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Family Deception Unveiled Novel Cover

Family Deception Unveiled

I froze in the doorway, my hand still gripping the knob as the scene before me burned itself into my memory. Asher, my husband of six years, had his arms wrapped around Madeleine, his face buried in her neck. Her eyes were closed, lips parted in what could only be pleasure as her fingers threaded through his hair. The laundry basket I'd been carrying slipped from my grasp, sending freshly folded clothes scattering across the bedroom floor. "What is this?" My voice sounded foreign to my own ears—thin and fragile. They sprang apart, but not quickly enough. Not nearly quickly enough. "Nina!" Asher's face registered shock, then something else—annoyance?—before settling into a mask of concern. "This isn't what it looks like." Madeleine's eyes filled with tears, the perfect crystalline drops clinging to her long lashes. "I'm so sorry, Nina.
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Chapter 2

The steady beeping of machines pulled me from darkness. White ceiling tiles came into focus, followed by the antiseptic smell of hospital air. My head throbbed with each heartbeat, and my body felt like it had been shattered and hastily reassembled.

"Nina? Oh thank God, you're awake." Asher's voice carried relief, but something else lurked beneath it—calculation. He leaned over my hospital bed, his face a mask of concern that I now saw with startling clarity.

Memory flooded back like a dam bursting. Not just the fall, not just the six years of lies, but everything. The Patterson estate with its marble staircases and crystal chandeliers. My mother's laugh echoing through sun-drenched gardens. The car accident that stole it all away. And Asher—this man who found me broken and built his life on my amnesia.

I remembered who I was. Nina Patterson, heiress to one of the most powerful families in the country. Not this diminished woman who begged for scraps of affection from children who weren't even mine.

"The doctor said you have a concussion," Asher continued, his hand hovering over mine. I forced myself not to flinch away. "You've been unconscious for two days. We were so worried."

Were they? I studied his face with new eyes, seeing the practiced expressions I'd mistaken for genuine emotion. The slight tension around his eyes suggested relief mixed with something darker—disappointment that I'd survived?

"I'm fine," I whispered, my voice hoarse. "Just tired."

Madeleine appeared beside him, her face pale and drawn. Dark circles shadowed her eyes, and her hand rested protectively over her stomach. "Nina, I'm so sorry about what happened. I keep thinking if I hadn't been there, if you two hadn't argued..."

The manipulation was breathtaking in its audacity. She was making herself the victim while standing over my hospital bed. I wanted to laugh at the sheer boldness of it.

"It wasn't your fault," I said carefully, watching both their faces. Asher's shoulders relaxed slightly. They thought I was still the same broken woman who'd fallen down those stairs.

They had no idea that Nina Patterson had just woken up.

* * *

Three days later, I sat in the living room, watching Madeleine work her poison on my children—Asher's children, I corrected myself. The distinction felt crucial now.

"Emma, sweetheart, come help me with this puzzle," Madeleine called from the coffee table, her voice honey-sweet.

Emma abandoned her homework and rushed over, settling beside Madeleine with eager devotion. I observed from my chair, a book open in my lap that I wasn't reading.

"You know," Madeleine said softly, fitting a puzzle piece into place, "your mother seems different since her accident. More distant."

Emma glanced toward me, uncertainty flickering across her young face. "She does seem weird."

"I think she might be upset with you children for some reason," Madeleine continued, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper that carried perfectly to where I sat. "But don't worry. I'll always be here for you, no matter what. Your mother... well, she doesn't really love you like I do. She can't. It's not her fault—some people just aren't meant to be mothers."

The words hit Emma like a physical blow. I watched my—Asher's—daughter absorb this poison, her small face crumpling with confusion and hurt.

"But she raised us," Emma said weakly.

"Out of obligation, darling. Because she had to. But look how easily she pulls away now. Real mothers don't do that." Madeleine's hand smoothed over Emma's hair with false tenderness. "Real mothers fight for their children. They don't give up."

I gripped my book tighter, my knuckles white. The cruelty was surgical in its precision, designed to cut deep while appearing caring. Emma nodded slowly, accepting this new truth about her inadequate mother.

Later that evening, James approached my chair hesitantly. For a moment, hope flickered in my chest—perhaps he wanted to read together, or share something about his day.

"Madeleine said you don't like reading to us anymore," he said, his eight-year-old voice uncertain. "She said you think it's boring now."

I looked into his trusting eyes, seeing how carefully he'd been coached. "Did she?"

"She said she'd read to me instead. She does all the voices better anyway." The words came out in a rush, as if he'd practiced them.

I nodded slowly. "That sounds nice, James."

Disappointment flashed across his face—he'd expected me to fight for him, to prove Madeleine wrong. Instead, I'd confirmed her narrative. He walked away with slumped shoulders, another piece of Madeleine's puzzle falling into place.

But I was done playing by their rules. I was done being the woman who begged for love from people who'd never truly given it.

* * *

I waited until the house was quiet before moving through my bedroom with purpose. My hands shook slightly as I gathered the few items that truly belonged to me—a locket I'd worn since the accident, a sweater I'd bought with my own small allowance, the notebook where I'd tried to piece together my missing memories.

Six years of life fit into a single small bag. The realization was both devastating and liberating.

Footsteps in the hallway made me freeze. I shoved the bag under the bed just as Asher appeared in the doorway.

"What are you doing up?" His voice carried suspicion disguised as concern.

I straightened slowly, my heart hammering. "Couldn't sleep. The headaches."

He stepped into the room, his eyes scanning the space with predatory alertness. "You've been acting strange since the accident. Distant."

"I'm still recovering."

"Are you?" He moved closer, and I caught the familiar scent of his cologne—once comforting, now suffocating. "Or are you planning something?"

The question hung between us like a blade. I met his gaze steadily, calling on every ounce of Patterson breeding I possessed.

"I don't know what you mean."

"Don't play games with me, Nina." His voice dropped to that dangerous whisper I knew too well. "If you're thinking of leaving, of taking the children from their home, I'll have you committed. One word about your mental state after the accident, and no court will believe anything you say."

The threat was delivered with casual cruelty, but I heard the desperation underneath. He was afraid. Good.

"I'm not going anywhere," I lied smoothly. "This is my home."

His smile was sharp as broken glass. "Yes. It is. And you'd do well to remember that."

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