
Betrayed Wife's Escape
Chapter 1
The leather chair in James Morrison's office felt cold beneath me as I shifted uncomfortably. The family lawyer had summoned me for what I thought was a routine meeting about my grandfather's estate. The morning sunlight streamed through the floor-to-ceiling windows, casting long shadows across his polished mahogany desk.
"I've finalized all the paperwork, Ms. Hayes," James said, sliding a thick folder toward me. "Congratulations are in order. You're now the sole heir to the Hayes fortune."
I blinked, momentarily stunned. "I'm... a billionaire?"
"Indeed." His thin lips curved into what might have been a smile. "Just over twelve billion, according to our latest valuation."
My grandfather had been wealthy, but I'd never imagined... I swallowed hard, trying to process the number. "And my husband? Ethan doesn't know yet. I wanted to surprise him."
James's expression flickered—something strange passing across his face. "Your husband?"
"Ethan Lawrence," I said, confused by his reaction. "My husband of seven years."
James cleared his throat, his fingers drumming against the folder. "Ms. Hayes, there seems to be some... discrepancy in our records."
"What kind of discrepancy?" My heart began to pound against my ribs.
"We've been conducting standard background checks for the inheritance transfer." He hesitated, then opened the folder and turned it toward me. "There's no record of your marriage to Ethan Lawrence in any legal database."
"That's impossible," I whispered, staring at the blank page where my marriage certificate should have been. "We've been married for seven years. We have a certificate."
James slid another document across the desk. "This is what we found. It appears to be a very sophisticated forgery."
My hands trembled as I picked up the paper—our marriage certificate. The one we'd signed in front of our families, the one that had hung framed in our bedroom for seven years.
"This can't be right," I said, my voice barely audible. "There must be some mistake."
James's eyes held a mixture of pity and professional detachment. "I'm afraid not, Ms. Hayes. We've checked every database, including international records. There is no legal marriage between you and Ethan Lawrence."
The room seemed to tilt around me as I stood abruptly. "I need to go."
"Summer—" James began, but I was already moving toward the door.
"Ethan's at his office," I said, more to myself than to him. "He'll explain this."
But when I arrived at Ethan's building, his assistant's smile faltered when she saw me.
"Is he in?" I asked, trying to keep my voice steady.
"He's... not here right now," she said, her eyes darting nervously to her computer screen. "He's at the airport. Urgent business."
"Did he forget something?" I asked, my mind racing. "I can bring it to him."
"No!" she said quickly, then lowered her voice. "It's... personal business."
My stomach dropped as I headed to the airport, barely aware of how I got there. The terminal buzzed with activity around me, but I moved through it in a daze, drawn by some terrible instinct toward the VIP lounge.
I shouldn't have looked through the glass doors. But I did.
Ethan stood there, his tall frame unmistakable even from a distance. And in his arms was Lauren Carter, his secretary. Her arms were wrapped around his neck, her body pressed against his in an embrace that spoke of intimacy and possession.
"It's about time we had a real wedding ceremony," Lauren was saying, her voice carrying through the partially open door. "I'm tired of being your secret."
Ethan smiled down at her, a smile I hadn't seen in months. "Soon, darling. The charade with Summer is almost over."
Lauren's hand flashed in the light—a diamond ring catching the sun. "I can't wait to be your real wife in everyone's eyes."
I stumbled backward, bile rising in my throat. Somehow I made it home, where I sat in darkness until I heard Ethan's key in the lock hours later.
"Summer?" he called, his footsteps echoing in our foyer.
I sat motionless in the living room as he entered, his tie askew, lipstick smudged at the corner of his mouth. The scent of Lauren's perfume wafted from his jacket.
"Where were you today?" I asked quietly.
"Business meeting," he said dismissively. Then he noticed my face. "What's wrong?"
I held up the fake marriage certificate. "Why did you lie to me for seven years?"
Something cold and unfamiliar flickered in his eyes as he stared at me. "You weren't supposed to find out like this."
"So it's true," I whispered.
Ethan straightened his shoulders, his expression hardening. "Lauren is my wife. My real wife. She saved my life when we were children. She deserves my loyalty."
"And what am I?" My voice cracked despite my efforts to remain composed.
"You were a family obligation," he said coldly. "A business arrangement between our grandfathers that I've fulfilled out of duty."
The truth crashed over me like a wave, drowning everything I thought I knew about my life.
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