
After My Husband Faked Death as His Twin
Chapter 2
I woke with the first light of dawn, my eyes puffy from tears that had finally come in the solitude of night. The note signed 'Michael' with Christopher's endearment still clutched in my hand, crumpled from my restless sleep. The Blake family estate was quiet, but my mind roared with questions I wasn't ready to face.
A soft knock at my door startled me. Eleanor stood there, her face a mask of practiced sympathy.
"We're sorting through Christopher's things today," she announced, her voice gentle but leaving no room for refusal. "Victoria thought you might want to help with his wardrobe."
I nodded, grateful for something to occupy my hands if not my heart. "I'll be down shortly."
Christopher's dressing room felt like a mausoleum. His scent—sandalwood and citrus—lingered in the fabric of his suits, each one a memory. I ran my fingers over his favorite navy blazer, remembering how it had hugged his shoulders at our anniversary dinner just months ago.
"Such a waste," Victoria sighed, efficiently sorting ties into piles. "Michael can use some of these, at least."
Something in her tone made me look up sharply. There was no grief there, only practical assessment. Michael stood by the window, his back to us, shoulders tense beneath his casual shirt.
"Could you reach that box on the top shelf?" Victoria asked him, pointing to a hatbox tucked away.
Michael stretched upward, his shirt riding up. That's when I saw it—a diagonal scar, about three inches long, peeking from beneath the fabric. My heart stopped.
That scar. I knew that scar intimately—had traced it with my fingertips countless times in the darkness of our bedroom. Christopher had gotten it falling from a tree when he was nine, requiring twelve stitches. He'd told me the story on our third date, showing me the mark that his mother had called his "badge of childhood courage."
But this was Michael. Why would Michael have identical—
Unless.
My fingers went numb, the silk tie I'd been holding slipping to the floor. Michael—or whoever he was—turned at the sound, his eyes meeting mine. For a split second, I saw recognition there, then something else. Wariness.
"Are you alright, Isabella?" he asked, his voice so like Christopher's it made my chest ache. "You look pale."
"Just... memories," I managed, bending to retrieve the tie, using the motion to hide my face until I could compose it. "I think I need some water."
I fled, my legs barely carrying me to the hallway bathroom where I locked the door and pressed my back against it, breathing hard.
The scar. The note. The way he looked at me.
---
Later that afternoon, I found myself in Christopher's study, ostensibly organizing his papers. My real purpose was more deliberate. I needed evidence, confirmation that I wasn't losing my mind to grief.
In the bottom drawer of his desk, I found what I was looking for—a collection of letters and cards we'd exchanged over the years. My hands trembled as I laid them out alongside correspondence signed by "Michael" that I'd found in another folder.
The handwriting was identical. Not similar as might be expected from twins—identical. The same pressure on downstrokes, the same slight curve to the letter 'y'. And there, in a note signed "Michael" from just three months ago: "The view from the balcony reminds me of Santorini."
But Michael had never been to Santorini. Christopher and I had honeymooned there, alone.
My blood ran cold as pieces began falling into place. I carefully returned everything to its proper place, my mind racing with implications too terrible to fully contemplate.
---
"Isabella, you've outdone yourself," Richard proclaimed at dinner that evening, helping himself to more roast chicken. "Christopher always said you were a miracle in the kitchen."
I forced a smile, hyper-aware of every glance, every word. "Just my mother's recipe."
"The rosemary and lemon," Victoria commented, taking a delicate bite. "Christopher always said it reminded him of that little restaurant in the Village."
My fork paused halfway to my mouth. "Yes, Café Lucien. Though I don't recall making it for you before, Michael."
The table went silent. Victoria's face flickered with something—panic?—before she laughed lightly. "Oh, Christopher must have mentioned it to us. He was always bragging about your cooking."
But I saw it. The flinch. The quick glance between them.
And in that moment, I knew with absolute certainty: my husband wasn't dead. He was sitting across from me at this table, wearing his brother's name like a stolen coat, thinking me too grief-stricken and naive to notice.
I smiled and took another bite of chicken, tasting nothing but betrayal.
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