
After My Husband Betrayed Me for Whitney
Chapter 2
The acrid smell of smoke drifted through our bedroom window at 11:47 PM, pulling me from restless sleep. I stumbled to the window, my heart already racing before my mind fully processed what I was seeing—an orange glow painting the eastern mountains, flames licking at the darkness like hungry tongues.
My phone buzzed with emergency alerts. Wildfire. Eastern slope. Immediate evacuation required.
Phillip's parents. His sister. They were camping right there.
I called Phillip's number with shaking fingers, each ring stretching into eternity. When he finally answered, Whitney's bright laughter filled the background, followed by the artificial click of camera shutters.
"Phillip!" My voice cracked with panic. "There's a wildfire! It started from the eastern slope—your parents are camping right in its path!"
"Rose?" His tone was flat, annoyed, like I'd interrupted something important. "What are you talking about?"
"The fireworks!" I screamed, pressing the phone so hard against my ear it hurt. "Whitney's blue fireworks started a fire! It's spreading toward the campgrounds! You have to get emergency crews there now!"
Silence. Then Whitney's voice, sweet and concerned: "Is everything okay, Phillip?"
"It's just Rose," he said, not bothering to cover the phone. "She's having one of her episodes."
My blood turned to ice. "Episodes? Phillip, I'm looking at the fire right now! Your family could die!"
"Stop it." His voice turned cold, dangerous. "This is pathetic, even for you. Whitney's display was perfect—I'm helping her document it for her photography portfolio. The fireworks ended hours ago."
"Hours ago?" I stared at the growing inferno. "And now the mountain is burning! How can you not see—"
"You're sick," he spat. "Making up emergencies to ruin Whitney's moment? I'm not falling for this jealous act anymore."
The line went dead.
I called back immediately. Straight to voicemail. Again. Voicemail. My hands trembled as I dialed the fire department's emergency line, but it was overwhelmed—busy signals and automated messages about "unprecedented call volume."
Through the window, the fire had doubled in size.
---
By dawn, the eastern slope was a blackened wasteland. I'd spent the night glued to emergency broadcasts, watching helicopter footage of the devastation, praying for news about survivors from the campgrounds.
Phillip's truck pulled into our driveway at 6:23 AM. He stumbled out, his uniform wrinkled, his face streaked with soot and something else—something that made my stomach clench with dread.
I met him at the door. "Your parents—"
"Don't." The word came out broken, barely human.
But I could see it in his eyes. The hollow, shattered look of someone whose world had just collapsed. "They're gone, aren't they?"
He collapsed against the doorframe, his whole body shaking. For a moment, he looked like the man I'd married—vulnerable, devastated, human. "We found them trying to reach their car. The flames moved too fast. They..." His voice shattered. "My sister was holding Mom's hand."
I reached for him, some buried instinct to comfort overriding everything else. "Phillip, I'm so—"
"No." He jerked away, his grief transforming into something harder, more dangerous. "This wasn't... it couldn't have been the fireworks. Whitney's display was controlled. Professional."
My blood chilled. "What?"
"The fire started from unknown causes," he said, his voice gaining strength as he spoke. "Probably campers who didn't properly extinguish their fire. Or electrical lines. These things happen during fire season."
"Phillip, you know that's not true."
His eyes met mine, and I saw something that terrified me—not grief, not guilt, but calculation. "That's the official report. That's what happened."
---
Three days later, I stood in the funeral home's viewing room, watching Phillip accept condolences with the practiced composure of a public official. He'd somehow managed to shift into damage control mode, his fire chief persona firmly in place.
Whitney stood beside him, playing the supportive family friend, her hand resting possessively on his arm. She'd even worn black—though I noticed she'd still managed to make it fashionable, her dress perfectly fitted, her makeup flawless despite her "grief."
"Rose." Phillip's voice cut through my observations. He'd approached while I was staring at his parents' closed caskets, trying to process that they were really gone. "We need to talk."
He led me to a quiet corner, away from the other mourners. Whitney followed, her presence like a shadow.
"The investigation is ongoing," he said quietly, his words carefully measured. "They're looking into all possible causes of the fire."
"Good," I said. "Then the truth will come out."
His jaw tightened. "The truth is that my parents died in a tragic wildfire of unknown origin. And that's what you're going to tell anyone who asks."
I stared at him. "What?"
"Your parents were in the area that day," Whitney said softly, her voice dripping false sympathy. "Investigators might start looking at them. You know how these things go—someone always needs to be blamed."
The threat hit me like a physical blow. "You're going to frame my parents?"
"I'm trying to protect everyone," Phillip said, but his eyes were cold, calculating. "Including you. But I need you to support the official narrative. No more wild theories about fireworks. No more accusations."
I looked between them—my husband and his obsession—and finally understood the depth of his moral corruption. He would sacrifice anyone, destroy anyone, to protect Whitney Berry.
"No," I said quietly.
Phillip's face darkened. "Rose—"
"No." I stepped back, my voice growing stronger. "I won't lie for you. I won't let you destroy my family to cover up what you've done."
Whitney's perfectly manicured hand tightened on Phillip's arm. "She's going to cause problems," she whispered, just loud enough for me to hear.
Phillip's eyes never left mine. "Then we'll have to deal with those problems."
In that moment, standing in the shadow of his parents' caskets, I realized my marriage wasn't just over—it was about to become a war.
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