
Betrayal on Yacht
Chapter 2
The drive home from the cemetery felt like navigating through fog, my hands gripping the steering wheel so tightly my knuckles had gone white. The stranger's heart in my chest hammered against my ribs—no longer Ford's gift, just another lie beating inside me. Every red light gave me time to think, to plan, to decide how to handle what I'd discovered.
By the time I pulled into our driveway, I'd made my choice. I wouldn't confront Kieran directly—not yet. I needed to understand the full scope of his deception before I showed my hand.
The house felt different as I stepped inside, like a stage set I was seeing for the first time. Everything looked the same—the cream walls, the family photos, the fresh flowers Kieran brought home every Friday—but now it all felt hollow, performative.
"Eleanor?" Kieran's voice called from the kitchen. "You're home late. How was your appointment with Dr. Chen?"
I paused in the hallway, steadying my breathing. "Fine. Just routine bloodwork." The lie slipped out easily, surprising me with its smoothness. "Where were you this afternoon?"
Kieran appeared in the doorway, his tie loosened, sleeves rolled up—the picture of a hardworking husband coming home from the office. "Stuck in meetings all day. You know how it is with the Morrison account." He crossed to me, pressing a kiss to my forehead that felt like ice against my skin. "Sorry I couldn't drive you to the appointment. Was traffic terrible?"
Another lie. I'd seen him at the cemetery, his hands in Maren's hair, his mouth on hers. The Morrison account was probably code for whatever hotel room they'd retreated to after their graveside rendezvous.
"Not too bad," I managed, stepping back from his touch. "I think I'll start dinner."
Over the next few days, I began my investigation with the methodical precision of a detective. While Kieran showered each morning, I photographed his phone screen when notifications came in. While he slept, I memorized his laptop password by watching his fingers. I became a stranger in my own home, moving through our shared spaces like a ghost gathering evidence.
The financial records were the most damning. Late one evening, while Kieran worked in his study, I accessed our joint accounts from my laptop in the bedroom. What I found made my stomach churn with a mixture of rage and nausea.
Transfers to Maren's account—thousands of dollars over the past eighteen months. Medical bills paid from our savings, expensive treatments at private clinics. A monthly allowance that exceeded what most people made in a year. Even the down payment on her new apartment, the one she'd claimed was covered by Ford's life insurance.
My brother's money. My family's resources, funneled to his widow while she carried on an affair with my husband. The betrayal had layers I was still uncovering, each one more devastating than the last.
I printed everything, hiding the evidence in a folder tucked behind my jewelry box. Each bank statement, each transfer receipt, each lie documented in black and white.
The family dinner arrived like a scheduled performance. Maren had suggested it—"to keep Ford's memory alive," she'd said with tears in her eyes that I now recognized as expertly manufactured. We met at Chez Laurent, the French restaurant where Ford had proposed to her three years ago.
Maren arrived fifteen minutes late, her face pale and drawn, one hand pressed dramatically to her chest. "I'm so sorry," she breathed, sliding into the booth beside Kieran. "I had another episode this afternoon. The doctors say my heart is still adjusting."
Ford's heart, I thought bitterly, watching Kieran's face flood with concern.
"Are you sure you should be out?" he asked, his hand immediately covering hers on the table. "We could have postponed—"
"No, no." Maren's smile was brave and tremulous. "Eleanor and I need these dinners. They help me feel close to Ford."
I sipped my wine and said nothing, studying the tableau before me. Kieran's attention was entirely focused on Maren—adjusting her shawl when she shivered, ordering her meal when she claimed to feel too weak, cutting her food into smaller pieces when she said her hands were shaking.
Meanwhile, I sat across from them, invisible. When I mentioned feeling dizzy earlier that day, Kieran barely looked up from Maren's plate. When I asked about scheduling my next cardiac follow-up, he suggested I handle it myself since his schedule was so busy.
The pattern was crystal clear now. Every family gathering, every shared meal, every moment I'd attributed to Kieran's natural kindness toward his grieving sister-in-law—it had all been an elaborate dance around their affair.
"Eleanor, you're so quiet tonight," Maren observed, her voice honey-sweet with false concern. "Are you feeling alright?"
I met her eyes across the table, seeing her clearly for perhaps the first time. The practiced vulnerability, the calculated fragility, the way she leaned into Kieran's space while speaking to me.
"I'm fine," I said, my voice steady despite the fury building in my chest. "Just thinking about Ford. About how much he loved both of us."
Maren's hand fluttered to her throat, and for just a moment, her mask slipped. Guilt flickered across her features before she recovered, pressing closer to Kieran.
"He did," she whispered. "He wanted us to take care of each other."
The irony was suffocating. Ford had indeed wanted us to care for each other—but not like this. Never like this.
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