Follow
Chapters
Share
Exposing Husband's Dark Secrets Novel Cover

Exposing Husband's Dark Secrets

The first contraction hit me like a sledgehammer to the spine as Wayne adjusted his tie in our bedroom mirror, preparing for what he called his "important academic obligation." The pain radiated through my swollen belly with such intensity that I doubled over, gripping the edge of our mahogany dresser. "Wayne," I gasped, my voice barely above a whisper. "Something's wrong. This isn't... this isn't normal." He glanced at me through the reflection, his expression more annoyed than concerned. "Amoura, you're barely at thirty-seven weeks. These are just Braxton Hicks contractions—false labor. Dr. Martinez explained this to you multiple times." Another wave of agony crashed over me, and I felt something warm and wet between my legs. My water had broken.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

The silence in our house felt different now—heavier, more suffocating than the grief that had settled into every corner since we returned from the hospital three days ago. Wayne moved through our home like a ghost, offering hollow condolences and empty gestures that felt rehearsed, clinical. When he suggested I rest in the guest room "to give you space to heal," I knew he simply couldn't bear to look at the woman who had failed to give him a living child.

I found myself wandering aimlessly through rooms that no longer felt like mine, searching for something to anchor me to reality. The nursery door remained closed—Wayne had locked it the moment we arrived home, claiming it was "too painful" for me to see. But whose pain was he really protecting?

It was while looking for the comfort items I'd packed for the hospital—a soft blanket, some photos—that I ended up in Wayne's study. The room smelled of his cologne and old books, masculine and authoritative in a way that had once made me feel safe. Now it felt like a mausoleum of secrets.

I opened his desk drawer looking for tissues, my hands still shaking from the phantom contractions that haunted my empty body. Instead, my fingers closed around a small amber prescription bottle hidden beneath a stack of academic papers. The label made my blood freeze: *Lorazepam 2mg - For anxiety and sleep disorders - Take as needed.*

The prescribing doctor's name was one I didn't recognize. The patient name read "Amoura Carter," but I had never seen this bottle before in my life.

With trembling hands, I opened more drawers. Another bottle of Diazepam. Then Trazodone. All prescribed to me, all from doctors I'd never met, all hidden in Wayne's private sanctuary. The dates went back months—some nearly a year.

My mind reeled as I stared at the collection of sedatives, my vision blurring with more than just tears. Those little white pills Wayne gave me every morning with breakfast, the ones he said were prenatal vitamins. The evening "herbal supplements" he insisted would help me sleep better during pregnancy. The way I'd been feeling increasingly foggy, compliant, like I was living my life through a thick layer of cotton.

"You're supposed to be resting."

Wayne's voice from the doorway made me jump, the pill bottles scattering across his desk like evidence of a crime. I spun around, my heart hammering against my ribs as I met his cold, calculating gaze.

"What are these?" I held up the Lorazepam bottle, my voice barely steady. "Wayne, what are these pills?"

He stepped into the study with that measured pace I'd once found so professorial, so reassuring. Now it felt predatory. "Amoura, you shouldn't be going through my things. You're not thinking clearly right now."

"These have my name on them. Prescriptions I never asked for, from doctors I've never seen." The words came out in a rush, desperation making my voice crack. "You've been drugging me."

Wayne's expression shifted to that patronizing concern he'd perfected over our marriage—the look that made me feel small, confused, like a child who couldn't understand adult complexities. "Sweetheart, you're grieving. The trauma of losing our baby has made you paranoid. Those are legitimate prescriptions from Dr. Henley, your psychiatrist."

"I don't have a psychiatrist named Dr. Henley!"

"You do. We discussed this months ago when your anxiety became unmanageable. You begged me to handle the appointments because crowds made you panic." His voice carried that same clinical detachment he'd used when abandoning me in labor. "The vitamins I give you each morning contain a mild anti-anxiety component. It's all perfectly legal and medically supervised."

The room spun around me as Wayne's words sank in. He was rewriting reality with such conviction that for a moment, I almost believed him. Almost. But the fog in my mind was lifting just enough for me to grasp at fragments of truth.

"You're lying," I whispered, backing away from him. "I remember... I remember feeling different. Sleepy all the time. Like I was watching my life happen to someone else."

Wayne moved closer, his hands outstretched in a gesture that might have looked comforting to an observer but felt threatening to me. "The grief is making you confused, Amoura. You need to take your evening medication and rest. Tomorrow you'll feel more like yourself."

But as he spoke, images flashed through my mind like lightning strikes—brief, vivid, and undeniably real. A different man's face, kind eyes that weren't Wayne's, hands that held mine with genuine tenderness rather than calculated control. A name whispered in my ear that wasn't my husband's.

Dante.

The name hit me like a physical blow, and I gasped, stumbling backward until I hit the bookshelf. Wayne's eyes narrowed, and I saw something flicker across his features—fear?

"Who is Dante?" I breathed, the question escaping before I could stop it.

The change in Wayne's expression was immediate and terrifying. The mask of concerned husband slipped completely, revealing something cold and calculating underneath. "You need your medication, Amoura. Now."

