
Abandoned Wife's Revenge
Chapter 1
I arranged the last of the white lilies in the crystal vase, stepping back to admire how they complemented the soft cream roses. The Manhattan penthouse gleamed under the afternoon light streaming through floor-to-ceiling windows, every surface polished to perfection. Just like me—the perfect wife, the perfect hostess, the perfect substitute.
My fingers found my wedding ring, twisting it nervously around my finger. Five years of marriage to Ryan, and I still couldn't quite believe it was real. That I, Olivia Sterling—the forgotten twin, the afterthought—had somehow earned my place in this family.
"Everything needs to be perfect," I whispered to myself, adjusting the centerpiece on the dining table for the third time. This dinner was my chance to prove myself worthy of the Sterling name, to show Ryan and my brothers that I could fill the Madison-shaped hole in their lives.
The doorbell's chime sent my heart racing. They were early. I smoothed down my silk blouse and hurried to the foyer, plastering on my most welcoming smile.
But when I opened the door, my smile froze.
Madison stood there, her face pale and drawn, clutching a manila folder to her chest. Behind her, my three brothers—Caleb, Ethan, and Jacob—hovered protectively, their faces etched with concern.
"Madison?" My voice came out as a whisper. "What are you—"
"Oh, Liv," she breathed, her voice fragile as spun glass. With perfect theatrical timing, she swayed dramatically and collapsed into Caleb's waiting arms.
"Someone get her water!" Ethan barked, his eyes never leaving Madison's face.
I stood rooted to the spot as they swept past me, carrying Madison to the living room I'd spent hours preparing. The folder she'd been holding fell open as they passed, papers spilling across my meticulously polished floor. Medical letterhead. Test results. The word "terminal" jumped out at me like a slap.
"It's cancer," Madison whispered, loud enough for me to hear from the foyer. "The doctors say I don't have long."
The collective gasp from my brothers was followed by immediate assurances, promises, and declarations of support. I finally forced my legs to move, entering my own living room like a stranger.
No one looked up as I entered. Madison was curled in the center of my sofa, my brothers forming a protective circle around her. Their backs to me, a wall of exclusion.
"I'll... I'll make some tea," I offered, my voice lost beneath their murmured comforts.
In the kitchen, I pressed my palms against the cool marble countertop, trying to steady my breathing as something dark and terrible uncurled in my chest.
---
The week crawled by in a blur of hospital visits and hushed conversations that stopped when I entered rooms. I tried to help, to be useful, but was consistently pushed aside with dismissive assurances that "the brothers have it handled" or "Ryan's taking care of it."
Ryan. My husband had barely spoken ten words to me since Madison's return, coming home late and leaving before dawn, always with the same explanation: "Madison needed me."
I returned early from the Carmichael charity gala, exhausted from an evening of pitying glances and whispered conversations about "poor Madison" and her "supportive sister." The penthouse was quiet, but a strip of light beneath Ryan's study door told me he was home.
I approached quietly, not wanting to disturb him if he was working. The door was slightly ajar, and I raised my hand to knock, but froze at what I saw inside.
Spread across his desk were photographs—wedding photographs. Not ours, but Madison's aborted wedding. The one she'd fled from five years ago, leaving Ryan at the altar. He'd kept them all this time.
I backed away silently, my heart hammering against my ribs. As I retreated down the hallway, I heard the elevator doors open and laughter—Madison's musical laugh and Ryan's deeper chuckle, a sound I hadn't heard in weeks.
I ducked into the shadows of the corridor, holding my breath as they passed.
"I have my real wife back," Ryan whispered, his voice tender in a way it had never been with me.
Madison giggled, waving a document triumphantly. "The judge was so understanding about my 'condition.' Signing the marriage certificate was just a formality."
They passed by without seeing me, Madison's head resting comfortably on Ryan's shoulder, his arm wrapped possessively around her waist.
In that moment, the carefully constructed illusion of my life shattered like fine crystal. Five years of marriage, of desperately trying to be enough, of believing I'd finally found my place—all of it had been a lie.
I was still the forgotten twin. I had always been the forgotten twin.
And now, I wasn't even a wife anymore.
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