
Exposing My Husband's Affair with My Best Friend
Chapter 1
I woke with a gasp, my heart pounding against my ribs. Something felt different. The quality of light streaming through my eyelids seemed... clearer somehow. More defined.
I opened my eyes slowly, expecting the familiar darkness that had been my companion for three long years.
Instead, golden morning sunlight poured through floor-to-ceiling windows, casting prisms across polished marble floors that gleamed like mirrors. My breath caught in my throat.
Marble floors? We didn't have marble floors anymore.
"Cesar?" I whispered, my voice trembling. "Cesar, are you there?"
Silence answered me.
I sat up slowly, afraid to trust my eyes, afraid this was some cruel dream that would vanish the moment I moved. But the vision remained—vivid, sharp, perfect.
I was sitting on our king-sized bed in the master bedroom of our mansion—the mansion Cesar had tearfully told me we'd lost when the company went bankrupt. The mansion he'd described as being repossessed, forcing us to move to a cramped apartment with torn floors and peeling paint.
My fingers gripped the silk sheets—expensive Egyptian cotton, not the threadbare blankets he'd claimed we now used. The same sheets I'd chosen when we first moved in.
"It can't be," I whispered, but my eyes continued to send crystal-clear images to my brain.
I swung my legs over the edge of the bed, my bare feet touching the cool marble floor. My toes curled against the smooth surface as memories flooded back—of walking across these same floors in heels, of entertaining business associates in this very room.
The curtains—those weren't new either. They were the custom-made silk drapes I'd imported from Italy, with the subtle pattern of silver threads woven throughout. Cesar had specifically mentioned how he'd had to sell them to pay our rent.
My hands trembled as I reached out, touching the fabric. It was real. All of it was real.
"Cesar?" I called again, louder this time. "Rosie?"
Still nothing.
I heard something then—voices coming from down the hall. Familiar voices.
I rose silently, following the sound. My body remembered this path even as my eyes confirmed what my memory had stored—the hallway lined with artwork we'd collected together, the subtle scent of the roses Cesar claimed we couldn't afford anymore.
The voices grew louder as I approached what had once been my home office.
"The blind fool actually believed we live in squalor," Rosie's voice drifted through the partially open door, followed by laughter—Cesar's deep chuckle joining her higher-pitched giggle.
I froze, pressing myself against the wall beside the door.
"She's so pathetic," Cesar replied, his voice thick with mockery I'd never heard before. "You should see how grateful she looks when I bring her those cheap meals from the 'delivery job' I supposedly have."
"Well, she'll be even more grateful when we finally get rid of her permanently," Rosie said. "The yacht party will be perfect—no witnesses, no evidence. Just a tragic accident during her birthday celebration."
"And then everything will be ours," Cesar added. "The company, the properties, everything."
I peered through the crack in the door and nearly vomited on the spot.
There they were—my husband and my best friend—naked in bed together. Rosie wore my diamond necklace, the one Cesar had told me was sold to pay our mounting bills. Her fingers toyed with my earrings, matching pieces I thought were long gone.
"When should we tell her about the party?" Rosie asked, running her hand down Cesar's chest.
"A week before," he replied casually, as if discussing the weather rather than my murder. "That way she'll have time to get excited about her 'special day' before we make it her last."
I stumbled backward, my hand clamped over my mouth to stifle any sound. My legs carried me blindly—ironically—to the bathroom across the hall. I barely made it to the toilet before my stomach heaved violently.
I retched until there was nothing left, cold sweat beading on my forehead. Three years of lies. Three years of humiliation and poverty that never existed. Three years of believing I was a burden when I was actually being systematically robbed and poisoned.
I flushed the toilet and rinsed my mouth with shaking hands. In the mirror, I stared at my reflection—thinner than before, paler perhaps, but my eyes... my eyes were clear and focused.
They couldn't know. I couldn't let them know.
Forcing my expression back to neutral, I returned to the bedroom. I slipped back under the covers just as Cesar entered the room, whistling softly.
"You're awake," he said tenderly, leaning down to kiss my forehead. "Did you have another restless night?"
I turned my face up to his, forcing myself to smile the same blind smile I'd worn for three years.
"Just a little trouble sleeping," I murmured. "But I'm fine now that you're here."
His hand stroked my hair, and I fought the urge to recoil from his touch. Everything had changed in the span of minutes. The world I thought I knew was a carefully constructed lie.
And now I needed to create a lie of my own—one that would keep me alive long enough to discover just how deep their betrayal went.
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