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Husband Fakes Amnesia for Mistress Novel Cover

Husband Fakes Amnesia for Mistress

The crystal chandeliers of the Whitmore Auction House sparkled overhead, casting prismatic light across the gathered elite of the city. I smoothed down the silk of my emerald gown, a dress Ford had once told me brought out the green flecks in my eyes. My husband stood at the center of the room, champagne flute in hand, his tailored tuxedo accentuating the broad shoulders I'd fallen in love with five years ago. Something in his stance made my heart flutter with unease. "If I could have everyone's attention," Ford's voice carried across the marble hall, silencing the murmur of conversation. His gaze swept the room but deliberately avoided mine. "I'd like to make an announcement." I instinctively touched my wedding ring, twisting it around my finger—a nervous habit I'd developed since Ford's supposed amnesia began six months ago. The doctors had said his memories would return gradually, and I'd been patient, devoted, preparing his favorite herbal remedies each morning despite his increasing coldness. "As many of you know, I've been struggling with memory loss," Ford continued, his voice steady and clear—too clear for someone who claimed to be confused about his past. "But sometimes, amnesia can be clarifying.
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Chapter 2

The antiseptic smell of the hospital still clung to my clothes as I turned my key in the front door. The sound echoed through our house—a house that suddenly felt cavernous and cold. Dr. Holmes' words rang in my ears: *Stage three stomach cancer. Aggressive treatment needed immediately.* The medical pamphlets crinkled in my trembling hands as I stepped into the foyer.

"Ford?" My voice cracked as I called out. "I'm home."

The response came from upstairs—the sound of drawers slamming shut, hangers scraping against the closet rod. I climbed the stairs on unsteady legs, each step feeling like I was ascending toward my own execution.

I found him in our bedroom, methodically folding his shirts into a leather suitcase I'd given him for our anniversary two years ago. The irony wasn't lost on me.

"What are you doing?" The question came out as barely a whisper.

Ford didn't look up from his packing. "What does it look like? I'm moving the rest of my things to Violette's."

"Ford, please." I clutched the medical pamphlets to my chest like a shield. "I need to tell you something. About the hospital—"

"Alice, don't make this harder than it needs to be." He finally met my eyes, and the coldness there made me stumble backward. "We both know this marriage was over long before tonight."

"I have cancer." The words tumbled out in a desperate rush. "Stomach cancer. Stage three. The doctor says I need to start treatment immediately, and I—I need you. Please don't leave me now."

Ford's hands stilled on his shirts. For a moment, just a moment, I thought I saw something flicker across his face. But then his expression hardened again, and he resumed his packing with deliberate precision.

"I'm sorry to hear that," he said, his tone suggesting he was anything but sorry. "But it doesn't change anything between us."

"How can you say that?" My voice rose to a pitch I didn't recognize. "I'm your wife! I'm sick, and I need—"

"You're my wife on paper." He snapped the suitcase shut with finality. "Nothing more. And honestly, Alice, maybe this illness is just proof that our marriage was cursed from the beginning."

The medical pamphlets fluttered to the floor as my hands went numb. "Cursed?"

"Think about it." Ford hefted the suitcase off the bed, not bothering to look at me. "Six months of my supposed memory problems, and now you're dying. Maybe the universe is trying to tell us something."

I watched him walk toward the door, this stranger wearing my husband's face. "Ford, please. I love you. I've always loved you, even when you couldn't remember—"

"That's your problem, Alice. You love too much. You suffocate people with it." He paused in the doorway without turning around. "Violette understands that love should be freeing, not binding."

The front door slammed shut moments later, leaving me alone in our bedroom—my bedroom now. I sank onto the bed, surrounded by empty hangers and the faint scent of his cologne. The medical pamphlets lay scattered at my feet like fallen leaves, each one a reminder of the battle I'd have to fight alone.

