
Betrayed Wife Reclaims Her Life
Betrayed Wife Reclaims Her Life Chapter 1
I stood frozen in the foyer, my fingers clutching the edge of a silver picture frame—our wedding photo—as the sound of tires crunching on gravel drew closer. Logan was coming home after three months away. Three months of sparse phone calls, vague explanations, and growing unease in my stomach.
When the door finally swung open, I almost didn't recognize my husband. Logan stood taller somehow, his military uniform pressed to perfection, his face leaner and more angular than when he'd left. But it was his eyes that stopped my greeting in my throat—cold and assessing, as if he were entering a stranger's home rather than returning to his wife of eight years.
"Elsie," he said, my name sounding foreign on his lips.
I stepped forward, the picture frame still in my hands. "Logan, I've missed—"
The words died as a second figure appeared in the doorway. She was tall, willowy, dressed in a cream designer suit that probably cost more than our monthly mortgage payment. Her dark hair was swept into an elegant chignon, not a strand out of place despite the spring breeze outside.
"This is Briella Grant," Logan announced, his voice carrying through our modest foyer in a way that summoned the household staff from their various posts. "She'll be joining us... permanently."
My eyes dropped to her left hand, where a diamond the size of a small pebble glittered obscenely on her ring finger. The wedding photo slipped from my grasp, the glass shattering against the marble floor.
"Mrs. Palmer," Briella extended her hand, her smile not quite reaching her eyes. "I've heard so much about you."
I couldn't move. Couldn't breathe. Somewhere upstairs, I heard Oaklee's small feet padding across the floor, our five-year-old daughter likely curious about the commotion.
"Where would you like your bags, sir?" our driver asked, breaking the terrible silence.
"The master suite," Logan replied without looking at me. "Briella will be taking up residence there."
"But that's—" I started.
"I need to speak with you privately, Elsie," Logan cut me off, gesturing toward his study. "Now."
The study had always been my favorite room—warm mahogany shelves filled with books, the leather sofa where I'd curl up while Logan worked. Now it felt like a courtroom, and I was on trial.
"I've made arrangements," Logan began without preamble, pulling documents from his briefcase. "You and Oaklee will be relocating to the east wing."
"The east wing?" I repeated numbly. "It's been closed for years. The roof leaks, the heating barely works—"
"It's been deemed sufficient," he interrupted, sliding the papers across his desk. "These outline the new living arrangements. Briella will be assuming all hostess duties and managing the main household."
I stared at him, searching for any trace of the man who had once carved me a wooden bracelet by hand because we couldn't afford real jewelry, who had promised we would build our dreams together. "And what am I supposed to be?"
"You remain my first wife, of course," he said, as if offering me a great honor. "But circumstances have changed. My position demands certain... social connections that Briella provides."
"And your daughter?" My voice trembled. "What does your position demand regarding her?"
Something flickered across his face—the first genuine emotion I'd seen since his return. "Oaklee will stay with you, naturally. She's... she's too young to understand the complexities of my new situation."
I heard the unspoken words: She doesn't fit into his new world either.
The next few hours passed in a blur of humiliation. Briella wasted no time asserting her new position. I watched, numb, as movers carried in expensive new furniture while others boxed up my possessions—family photos, my grandmother's quilt, the small treasures that had made this house a home.
"These can go to storage," Briella instructed a worker holding a box of my books. "And those family portraits in the hallway—replace them with the artwork we brought from New York."
I stood in what had been my living room for eight years, now transformed by cream-colored silk drapes and modern art pieces that looked like random splashes of color. The warm, lived-in space where Oaklee had taken her first steps was becoming a sterile showcase.
"Mother?" Oaklee's small voice came from behind me. "Why are they taking our things?"
I turned to her, forcing a smile that felt like it might crack my face. "We're... moving to another part of the house, sweetheart."
As I led her away from the main house, I caught Logan watching us from his study doorway, his expression unreadable. For a moment, our eyes met, and I searched desperately for any sign of the man I had sacrificed everything for.
There was nothing there.
Betrayed Wife Reclaims Her Life of Contents
New Release Novels

















