
He Was Never Who I Married To
Chapter 2
I don't remember how I got back to bed after collapsing. The days that followed blurred together in a haze of disbelief and betrayal. My body felt impossibly heavy, as if gravity had somehow intensified just for me. The ceiling above our king-sized bed became my entire world—the intricate crown molding Benjamin had insisted on now resembling prison bars in my mind.
Somehow, the physical pain of childbirth paled in comparison to this. This was a different kind of tearing—not of flesh, but of soul. Every heartbeat hurt. Every breath felt like an effort not worth making.
Emma's cries would occasionally pierce through my fog, but before I could summon the strength to rise, I'd hear either Benjamin or my mother attending to her. My mother. The thought alone made bile rise in my throat.
They didn't even try to hide it anymore. I could hear their whispers, their laughter, the casual intimacy in their voices as they moved around my home—our home. Once, I heard Benjamin call her "darling" just outside my bedroom door, and I pressed my pillow against my face to muffle my sobs.
"Sue, you need to eat something," Benjamin would say, appearing at scheduled intervals with trays of food I couldn't stomach. He played the concerned husband perfectly, but his eyes never quite met mine. There was no remorse there, only calculation.
"I'm not hungry," was all I could manage, turning away from him.
"You're being ridiculous," my mother said on the third day, barging into my room without knocking. "Lying here like some Victorian heroine with consumption. It's melodramatic."
I looked at her—this woman who had carried me, raised me, and now betrayed me in the most fundamental way possible—and felt nothing but a cold emptiness.
"Get out," I whispered.
"Sue, darling, you need to understand—"
"GET OUT!" The scream tore from my throat, surprising even me with its ferocity.
She left, but not before I caught a glimpse of something in her expression—not guilt, but annoyance, as if my pain was an inconvenience to her happiness.
That night, I heard them in the guest room. The walls of our home—the home I had built with my success, the home where I had just brought my daughter into the world—were not thick enough to shield me from the sounds of their betrayal.
I pressed my hands against my ears and wept until exhaustion claimed me.
On the fifth day, the doorbell rang. I heard Benjamin's footsteps, then Natalia's familiar voice, sharp with concern.
"Where is she? I've been calling for days."
"She's not feeling well," Benjamin's voice, smooth as always. "The doctor says it's postpartum depression. She needs rest, not visitors."
"I'm her best friend, not some random visitor," Natalia countered, her tone brooking no argument. "And I didn't ask for your medical opinion."
Footsteps on the stairs, then my bedroom door opened. Natalia stood there, her expression shifting from determination to horror as she took in my appearance.
"Oh my God, Sue," she whispered, rushing to my side. "What's happened to you?"
I must have looked terrible—unwashed hair, hollow cheeks, eyes swollen from crying. But seeing her familiar face, the genuine concern in her eyes, broke something loose inside me.
"Nat," I croaked, my voice raw from disuse and crying.
She sat beside me, taking my cold hands in her warm ones. "I've been worried sick. You haven't answered calls or texts. Your assistant said you haven't been in touch with the office..."
I could feel Benjamin hovering in the doorway, watching us.
"Could you give us a minute?" Natalia said to him, not bothering to hide her suspicion.
Once he was gone, she leaned closer. "Sue, what's going on? This isn't just postpartum depression, is it?"
The dam broke. Words poured out of me in between heaving sobs—the discovery, the betrayal, the days of torment that followed. Natalia's expression hardened as I spoke, her journalist's mind cataloging every detail even as her friend's heart broke for me.
"That bastard," she hissed when I finished. "And your mother... I always knew she was selfish, but this..."
"I don't know what to do," I admitted, the confession costing me what little pride I had left. "I can barely get out of bed. How am I supposed to fight this?"
Natalia's eyes narrowed, a familiar determination settling over her features. It was the same look she got when pursuing a particularly difficult story—focused, relentless.
"First, you need to stop confronting them without evidence," she said, lowering her voice. "Right now, it's your word against theirs, and they're clearly working together."
"Evidence?" I repeated, the concept feeling foreign in my grief-addled mind.
"Yes, evidence." Natalia squeezed my hands. "Sue, you're not just fighting for yourself anymore. You have Emma to think about. And your company. Do you really want Benjamin controlling your assets? Your daughter's future?"
The mention of Emma cut through my fog of despair. My daughter. My innocent baby girl, being raised in this house of lies.
"What kind of evidence?" I asked, my voice steadier now.
"Recordings. Videos. Emails. Anything that proves the affair and their intentions." Natalia's eyes gleamed with strategic focus. "You need to play the long game here, Sue. Let them think you're broken. Let them get comfortable and careless. And meanwhile, you document everything."
For the first time in days, I felt something other than despair—a tiny spark of determination, of the business acumen that had built my company from nothing.
"I need to protect Emma," I said, the words cementing my resolve. "And my company."
Natalia nodded, a grim smile forming on her lips. "Exactly. And to do that, you need to be smart. Smarter than them."
As she outlined her plan, I felt myself coming back to life—not the trusting, open-hearted woman I had been, but someone new. Someone harder. Someone who would survive this betrayal and make them pay for every tear I had shed in this bed.
"Can you do this?" Natalia asked finally, searching my face.
I thought of Benjamin's hands on my mother's body. I thought of Emma, innocent and vulnerable. I thought of everything I had built, everything they sought to take from me.
"Yes," I said, my voice no longer a whisper but a promise. "I can do this."
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