
Divorce After Discovering His Affair with Her Sister
Chapter 1
I hummed softly as I gathered Matthew's suits for dry cleaning, a mundane Tuesday task in our seven-year marriage. My fingers brushed something stiff inside his navy jacket pocket—unusual, as Matthew was meticulous about emptying his pockets. Curiosity piqued, I pulled out what appeared to be a photograph.
The world stopped spinning.
There, captured in glossy color, was my husband with his arms wrapped intimately around my cousin Aspyn. Her head was tilted back in laughter, his lips pressed against her neck. They looked... happy. Genuinely, radiantly happy in a way Matthew rarely looked with me anymore.
My hands trembled as I flipped the photo over. In Matthew's distinctive slanted handwriting: "Aspyn, wait for me."
Four words. Four simple words that erased seven years of what I thought was love.
I sank onto our bedroom floor, the photo burning between my fingertips. Memories cascaded through my mind—Aspyn's lingering hugs with Matthew at family gatherings, their inside jokes, the way his eyes followed her when he thought no one was watching. Signs I'd dismissed, rationalized away because I trusted them both implicitly.
"Lena?" Matthew's voice from downstairs jolted me back to reality. "Have you seen my blue tie?"
With mechanical precision, I slid the photo back exactly where I'd found it. "Checking now!" I called back, my voice surprisingly steady despite the earthquake happening inside me.
Later that night, I lay beside Matthew in our king-sized bed, studying his sleeping face. The gentle curve of his lips, the dark sweep of his lashes against his cheeks—features I'd memorized over years of marriage. Now they belonged to a stranger. I watched his chest rise and fall, wondering how many nights he'd lain awake thinking of her while I slept trustingly beside him.
Three days passed in a fog of disbelief and mounting nausea that I initially attributed to stress. But when the fatigue persisted and my period didn't arrive, a different possibility emerged.
In our master bathroom, I locked the door and withdrew a pregnancy test from beneath a stack of towels. My hands shook as I followed the instructions, then placed the stick on the counter. The longest three minutes of my life crawled by as I sat on the edge of the bathtub, knuckles white against the porcelain.
Two lines. Unmistakable.
I was pregnant.
A hysterical laugh bubbled up in my throat. A baby—the culmination of our weekly scheduled intimacy, the heir Matthew had been pressing for lately. For one brief, shining moment, hope fluttered in my chest. Perhaps a child could bridge the chasm between us, restore what we'd lost.
Then the photograph flashed in my mind's eye. "Aspyn, wait for me."
I buried the test deep in my bathroom drawer beneath feminine products Matthew never touched. This secret was mine alone until I decided what to do with it.
My grandmother Eleanor's seventieth birthday celebration arrived that weekend at Maison Laurent, Seattle's premier French restaurant. The Brooks and Silva families gathered around an elegant table, champagne flowing freely. I watched through new eyes as Matthew pulled out Aspyn's chair, their fingers brushing longer than necessary.
"You look pale, cuz," Aspyn said, her concern so convincing it would win her an Oscar. "You're not eating enough."
She personally placed a plate before me, her diamond bracelet—a gift from Matthew I now realized—catching the light. "You must try the special seafood selection. Chef made it just for us."
"I don't think—" I began, but she'd already moved away, whispering something in Matthew's ear that made him smile—that rare, genuine smile.
The first bite tasted unusual, but I was distracted, watching them. Within minutes, my throat began to close. Heat rushed across my skin as the familiar, terrifying sensation of anaphylaxis set in. My shellfish allergy—documented in all our family gatherings, known intimately to Aspyn since childhood.
"Matthew," I gasped, fumbling for my EpiPen in my purse.
Chaos erupted. Matthew drove me to the emergency room, one hand on the wheel, the other checking his phone as it buzzed repeatedly. Through my oxygen-deprived haze, I glimpsed Aspyn's name lighting up his screen.
"Pregnant?" the ER doctor said as he administered epinephrine. "We'll need to monitor both you and the baby carefully after this reaction."
Matthew's face transformed—surprise, then unmistakable excitement. But when his eyes met mine, they remained cold, calculating.
That evening, as I lay in the hospital bed with IV fluids dripping into my veins, I heard Matthew's voice in the hallway.
"The placeholder finally served her purpose," he said quietly into his phone. "Once the baby's born and my inheritance is secured, we'll be free. She's too devoted to suspect anything."
My hand moved instinctively to my stomach as ice crystallized in my veins. In that moment, something hardened within me. I would be no man's placeholder, no one's convenient incubator.
I closed my eyes, no longer a victim but a woman with a plan forming in the darkness.
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