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His Perfect Lie Novel Cover

His Perfect Lie

When Natalie Crawford dies betrayed by the two people she loved most—her husband and her sister—fate gives her a terrifying gift: a second chance. Reborn five years before her wedding, Natalie remembers every cruel secret, every stolen asset, every lie. But instead of running, she plays the role of the perfect bride—sweet, devoted, harmless—while setting the stage for her revenge. Her husband will fall in love with her all over again. Her sister will trust her completely. And when the time is right, they’ll lose everything—just like she did. But as Natalie’s vengeance unfolds, she begins to wonder… If you could rewrite your own tragedy, how far would you go to make them pay?
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Chapter 1

I woke to the scent of pancakes and the gentle press of Aaron's lips against my forehead.

"Happy anniversary, beautiful," he murmured, his voice still rough with sleep.

I stretched beneath the sheets, a smile tugging at my lips despite myself. Five years. Five years of marriage to Aaron Crawford, the man who'd swept me off my feet with his ambition, his intensity, his promises of forever.

"Mmm, you're spoiling me," I said, watching as he set a tray on the nightstand. Golden pancakes stacked high, fresh berries, real maple syrup. He knew exactly how I liked them.

He kissed me again, deeper this time. "You deserve to be spoiled. Every single day."

When he left for the office, I found the note tucked beside my coffee mug. His handwriting, bold and confident: *6pm, our place. Dress up. I have a surprise.*

My heart fluttered with anticipation. Le Bernardin. It had to be. The upscale French restaurant where he'd proposed, where we'd celebrated every milestone. I spent the afternoon in a pleasant haze, trying on dresses until I settled on a red one, fitted and elegant, the kind that made me feel powerful and desired.

I arrived at five forty-five, too eager to wait. The restaurant glowed with warm lighting, the murmur of sophisticated conversation filling the air. A server approached immediately.

"Mrs. Crawford, welcome. Your husband is already in the private dining room."

I followed him through the main dining area, my heels clicking against polished floors. The private room. Aaron had gone all out. My pulse quickened as I smoothed my dress, checked my lipstick in a passing mirror. Whatever surprise he'd planned, I was ready.

The server opened the door.

And my world shattered.

Aaron sat at the head of the table, his expression unreadable. But he wasn't alone. Claire, my sister, sat beside him, her hand resting possessively on his arm. On the table between them lay two neat stacks of documents.

My feet carried me forward on autopilot. "What... what is this?"

Aaron stood slowly, his movements measured and controlled. "Natalie, sit down. We need to talk."

"Talk?" My voice came out strangled. I couldn't tear my eyes away from Claire's hand on his arm, from the way she looked at him with open adoration. "Aaron, what's going on?"

Claire shifted, and that's when I saw it. The ring. An enormous diamond catching the light, sending prisms dancing across the white tablecloth. My breath caught in my throat. That ring. That specific ring.

"Oh my God," I whispered.

It was my mother's ring. The heirloom she'd given me on her deathbed, the one I'd worn every day until three months ago when I'd "lost" it. I'd searched everywhere, torn apart our apartment, filed a police report. And now it sat on my sister's finger, marking her as Aaron's chosen one.

"Natalie," Claire said, her voice dripping with false sympathy. "Sister, I'm sorry. Aaron and I... we're in love."

The room tilted. I gripped the edge of the table, my knuckles white. "You've been planning this. For months."

Aaron's jaw tightened. "Two years, actually. Claire and I are soulmates, Natalie. I married you because your father's firm helped my company launch. But I love her."

Two years. The words echoed in my skull, reshaping every memory, every tender moment, every lie. I thought of the late nights he'd claimed to be working, the business trips that lasted just a bit too long, the way he'd grown distant right around the time Claire had started visiting more often.

A projector on the wall suddenly flickered to life. I turned, and the images hit me like physical blows.

Photographs. Dozens of them. Aaron and Claire kissing at my birthday party last year, hidden in a shadowed corner while I'd cut the cake, smiling for the camera. Aaron and Claire in our bed, tangled in sheets I'd washed and folded. Aaron and Claire on a pristine beach, crystal-blue water behind them, her in a bikini, him pulling her close.

That beach. I knew that beach.

"Maldives," I breathed, my vision blurring. "You were in the Maldives."

Three months ago. When I'd lost the twins. When I'd hemorrhaged in the hospital, terrified and alone, calling Aaron's phone over and over. When he'd texted that there was an emergency at the Tokyo office, that he couldn't get a flight back for two days.

He'd been with her. On a beach. While our babies died.

"I lost our babies!" The scream tore from my throat, raw and primal. "And you were with HER?!"

Aaron's expression didn't change. "Keep your voice down. You're making a scene."

Claire leaned forward, her eyes glittering with malice barely concealed beneath her saccharine smile. "Sister, those children were never meant to exist. Aaron never wanted them."

Something inside me snapped. I lunged forward, hands reaching for her lying face, but Aaron caught my wrists in an iron grip.

"Sign the papers, Natalie," he said, his voice cold, clinical. "Don't make this ugly."

A server appeared in the doorway, eyes wide. "Should I call security?"

And suddenly, I understood. This wasn't just cruelty. It was calculated. A public place, witnesses, me losing control. They were building a case, painting me as unstable, hysterical. The divorce would be easy to justify. My reputation would be destroyed.

I forced myself to breathe. To think. The red haze of rage cleared, replaced by ice.

"Fine," I said, my voice steady. "I'll sign."

Aaron's eyes widened slightly. He'd expected a fight. "Really?"

I looked at him, at this man I'd loved for five years, and saw a stranger. A cold, calculating stranger who'd used me and discarded me like a business deal gone stale.

"You want ugly?" I smiled, and it felt like broken glass in my mouth. "I'll show you ugly. But not here. Not now."

I turned on my heel and walked away, my spine straight, my head high. Behind me, I heard Claire's triumphant laugh, the sound chasing me through the restaurant and out into the cold night air.

I'd sign their papers. But this wasn't over.

Not by a long shot.

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