
After My Husband Fathered His Mistress’s Child, I Faked My Death
Chapter 1
The champagne flutes chimed like warning bells. From my vantage point near the French doors, the sound was sharp enough to cut through the hazy, golden afternoon light of our Malibu estate. I adjusted the throw blanket over my legs, a reflex born of shame rather than cold. It was seventy-five degrees, but the phantom ache in what remained of my limbs always flared when the air grew thick with pretense.
Priscilla stood in the center of the living room, a vision in cream silk that clung to her post-pregnancy curves. In her arms, she held the boy. *Leo.* A name that roared, unlike the silence that had filled my womb for seven years.
"He has the Cruz eyes," a woman whispered near the buffet. I didn't need to turn my wheelchair to know it was Mrs. Gable from the club. Her voice carried that particular frequency of gossip meant to be overheard.
"Doesn't he just?" another voice agreed. "Poor Caroline. To be the aunt and the… well, the burden."
I gripped the armrests of my chair until my knuckles turned the color of bone. The leather creaked, a small protest lost in the swell of laughter as Anthony walked into the room. My husband. The man who had insured my face for a million dollars to keep the tabloids from calling me a monster, yet hadn't looked me in the eye for six months.
He moved toward Priscilla with a gravitational pull that made my stomach turn. He touched the baby’s cheek, his finger lingering there, before sliding his hand to the small of Priscilla’s back. It wasn’t a brother-in-law's touch. It was possessive. Familiar. It was the touch of a man claiming his property.
Priscilla looked up at him, her lashes fluttering. Then, her gaze sliced across the room, finding me in the shadows. She smiled—a small, triumphant curling of lips that chilled me more than the ocean breeze.
I spun my chair around, the electric motor whining as I retreated toward the hallway. I couldn’t watch them play happy family in the house my settlement money had helped renovate.
***
The master suite was supposed to be my sanctuary, but tonight it felt like a courtroom. I sat by the window, watching the Pacific crash against the rocks below, waiting. The party had wound down hours ago. The silence in the house was heavy, pregnant with the truth I had been too cowardly to name.
The door clicked open. Anthony entered, loosening his tie. He smelled of expensive scotch and Priscilla’s vanilla perfume.
"You left early," he said, not looking at me. He walked to the dresser, removing his cufflinks with precise, jerky movements.
"They were whispering, Anthony. About the baby’s eyes."
He paused. The clinking of metal on wood stopped. "People always whisper, Caroline. You of all people should be used to that."
"They say he looks like you."
He turned then. His face, usually a mask of practiced stoicism, looked ragged. "He does."
The air left the room. I wheeled myself closer, needing to see the lie before he spoke it, but there was no lie. Just a brutal, naked exhaustion.
"Is he yours?" My voice was a dry rasp.
Anthony didn't flinch. "Yes."
The word hung between us, suspended and terrible. I waited for the apology, the groveling, the excuse of a drunken mistake. Instead, Anthony walked to the window, staring out at the dark ocean.
"I can't do this anymore, Care," he said softly. The nickname, once a caress, felt like a slap. "I look at you in that chair… and I feel like I’m suffocating."
"Suffocating?" I choked out a laugh that sounded like glass breaking. "I lost my legs, Anthony. You lost your… what? Your weekends?"
"My life!" he shouted, spinning around. The vein in his neck bulged. "I want to hike the Alps. I want to sail in Greece. I want to run on a beach without worrying about ramps and accessibility and your phantom pains! I’m thirty-two years old, and I’m trapped in a nursing home!"
"So you replaced me," I whispered. "With your brother's widow."
"Priscilla understands," he said, his voice dropping, pleading for me to validate his cruelty. "She’s alive, Caroline. She moves. She wants the world, same as me."
"Then leave," I said, tears finally spilling hot and fast down my scarred cheeks. "Get out. I want a divorce."
Anthony’s face hardened. The vulnerability vanished, replaced by the CEO who crushed competitors without blinking. "No."
"Excuse me?"
"The IPO is in three months. My image is built on loyalty. The devoted husband. The saint who stayed by his tragic wife’s side." He walked over, crouching down so we were eye-level. He placed a hand on my knee—my prosthetic knee. He didn't even realize he wasn't touching flesh. "If I leave you now, the press will crucify me. The stock will tank."
"I am not your prop, Anthony."
"You are my wife," he corrected coldly. "And you will stay my wife. In this house. On paper."
He stood up, brushing imaginary dust from his pants. "But I’m not living like a monk anymore. Priscilla and Leo are moving into the East Wing. For the baby’s security."
"You can't be serious. You want your mistress and your bastard child living under the same roof as me?"
"It’s a big house, Caroline," he said, walking toward the door. He paused with his hand on the knob, looking back at me with a pity that was far worse than his anger. "Try to stay out of their way. It’ll be easier for everyone if you just… stay in the background. Like you always do."
The door clicked shut. I sat alone in the dark, the sound of the ocean roaring outside, realizing that the crash seven years ago hadn’t killed me, but tonight, Anthony had surely buried me alive.
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