You may also like

After My Groom Saved His Mistress on Our Wedding Day Novel Cover
8.4
The morning light streaming through the Plaza Hotel's bridal suite windows should have felt like a blessing. Instead, it illuminated the wreckage of eight years. Lance's phone wouldn't stop buzzing on the vanity. He'd left it there when he went downstairs to check on the reception setup, and the insistent vibration scraped against my nerves like nails on glass. I was adjusting my veil when the screen lit up again. And again. H: Please don't do this H: I can't live without you H: If you marry her, I'll jump. I swear I will. My fingers went numb. I scrolled up, watching months of my life rewrite themselves in real time.
Help! My Stepson is My High School First Love Novel Cover
7.2
He was my first love. My first everything. Now he's my stepson. One night changed everything. Ten years couldn't make us forget. But loving him now could destroy us all. Ethan Cole was the boy who held my heart. My first kiss. My first time. My first real love. We planned a future together, whispered forever, believed nothing could tear us apart. Then prom night happened. I woke up alone in a hotel room with no memory of how I got there, and Ethan was gone. Vanished. The rumors said he got what he wanted and got tired of me. I spent a decade believing I wasn't enough. So I moved on. I built walls. I found Harrison to be kind, stable, and safe, and I said yes when he asked me to marry him. But fate has a cruel sense of humor. Because Harrison's son? The one living in the guest house? The one I'll see at family dinners and weddings, and holidays for the rest of my life? It's Ethan. My Ethan. The boy who broke me. The man I never stopped loving. And when I look into his whiskey-colored eyes, I see the same hunger, the same pain, the same unanswered questions burning in me. He says he never left me. He says prom night was a setup. He says he's loved me every single day for the past ten years. And God help me... I believe him. But how do I choose between the man who gave me a future and the man who still owns my past? How do I resist the only love that ever felt like home? And how do I survive when my heart is tearing me in two?
His Betrayal Forged Her Empire Novel Cover
7.5
I run my family's political dynasty with an iron fist. From my father’s Senate votes to my own calculated engagement, every move is mine to control. Then, in a single evening, my ambitious stepmother made her play. She used our housekeeper as a spy and orchestrated a scandal involving my fiancé and stepsister, designed to shatter my reputation and power. They thought they could break me. Within twelve hours, the spy was dead on the marble floor of my foyer. My fiancé’s family was blackmailed into silence. My stepsister was exiled to a Swiss boarding school, and I stripped my own father of his authority for his weakness. As for my stepmother, Bronte, I had her declared mentally unstable and forcibly taken to a remote facility in Montana, completely cut off from the world. Everyone saw a cold-hearted coup, but they didn't know the secret I held. I had proof that Bronte had systematically orchestrated my brother’s death years ago, all to position her own son to inherit everything. This wasn't about power; it was vengeance. But winning the war at home has put me on a much deadlier board. Now, I'm preparing for a dinner with Eldridge Marsh—the most dangerous man in Washington—who wants to decide if I'm a player he can use, or a threat he needs to destroy.
I Sent Him Our Child’s Remains with the Divorce Papers Novel Cover
8.5
At twenty-eight weeks pregnant, I could barely manage the baby's movements and begged my husband, Jesus, to drive me to the hospital. Just as we were about to leave the garage, he received a call and told me to get out of the car. "Catalina's running a fever and wants some apple cider from The Orchard. I have to take it to her. You'll have to get to the hospital by yourself." I battled the intense pain gripping my abdomen and pleaded with him, "Jesus, we live in the suburbs, and there are no taxis around. Please, just take me to the hospital first." Growing impatient, he shoved me out of the passenger seat and drove away. As I sat on the pavement, I felt the warm trickle of blood running down my legs and lost consciousness from the pain. While my husband savored the sweet cider with his muse, I was robbed of my nearly full-term child and my womb. I woke up in the hospital bed, my heart shattered. I sent the remains of our child and a divorce agreement to his office via courier.
My Ex Wrote Our Broken Marriage Into a Movie Novel Cover
9.2
The flashbulbs hit me like physical blows, a strobe-light barrage that turned the crisp New York City night into a fractured, blinding day. The November wind off the Hudson bit into my bare shoulders, but beneath the silk of my emerald gown, my spine was forged of steel. I was not the same woman who had died in a suffocating, cramped Los Angeles apartment. That Haisley Garza—the pathetic, forgotten wife who had withered away in the shadows of a loveless marriage—was a ghost I had left behind in a past life. Tonight, two years after I woke up on the eve of our secret wedding and walked out with nothing but a breakup letter, I was the rising star. I belonged on this sprawling crimson carpet. "Chin up, Haisley. Look to your left," Margot, my agent, murmured from just outside the camera's firing line. I shifted my weight, letting the slit of my dress fall perfectly over my thigh, and offered the press a razor-thin, untouchable smile. Then, the atmosphere in the plaza shattered.
My Husband Drugged Me to Protect His Mistress Novel Cover
8.3
The air in our foyer didn’t smell like a home. It smelled like a triage unit scrubbed down after a plague—acrid, chemical, and safe. My hands were raw, the skin around my cuticles peeling in jagged white strips where the bleach had eaten through, but I didn’t care. The burn was the only proof I had that I was trying. “Josephine, please,” Dorian whispered, his voice tight with a pain I had caused. He stood by the heavy oak door, one hand shielding his eyes as if the mere sight of me was a strobe light triggering a seizure. “The car is waiting. We need to go before it gets bad.” “I’m sorry,” I breathed, stepping back, pressing my spine against the cold plaster of the wall to maximize the distance between us. “I scrubbed everything twice. I used the industrial grade cleaner.” “It’s not the house, Jo.