couldn't control-and threatened to unravel everything he had ever built.
His Unwanted Wife, The Rival Don's Queen Novel Cover
7.6
The gunman pressed a Glock to my temple and gave my husband a choice. "One walks out. One stays. Choose, Mr. Underboss." I wasn't worried. I was Haven. I was his wife of ten years, his Consigliere, the woman who built his empire. Beside me sobbed Gemma, a fragile twenty-two-year-old he had known for six months. "Take Gemma! Leave Haven!" Connor screamed, his honor twisting into something unrecognizable. He walked out of the warehouse with another woman in his arms, leaving me to be butchered. I didn't wait for the bullet. I threw myself through a glass window into the freezing canal. I survived the fall, but the life inside me didn't. After five years of failed IVF, the miracle baby I hadn't even told Connor about was gone. While I lay in a cold hospital room, bleeding out the remains of our child, my husband was buying diamond earrings for the woman who had set me up to die. When the doctor tried to sedate me for the surgery, I grabbed his wrist. "No anesthesia," I commanded. "But the pain..." "I want to feel it," I said, staring at the ceiling. "I want to feel every scrap of him leaving my body." I burned that pain into my soul. Then, I went home, poured gasoline over our wedding bed, and lit a match. Two years later, I returned to the city. Connor thought I was dead. But when he saw me on the arm of his mortal enemy, wearing the crown of a rival Queen, he realized his mistake. He didn't just lose a wife. He started a war.
Just A Vessel: The Surrogate's Escape Novel Cover
7.2
I went to the bank to set up a trust fund for my twins, only to have the manager look at me with pity. "Mrs. Dunlap, the trust requires the *biological* mother's signature." I froze. I *was* their mother. Or so I thought. That day, I learned my husband, the most powerful Mafia Don on the coast, had used his ex-lover’s frozen eggs. For six years, I wasn't his wife. I was just the incubator. When his "true love," Iliana, returned from exile, my life disintegrated. My children, poisoned by her lies, pushed me down the stairs and called me "just the nanny." Gavyn didn't help me up. He stepped over my bleeding body to take his "real family" out for ice cream. But the ultimate betrayal happened on a windswept cliff. Staged by Iliana, we were both tied up, allegedly rigged to explode. Forced to choose who to save, Gavyn didn't hesitate. He cut Iliana loose. "You did this to yourself, Alex," he said, driving away with the children, leaving me to die. He thought he was leaving behind a corpse. He didn't know I had skimmed ten million dollars from the household accounts. "Cut me loose," I told the hitman, transferring the money. "And tell him the ocean took me." Two years later, the Don is on his knees in my garden, begging for a second chance. Too bad he has to get through my new fiancé first—the head of the rival cartel.