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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.
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Chapter 3

The house felt like a tomb without Wayne's oppressive presence. He'd left early for the university, muttering something about important research meetings, but I knew better now. Every absence was another opportunity for him to see Clare, to continue whatever twisted game they were playing at my expense.

I found myself drawn to the attic, a space I hadn't visited in years. The narrow stairs creaked under my weight as I climbed, each step taking me further from the suffocating reality of my drugged existence below. Dust motes danced in the pale morning light filtering through the small window, and the air smelled of old wood and forgotten memories.

Boxes lined the walls, labeled in Wayne's precise handwriting: "Amoura's College Items," "Family Photos," "Miscellaneous." How clinical, how organized. Even my past had been catalogued and stored away like evidence in a case file.

I opened the first box with trembling fingers, expecting to find the usual collection of academic achievements and social photos from my university days. Instead, I discovered layers of deception so profound that my knees nearly buckled.

At the bottom of the box, wrapped in tissue paper that had yellowed with age, was a ring I'd never seen before—yet the moment my fingers touched the cool metal, something deep in my chest recognized it. A delicate platinum band with a single, perfect diamond surrounded by tiny sapphires. The craftsmanship was exquisite, clearly expensive, but it wasn't the monetary value that made my breath catch.

It was the inscription inside the band: "To my forever love, Dante."

Dante. That name again, hitting me like lightning, bringing with it flashes of memory so vivid they made me dizzy. Strong arms holding me as we watched sunsets. Gentle hands wiping away tears after my parents' accident. A voice whispering promises of forever in my ear.

With shaking hands, I dug deeper into the box. Photo after photo revealed a life I'd somehow forgotten—me, younger and radiant, wrapped in the arms of a man who wasn't Wayne. A man with kind eyes and a genuine smile, who looked at me like I was his entire world. In every image, I glowed with a happiness I couldn't remember feeling in years.

There were love letters in Dante's handwriting, ticket stubs from movies we'd seen together, pressed flowers from dates I couldn't recall. An entire relationship, an entire love story, hidden away in Wayne's attic like dirty secrets.

At the very bottom of the box, I found a journal in my own handwriting. The entries were dated eight years ago, just before my accident:

"Dante leaves for Oxford tomorrow. I can't bear it, but I know this opportunity will change his life. He promised to come back for me, to make me his wife when he returns. I'll wait forever if I have to. He's my soulmate, my other half. Nothing could ever change that."

My vision blurred as I read my own words, written in a hand that seemed steadier, more confident than the trembling script I'd developed over my marriage to Wayne. This woman in the journal entries was vibrant, independent, deeply in love with a man who cherished her.

What had Wayne done to me?

I heard his car in the driveway and quickly shoved everything back into the box, my heart racing. By the time he entered the house, I was sitting in the living room, the ring hidden in my palm like a secret weapon.

"How are you feeling today, darling?" Wayne asked, his voice carrying that false concern that now made my skin crawl. "You look flushed. Perhaps you should rest."

"I'm fine," I managed, studying his face with new eyes. Had he always been this calculating? Had I been so blind, or had the drugs simply made me compliant?

"I brought your evening medication," he said, pulling out the familiar white pills. "Dr. Henley adjusted your dosage. These should help with the anxiety."

I stared at the pills in his palm, remembering the hidden bottles in his study. "Wayne, I want to see Dr. Henley myself. I want to discuss my treatment."

Something flickered across his features—annoyance, fear, calculation. "That's not necessary, sweetheart. I handle all the medical consultations to spare you the stress. You know how crowds affect you."

But I was beginning to remember a different version of myself, one who had never feared crowds, who had been confident and social. The woman in those photographs hadn't been hiding from the world—she'd been embracing it.

"I insist," I said quietly, closing my fist around Dante's ring. "I want to take control of my own healthcare."

Wayne's smile never wavered, but his eyes grew cold. "Of course, darling. We'll discuss it tomorrow. For now, please take your medication. You've had a difficult few days."

I took the pills from his palm and pretended to swallow them, tucking them under my tongue until he looked away. The bitter taste was nothing compared to the bitter truth I was beginning to uncover.

As Wayne busied himself with his briefcase, I slipped away to the bathroom and spat out the pills, watching them dissolve in the sink. For the first time in years, my mind felt clearer, sharper.

I was going to find out what he'd done to me. And I was going to remember who I really was.

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