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Betrayed Wife Reclaims Her Life Novel Cover

Betrayed Wife Reclaims Her Life

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.
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Chapter 2

The manila envelope arrived on a Tuesday morning, delivered by Logan's attorney with the same cold efficiency that had become his trademark since returning home. I sat at the small wooden table in our cramped east wing quarters, Oaklee coloring quietly beside me, as I opened what I assumed were routine household documents.

My hands trembled as I read the first page. Then the second. By the third, I could barely see through the tears blurring my vision.

Every account I had opened to support Logan's business ventures—funded with my inheritance from my grandmother's estate—had been transferred to joint ownership with Briella Grant. The social connections I had cultivated over years, the introductions I had made using my family's old money contacts, were now listed as 'mutually acquired assets' belonging to both Logan and his new wife.

"Mother?" Oaklee looked up from her coloring book, her small face creased with concern. "Why are you crying?"

I wiped my eyes quickly, forcing a smile. "Just some paperwork, sweetheart. Nothing for you to worry about."

But it was everything to worry about. The final page detailed my new 'household allowance'—a sum so meager it wouldn't cover Oaklee's school supplies, let alone proper food or clothing. I was being systematically erased from the life I had helped build, reduced to a dependent in my own home.

The sound of laughter drifted up from the main house, where Briella was no doubt planning another of her elaborate social gatherings. I folded the documents carefully, my jaw clenching with each crease.

That evening, the transformation was complete. Crystal chandeliers blazed in the main dining room as Logan's business associates arrived for Briella's first official dinner party as mistress of the house. I watched from the east wing window as luxury cars pulled up the circular drive, disgorging men in expensive suits and women dripping with jewelry.

These were people I had introduced to Logan. Contacts from my family's old social circle who had opened doors for his military career and business ventures. Now they walked past our darkened wing as if it didn't exist.

"Mrs. Palmer?" Margaret, our longtime housekeeper, appeared at my door with a covered tray. Her face was flushed with embarrassment. "Mrs. Grant has instructed that you and the little one take your meals in the kitchen tonight. She said the dining room is... occupied."

I stared at the tray—simple fare, nothing like the elaborate spread I could smell wafting from the main house. "In the kitchen, Margaret?"

"I'm so sorry, ma'am." Margaret's voice cracked. "She said it was temporary, just for tonight, but—"

"It's not your fault." I took the tray, my fingers steady despite the rage building in my chest. "Thank you for bringing it up."

As Margaret hurried away, I caught a glimpse of Logan through the main house windows, raising a toast with his guests. Briella stood beside him in a stunning emerald gown, her hand possessively on his arm as she smiled at our former friends.

Former friends who now looked at her with the same deference they had once shown me.

Two days later, Oaklee woke burning with fever. I pressed my palm to her forehead, feeling the heat radiating from her small body as she whimpered in discomfort.

"It's okay, baby," I whispered, reaching for the phone to call Dr. Harrison, who had been our family physician since Oaklee's birth. "Mommy's going to get help."

The phone rang twice before an unfamiliar voice answered. "Dr. Morrison's office."

"I'm sorry, I was trying to reach Dr. Harrison—"

"Dr. Harrison is no longer the attending physician for the Morales household," the crisp voice interrupted. "All medical matters now go through Dr. Morrison, and Mrs. Grant has requested that any appointments be approved through her office first."

I felt the blood drain from my face. "This is about my daughter. She has a high fever—"

"I understand your concern, but protocol requires Mrs. Grant's authorization. I can schedule you for next Tuesday if—"

"Next Tuesday?" My voice rose to a near shout. "My five-year-old daughter is sick now!"

Oaklee stirred restlessly, her cheeks flushed with fever, and I forced myself to lower my voice. "Please, just let me speak to the doctor."

"I'm sorry, but without proper authorization—"

I hung up, my hands shaking with fury and helplessness. In the span of three days, I had been stripped of my financial independence, excluded from my own home's social functions, and now denied the right to seek medical care for my child.

I looked down at Oaklee, her small body trembling with chills despite the fever, and something crystallized inside me. This wasn't just humiliation anymore.

This was war.

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