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Betrayed Wife's Bold Escape Novel Cover

Betrayed Wife's Bold Escape

I checked my watch as the Uber pulled up to our Presidio Heights home. Four hours early. Cameron wasn't expecting me until tonight—the perfect surprise after landing the Westbrook account in Seattle. My heels clicked against the marble foyer as I set down my carry-on, the house eerily quiet except for the distant hum of the air conditioning. "Cameron?" I called out, my voice echoing through our minimalist modern home. No answer. I slipped off my blazer and headed toward our home office, hoping to finalize the contract details before he returned. The afternoon sun streamed through the floor-to-ceiling windows, illuminating dust particles dancing in the air. Cameron's laptop sat open on the desk, screen still glowing—unusual for my meticulous husband who treated his devices like extensions of himself. I moved to close it when a notification flashed across the screen.
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Chapter 1

I checked my watch as the Uber pulled up to our Presidio Heights home. Four hours early. Cameron wasn't expecting me until tonight—the perfect surprise after landing the Westbrook account in Seattle. My heels clicked against the marble foyer as I set down my carry-on, the house eerily quiet except for the distant hum of the air conditioning.

"Cameron?" I called out, my voice echoing through our minimalist modern home. No answer.

I slipped off my blazer and headed toward our home office, hoping to finalize the contract details before he returned. The afternoon sun streamed through the floor-to-ceiling windows, illuminating dust particles dancing in the air. Cameron's laptop sat open on the desk, screen still glowing—unusual for my meticulous husband who treated his devices like extensions of himself.

I moved to close it when a notification flashed across the screen. A video message from Isabella. My sister's name alone made something twist in my stomach—a lifetime of instinct I'd learned to suppress.

I shouldn't look. I shouldn't.

But my finger moved of its own accord, clicking the preview.

The video filled the screen, and my world collapsed.

Isabella—my adopted sister—naked, writhing, moaning my husband's name. The timestamp showed yesterday, while I was preparing my presentation in Seattle.

My hands trembled as I clicked through their message history. Not just once. Not just recently. Over a year of explicit photos, detailed accounts of their rendezvous, plans for their next meeting. My vision blurred as I read Cameron's words to her:

*When are you going to leave that boring husband of yours? Aria's in Seattle all week. Come over tonight.*

Isabella's response: *She's so pathetic. Doesn't even suspect. I'll wear that thing you like.*

The room seemed to tilt sideways. I gripped the edge of the desk, feeling the cool glass against my palms, anchoring me to reality. A reality where I was the fool. The pathetic wife. The biological daughter who was never good enough.

Again.

I took a deep breath, forcing air into lungs that felt crystallized with shock. My fingers moved methodically, downloading their entire conversation history onto a USB drive I found in the desk drawer. Evidence. Proof. Something solid in a world suddenly made of quicksand.

I closed the laptop exactly as I'd found it, slipping the USB drive into the silver locket around my neck—the only thing my grandmother had given me before she left for Paris. Before she escaped her own gilded cage.

The bathroom tiles were cold against my bare feet as I stripped off my clothes and stepped into the shower. I turned the water to its coldest setting, letting it pummel my skin until numbness replaced the burning in my chest. Ice replacing fire. Calculation replacing pain.

They thought I was pathetic. Boring. Unsuspecting.

They had no idea who I really was. Who I could become.

Hours later, after Cameron texted that he'd be "working late" again, I sat in our darkened bedroom with my burner phone—purchased months ago when his late nights first became suspicious. My fingers hovered over the number I'd found through weeks of careful research. A service for the ultra-wealthy. A service for people who needed to disappear.

"Body Double Elite," answered a crisp, professional voice. "How may we assist you?"

"My name is..." I paused, then smiled in the darkness. "Grace Laurent. I need a perfect match. Cost is no object."

"We'll need photographs, measurements, and voice recordings," the voice replied, unperturbed. "And your reason for requiring our services?"

I thought of Cameron and Isabella, laughing at my expense. I thought of the Whitmore family that had never truly wanted me. I thought of the life I'd tried to build, crumbling like sand between my fingers.

"Let's just say," I whispered, "I need to attend my own funeral."

As I hung up, I caught my reflection in the mirror—eyes glittering with resolve, jaw set with determination. For the first time in my life, I didn't see Aria Whitmore, the overlooked daughter, the betrayed wife.

I saw someone dangerous.

I saw someone free.

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