Three days passed in a blur of medical appointments and insurance calls. I moved through our house like a ghost, touching familiar objects that now felt foreign. Ford's coffee mug still sat in the sink. His favorite book remained open on the nightstand, bookmark still marking his place.

I was searching through his study for our health insurance documents when I heard his voice drifting through the partially open window. He was on the back patio, phone pressed to his ear, his laughter carrying on the evening breeze.

"...no, Violette, she actually believed it," he was saying, his voice filled with cruel amusement. "Six months of playing the confused amnesiac, and she never suspected a thing."

My blood turned to ice. I crept closer to the window, straining to hear every word.

"The pathetically devoted wife act was almost too easy to manipulate. Every morning with those herbal teas, every evening reading me stories from our 'happy memories.' God, it was nauseating." His laughter was sharp, cutting. "You should have seen her face when I told her I couldn't remember our wedding day. She actually cried."

I gripped the windowsill until my knuckles turned white.

"Of course I never had amnesia," Ford continued. "It was just easier than dealing with divorce proceedings. This way, she couldn't claim I abandoned her—I was just a confused man trying to piece his life back together. Brilliant, really."

The world tilted on its axis. Six months. Six months of caring for him, researching treatments, preparing his favorite foods, reading to him, sharing our photo albums, begging him to remember our love. Six months of believing I was helping my husband heal.

Six months of lies.

I stumbled away from the window, my vision blurring with tears and rage. In the study, I frantically pulled out file folders until I found what I was looking for—Ford's medical records from the car accident that supposedly caused his memory loss.

My hands shook as I read the neurologist's report: *No evidence of traumatic brain injury. Patient shows no signs of retrograde amnesia. Recommend psychological evaluation for possible malingering.*

Malingering. Faking illness.

The medical file slipped from my fingers as Ford's footsteps echoed in the hallway. He appeared in the doorway of his study, his phone call apparently finished, and froze when he saw the scattered papers.

"Alice." His voice was carefully neutral. "What are you doing in here?"

I held up the neurologist's report with trembling hands. "No brain injury, Ford. No amnesia. The doctor recommended a psychological evaluation because he thought you were faking."

For a moment, we stared at each other across the study. Then Ford's mouth curved into a cold smile that I'd never seen before—or maybe I'd just been too blind to notice it.

"Well," he said, stepping into the room and closing the door behind him. "I suppose the game is up."

"Game?" The word came out as a whisper.

"Our marriage became suffocating, Alice. You wanted to know everything, control everything, be part of everything I did. I needed an escape route that wouldn't make me look like the bad guy." He moved to his desk, casually straightening papers as if we were discussing the weather. "Amnesia was perfect. I could forget whatever was convenient to forget."

"You let me take care of you," I said, my voice growing stronger with each word. "You let me blame myself for not being able to help you remember. You let me research treatments, make special meals, read to you every night—"

"And you loved every minute of it," Ford interrupted. "Playing the devoted wife, the selfless caregiver. It gave you purpose, didn't it? Made you feel important."

I stared at this man I'd shared a bed with, shared dreams with, shared five years of my life with. "I don't know you at all, do I?"

"You know exactly who I let you see." He leaned against his desk, completely at ease. "The question is, what are you going to do about it now?"

The medical pamphlets in my purse seemed to burn against my hip. Cancer eating away at my stomach while lies had been eating away at my marriage. I was dying, and the man I'd devoted my life to had been playing games with my heart for months.

"Nothing," I said finally, my voice hollow. "I'm going to do absolutely nothing."

Ford's eyebrows rose in surprise. "Nothing?"

"You're right about one thing—our marriage is over. Has been for months, apparently." I walked toward the door, stepping around him without looking back. "Enjoy your freedom, Ford. I hope it's everything you thought it would be."

I left him standing in his study, surrounded by the evidence of his deception, and walked upstairs to pack my own suitcase. If I was going to fight cancer, I'd do it on my own terms, without the dead weight of a marriage built on lies.

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