
After My Betrayed Wife's Bold Return
Chapter 2
The week following the dinner party disaster passed in a haze of careful avoidance. I kept to the shadows of the Matthews estate, moving through my daily routines like a ghost haunting rooms that had never truly been mine. The torn sleeve of my navy dress had been mended, but the memory of that humiliation clung to me like the scent of failure.
It was Tuesday afternoon when Mrs. Matthews summoned me to the main parlor with her usual imperious tone. "Everly, come here immediately. We have a guest."
I smoothed my simple gray dress and checked my reflection in the hallway mirror before entering. What I found waiting made my breath catch in my throat.
A woman sat elegantly on the cream silk sofa, her auburn hair styled in perfect waves that caught the afternoon light streaming through the tall windows. She wore a emerald green dress that hugged her curves in all the right places, and diamonds sparkled at her throat and ears. Everything about her screamed wealth, sophistication, and confidence—everything I had never been allowed to be.
"Everly, dear," Mrs. Matthews said with a smile that never reached her eyes, "I'd like you to meet Vanessa Torres, my late husband's cousin's daughter. She'll be staying with us indefinitely."
Vanessa rose gracefully, extending a perfectly manicured hand. "How lovely to finally meet Ridge's wife," she purred, her voice honey-sweet with an underlying edge. "I've heard so much about you."
I shook her hand, noting how soft her skin was compared to my own work-roughened fingers. "Welcome to our home, Miss Torres. I hope your stay will be comfortable."
"Oh, I'm certain it will be." Her smile was predatory. "Mrs. Matthews has been so kind, showing me around, explaining how things work here. I do hope I won't be too much trouble."
Over the following days, Vanessa made herself remarkably at home. I first noticed the changes in small ways—the staff suddenly seemed confused about their duties, coming to me with conflicting instructions. When I investigated, I discovered Vanessa had been "helpfully" reorganizing the household schedule.
"I thought the morning cleaning routine seemed inefficient," she explained when I confronted her in the servants' hall. "Really, Everly, you've been letting them slack off terribly. A proper lady of the house needs to maintain standards."
My cheeks burned. "I've managed this household for three years—"
"And it shows," she interrupted with a laugh that tinkled like broken glass. "Don't worry, I'm happy to help. After all, we're family now."
But it was the roses that truly declared war.
I returned from the market Thursday afternoon to find the entire main floor filled with massive arrangements of blood-red roses. Their cloying perfume hit me like a physical blow, triggering memories I'd spent years trying to suppress. Catherine had loved roses. They had filled the house during her final illness, their scent mingling with the smell of medicine and death until I could no longer tell where beauty ended and decay began.
"Beautiful, aren't they?" Vanessa appeared beside me, her eyes glittering with malicious satisfaction. "I thought the house needed more life, more color. These are Catherine's favorites—Ridge told me all about her exquisite taste."
My hands trembled as I gripped my market basket. "The household budget doesn't typically cover such elaborate arrangements."
"Oh, don't worry about that." She waved dismissively. "Ridge was more than happy to cover the expense when I explained how dreary everything looked. He said Catherine would have wanted the house to be beautiful again."
The casual way she spoke his name, the intimate knowledge she claimed—it all felt like tiny knives slicing at whatever remained of my dignity. I excused myself and fled to the kitchen, where I spent the next hour scrubbing pots that were already clean, trying to wash away the scent of roses that seemed to follow me everywhere.
Friday brought the afternoon tea that would shatter what little remained of my illusions.
I had been reviewing the weekly accounts in my small sitting room when I remembered I needed to discuss the grocery order with Mrs. Matthews. The main parlor door stood slightly ajar, and I could hear the gentle clink of china and soft laughter from within.
I pushed the door open and froze.
Vanessa sat perched on the arm of Ridge's leather chair, her emerald dress pooling elegantly around her. Her hand rested on the back of his neck, her fingers playing with the hair at his collar in a gesture so intimate it made my stomach lurch. Ridge's face was relaxed in a way I hadn't seen in years, his usual harsh lines softened as he gazed up at her.
Mrs. Matthews sat across from them, pouring tea with a smile of genuine warmth—the kind of expression she had never once directed at me.
"Oh, Everly," Mrs. Matthews said without looking up from the delicate china. "Perfect timing. Vanessa was just telling us the most amusing story about her time in Paris."
I stood frozen in the doorway, my account books clutched against my chest like armor. Vanessa turned toward me with a expression of mock concern.
"My dear, you look absolutely exhausted," she said, her voice dripping with false sympathy. "So pale and haggard. Are you feeling quite well?"
Ridge's eyes flicked over me with obvious distaste. "Perhaps you should take your tea in the kitchen today, Everly. You do look rather... unwell. We wouldn't want to spoil the mood."
The dismissal hit me like a physical blow. In my own home—or what I had foolishly believed was my home—I was being banished like a servant who had overstepped her bounds.
"Of course," I managed, my voice barely above a whisper. "I'll just... I have accounts to review anyway."
As I backed out of the room, I caught Vanessa's triumphant smile and the way her fingers tightened possessively on Ridge's neck. The door closed behind me with a soft click that sounded like the final nail in a coffin.
I stood in the hallway for a long moment, listening to their resumed laughter, before making my way to the kitchen where I belonged—or so it seemed I always had.
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