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After My Husband Fathered His Mistress’s Child, I Faked My Death Novel Cover

After My Husband Fathered His Mistress’s Child, I Faked My Death

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.
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Chapter 2

The morning light in my studio usually offered a truce with the world, but today it felt like an interrogation lamp. I sat at my drafting table, the hum of my electric wheelchair a low static beneath the scratching of my charcoal pencil. I was working on a terracing concept for the botanical garden proposal—a desperate, secret bid for relevance I’d been refining for months. The graphite smudge on the side of my hand was the only thing that felt real.

The door didn’t creak; it swung open with the entitlement of someone who owned the place. Priscilla breezed in, Leo absent for once, replaced by a steaming mug of coffee and a predatory smile.

"Anthony said you’d be hiding in here," she said, her voice light and airy, like a toxic gas. She drifted toward my desk, her fingers trailing over the edge of a scaled model I’d spent three weeks building. "Cute. It’s like a dollhouse for plants."

I didn't look up. "It's a sustainable irrigation system for arid climates."

"Right." She leaned over my shoulder, too close. I could smell the vanilla perfume that now clung to my husband’s shirts. "Does it make you feel better? Pretending you have a job?"

My grip on the charcoal tightened until it snapped. I spun my chair around to face her. "This is my workspace, Priscilla. Get out."

She laughed, a tinkling sound that grated against my nerves. "Your workspace? Honey, Anthony paid for the table. He paid for the pencils. He paid for the ramp that let you roll in here." She took a sip of her coffee, her eyes dancing with malice. "You’re just another expensive hobby he maintains. Like his vintage Ferraris. Except those can actually go somewhere."

"Get. Out."

"Oops." Her hand jerked. A calculated spasm. The mug tilted, and a brown waterfall cascaded onto my drafting table.

I watched in paralyzed horror as the dark liquid pooled over the vellum, soaking into the intricate shading of the retaining walls, dissolving weeks of calculations into a muddy blur. The heat of the coffee dripped onto my lap, scalding through my pants, but the phantom pain in my missing shins screamed louder.

"Oh no," Priscilla deadpanned. "Look what a mess you made me make."

"What is going on in here?" Anthony appeared in the doorway, adjusting his cufflinks. He looked from Priscilla’s feigned shock to my trembling rage, and then to the ruined drawings.

"She startled me, Ant," Priscilla said, her voice dropping into a register of hurt innocence. "I just wanted to see her little drawings."

"They weren't 'little drawings,'" I spat, my voice shaking. "That was the proposal. She did it on purpose!"

Anthony sighed—a long, weary exhale that sucked the oxygen out of the room. He walked over, not to check the damage, but to guide Priscilla away from the puddle. "Caroline, stop it. It’s just paper."

"It’s my work, Anthony!"

"It's therapy," he corrected, his tone flat and final. "Let's be honest. You’re not an architect anymore. You’re recovering. You need to focus on your health, not playing pretend with building blocks. Look at you—you’re hysterical over spilled coffee."

He placed a hand on Priscilla’s back, guiding her out. "Come on, Cilla. The investors will be here in an hour. Caroline, clean this up before you come down."

***

Two hours later, the house was buzzing with the low murmur of Anthony's business partners. I had changed my clothes, scrubbing the coffee stains from my skin, but the stain of his words wouldn't wash off. I wheeled toward the elevator, intending to make a brief appearance to keep up the charade he demanded.

I pressed the button. Nothing. The light didn't flicker. I pressed it again, harder.

"Oh, dear," Priscilla’s voice drifted from the top of the stairs. She stood next to Anthony and three men in Italian suits. "The technician was here earlier. He said the lift needs a part from Germany. It’ll be down for weeks."

She looked at me, her eyes gleaming. She knew. She had done this.

Anthony looked down the grand staircase at me, stranded in the foyer like a piece of misplaced luggage. The investors turned, their gazes heavy with pity.

"Well," Anthony said, loud enough for everyone to hear. "I suppose I’ll have to be the hero."

He descended the stairs, his footsteps heavy. When he reached me, he didn't offer a hand. He bent down and scooped me up, bypassing the dignity of asking.

"Leave the chair," he grunted to a passing maid.

As he carried me up the stairs, my face pressed against the expensive fabric of his suit, I felt the tension in his arms. He wasn't holding me like a wife; he was hauling a burden.

"You've gained weight," he whispered into my ear, his breath hot and cruel. "Heavy. So heavy."

I went rigid, burning with a shame so intense it felt like sunburn. At the top of the stairs, he set me down on a velvet bench, slightly too hard, breathless for effect.

"There," he said to his applauding partners, wiping his brow. "The things we do for love, gentlemen."

***

The humiliation wasn't finished. The next afternoon, the garden was transformed into a tableau of white linen and fresh hydrangeas. Priscilla’s "ladies' tea." I had tried to refuse, but Anthony had threatened to cut my access to my physical therapy funds if I didn't "make an effort."

They placed me at the head of the table, but not in the shade of the pergola where the other women sat sipping iced tea. My wheelchair was positioned just outside the shadow line, directly in the path of the relentless Malibu sun.

"Is the sun too much, Caroline?" Mrs. Gable asked, fanning herself.

I opened my mouth to ask for help moving, my skin already prickling with heat. My scars, sensitive to temperature changes, began to itch maddeningly.

"Oh, don't worry about her," Priscilla interrupted, pouring champagne. "The doctors say the Vitamin D is good for her circulation. Besides, moving that electric chair is such an ordeal. Poor Anthony threw his back out carrying her yesterday."

"He's a saint," a woman in a wide-brimmed hat sighed. "Truly."

"He is," Priscilla agreed, glancing at me with a smile sharp enough to cut glass. "It takes a special kind of man to sacrifice his prime years for… this."

She gestured vaguely at me—at the metal, the scars, the immobility. I sat there, baking in the heat, sweat trickling down my spine, realizing I wasn't a person to them. I was a prop in Priscilla’s play, a backdrop to highlight her vitality and Anthony's martyrdom.

I gripped the armrests, the metal burning my palms. I didn't say a word. I just watched them, etching every face, every laugh, every drop of condensation on their glasses into my memory. They thought I was broken. They had no idea I was merely being forged.

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