
From Wife to Ghost
Chapter 1
The worn cloth pouch felt rough against my fingers as I carefully opened it, my heart racing with anticipation. Inside lay my entire world—crumpled dollar bills, some so faded I could barely make out the numbers, and a handful of coins that jingled softly as I emptied them onto our threadbare kitchen table.
One... two... three dollars and forty-seven cents. Not enough. Never enough.
"Come on," I whispered, counting again as if the money might magically multiply. "Just a little more."
The apartment around me was silent except for the distant hum of traffic outside our broken window. Alessandro had left for his job interview hours ago—his third this month. I'd been so proud when he told me about this opportunity at the construction company. A new shirt would make all the difference, he'd said. Make him look like someone who belonged in an office.
I smoothed out the bills, pressing them flat against the table. Three dollars and forty-seven cents would buy him a decent shirt at the thrift store. But what about the protective charm?
My fingers traced the small wooden elephant I'd bought last month at the temple three miles away. It had cost me nearly two days' wages, but Alessandro had smiled when I gave it to him—one of the few times he'd smiled lately.
"I'll skip lunch again," I decided, tucking the money back into the pouch. "The walk will be good exercise."
The temple was my sanctuary. The old monk there never asked questions when I came in, dirt-smudged and exhausted from cleaning offices. He simply nodded, understanding in his eyes as I lit incense and prayed for Alessandro's safety.
Today would be different. Today I'd ask for something extra—protection for his interview, for our future.
---
The amusement park buzzed with activity as I pushed my cleaning cart between rides. The cotton candy machine created clouds of pink sugar that made my stomach growl, but I ignored it. Lunch could wait.
"Excuse me," a mother said, her child clutching a oversized teddy bear. "Could you tell me where the carousel is?"
I smiled and pointed toward the flashing lights. "Just past the—"
A commotion near the VIP section caught my attention. A crowd had gathered, cameras flashing. Something about it made my chest tighten.
"That's him!" someone shouted. "Alessandro Williamson!"
The name hit me like a physical blow. Alessandro? My Alessandro?
I abandoned my cart and moved closer, ducking behind a popcorn stand. There, in the center of the crowd, stood a man who looked exactly like my husband—but couldn't be. This man wore a tailored Italian suit that probably cost more than our entire apartment. His arm was wrapped around a stunning blonde woman in designer clothes.
"Is that his fiancée?" a reporter called out. "The Peterson heiress?"
The woman laughed, her voice carrying across the crowd. "We're just celebrating his latest acquisition."
My legs felt rooted to the spot as I watched them—watched him—laughing and smiling in a way he never did with me anymore.
"Alessandro," I whispered, then louder, "Alessandro!"
Something compelled me forward. The crowd parted as I stumbled toward him, my uniform stained with cleaning solution, my hair pulled back in a messy ponytail.
His eyes met mine—those same gray eyes I'd gazed into every morning for three years. But now they were cold, distant.
"Excuse me," I said, my voice shaking. "Alessandro, it's me—"
"Get that beggar away from us," the blonde woman hissed, stepping in front of him.
Alessandro's gaze flickered over me, recognition flashing briefly before hardening into disdain. "I don't know this woman," he said smoothly to the reporters. "Just some crazy person looking for attention."
"Crazy?" I echoed, confusion washing over me. "Alessandro, what are you doing? Why are you dressed like that? Who is she?"
The woman laughed, her perfectly manicured hand resting on Alessandro's chest. "Oh, darling, look at her rags. Is this some kind of joke?"
Something shifted inside me—a crack in the foundation of everything I thought I knew.
---
The world tilted sideways as their laughter crashed over me. My vision blurred, then sharpened with painful clarity.
"Alessandro," I whispered again, but this time the name tasted different on my tongue.
Suddenly, I was somewhere else entirely—in our apartment, but not as it was now. It was night, and I was on the floor, my body curled around something precious.
"Where is she?" Alessandro's voice, cold and unfamiliar, echoed in my memory.
"I don't know what you're talking about," my past self pleaded. "I'm pregnant, Alessandro. Your baby—"
"Stop lying!" His fist connected with my ribs. "Where did you take Kallie?"
The pain exploded through me as another blow landed. I felt myself falling backward, hands reaching protectively toward my stomach.
"Alessandro, please," I begged as blood began to pool beneath me. "The baby—our baby—"
But he was already walking away, leaving me broken on the floor.
The memory slammed into me with such force that I staggered backward into the crowd. My knees buckled as the truth crystallized with horrifying clarity.
The man I had starved myself for, the man I had walked miles for, the man I had loved with every fiber of my being—had killed our child with his own hands.
You may also like





