
Blind Wife Exposes Deception
Blind Wife Exposes Deception Chapter 1
The hardwood floor felt cool beneath my bare feet as I navigated the familiar path down the hallway of our penthouse. My fingers trailed lightly along the wall, counting doorways—a habit I'd developed in the three years since losing my sight. I didn't really need my white cane inside our home anymore, but I carried it anyway, tapping occasionally for reassurance.
I was heading to retrieve my sketchbook from the library. Though I couldn't see my drawings anymore, the act of creating—feeling the texture of the paper, the glide of charcoal between my fingers—remained one of my few remaining connections to my former life as an artist.
The low rumble of male laughter drifted from Connor's study. My husband was entertaining friends tonight—something about celebrating a business merger. He'd kissed my forehead earlier, his cologne lingering as he suggested I rest in our bedroom. 'Just boring business talk, my sweet, helpless girl,' he'd murmured, his thumb brushing my cheek in that possessive way of his.
I was about to pass the study when Connor's voice, loosened by what I assumed was expensive scotch, carried clearly through the partially open door.
'I swear to God, Mitchell, your impression is getting too good. She didn't suspect a thing last night?'
More laughter erupted, and I froze, my cane suspended mid-tap.
'Gentlemen, I'd like to propose a toast,' a voice I recognized as Julian Croft announced. 'To the most entertaining blind date in Manhattan.'
The explosion of cruel laughter made my blood run cold.
'Blind date.' The pun wasn't lost on me. My fingers tightened around my cane as I inched closer to the doorway.
'You should have seen her face when I told her how beautiful she looked in that blue dress,' another voice said—Ryan Mitchell's. 'She had no idea it was red.'
My heart hammered against my ribs. What were they talking about?
'Three months of this game, and she still thinks it's me in bed with her every night.' Connor's voice was smug, satisfied. 'Mitchell, you're getting the most turns lately. Should I be jealous?'
'Just following the rotation,' Ryan replied, his voice strangely tight. 'Besides, Madison would kill you if you actually touched your substitute wife.'
Substitute wife. The words pierced through me like a physical blow.
'Madison's the one who came up with the game in the first place,' Connor said. 'She thinks it's hilarious. Says it keeps me entertained while I wait for her to finish with that European business expansion.'
'The perfect arrangement,' Julian chimed in. 'You get the publicity of the devoted husband caring for his blind wife, Madison gets to build her empire knowing you're not actually sleeping with the stand-in, and we get...well, the benefits.'
I backed away from the door, my legs trembling so violently I feared they would give out. I retreated to the staircase landing, gripping the banister for support as their words continued to assault me.
'To think she actually believes you married her for love,' someone said.
'Well, I needed someone after Madison temporarily chose her career. The press ate up the story—wealthy businessman marries beautiful artist after tragic accident. Perfect PR.'
My entire body had gone numb. Three years of marriage—a lie. The tender moments, the whispered promises in the dark—all fabricated. And worse, for the past three months, I'd been intimate with...who? Different men taking turns pretending to be my husband?
I made my way back to our—my—bedroom, moving silently despite my shaking limbs. Once inside, I closed the door and slid down against it, my cane clattering to the floor.
The next morning, I woke with swollen eyes and a hollow feeling in my chest. Connor had left early for a meeting—or so the housekeeper informed me. I wondered bitterly if it was actually a meeting or a rendezvous with Madison.
In the bathroom, I fumbled through the cabinet for my face cream, when my fingers brushed against a small, unfamiliar box. I pulled it out, running my fingertips over it to identify it. A pregnancy test. Probably left by one of the housekeepers.
A sudden, terrible suspicion seized me. The nausea I'd been experiencing, the tenderness in my breasts—symptoms I'd attributed to stress.
With trembling hands, I took the test. As I waited for the result, a strange calm settled over me. When I finally held the plastic stick, I didn't need sight to know what it would show. Somehow, I could feel the truth in my body.
Two pink lines. Pregnant. And I had no idea who the father was.
But instead of collapsing into despair, something shifted inside me. A cold, clear purpose crystallized in my mind. This child—this innocent life—deserved better. And so did I.
I pressed my hand against my still-flat stomach, and for the first time since overhearing that conversation, my lips curved into a smile. Not a smile of joy, but of determination.
They thought my blindness made me weak, made me a perfect victim for their cruel game. They had no idea that their biggest mistake wasn't their betrayal—it was underestimating me.
This baby wasn't going to be my downfall. It would be my secret weapon.
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