
Husband Fakes Amnesia for Mistress
Chapter 3
The Children's Hospital charity gala should have been a beacon of hope—crystal chandeliers casting warm light over guests who'd donated millions to save young lives. Instead, I stood at the edge of the marble staircase, watching Violette Sanders work the crowd like the seasoned performer she was. Her hand rested protectively over her supposedly pregnant belly, the gesture calculated to draw maximum sympathy from every camera in the room.
"Alice." Her voice carried across the space between us, sweet as poisoned honey. "How lovely to see you here. Though I'm surprised Ford let you come, given your... condition."
The word 'condition' dripped with false concern. Around us, other guests pretended not to listen while hanging on every word. My cancer diagnosis had somehow become public knowledge—another gift from my loving husband, no doubt.
"I don't need anyone's permission to attend charity events," I replied, keeping my voice level despite the way my stomach cramped. The pain had been getting worse lately, the treatments Dr. Holmes prescribed seeming less effective each day.
Violette's smile widened, predatory and sharp. "Of course not. Though I do worry about the stress you're putting yourself through. Fighting a losing battle with your marriage, your health..." She touched her belly again, the gesture deliberate. "Some of us are focused on creating new life instead of clinging to dying dreams."
The crowd around us had grown larger, drawn by the scent of drama like vultures to carrion. Cameras flashed discretely from the press section, capturing every moment of what they no doubt hoped would become tomorrow's headline scandal.
"Violette," I said quietly, "whatever game you're playing, it ends now. I know about the tea."
Something flickered behind her perfectly made-up eyes—surprise, then calculation. "I have no idea what you're talking about."
"The herbal blends I was making for Ford. Someone's been tampering with them. Adding things that shouldn't be there." The words felt heavy on my tongue, each one a small victory over months of gaslighting and manipulation.
Violette's laugh was like breaking glass. "Oh, Alice. Your paranoia is showing. Just because you're sick doesn't mean everyone's conspiring against you."
She stepped closer, close enough that only I could hear her next words. "Though I have to say, watching you slowly poison yourself while trying to save your pathetic marriage has been... educational."
The admission hit me like a physical blow. She'd been poisoning me. All those months of preparing Ford's favorite tea, adding special herbs I'd researched to help with memory and cognitive function—she'd been contaminating them. My cancer wasn't just cruel fate. It was murder in slow motion.
"You're insane," I whispered, backing away from her.
"I'm pregnant," she announced loudly, her voice carrying across the marble hall. "With Ford's baby. And you're threatening me."
The crowd around us stirred, sensing the shift in atmosphere. Violette's eyes gleamed with malicious triumph as she continued her performance.
"I understand you're upset about Ford choosing me," she said, projecting her voice for maximum impact. "But threatening a pregnant woman? Alice, you need help."
"I never threatened—" I started, but she was already moving.
With the fluid grace of a trained dancer, Violette stepped backward toward the grand staircase. Her hand clutched her belly dramatically as she stumbled—no, as she deliberately threw herself backward.
Time slowed to a crawl. I watched in horror as she tumbled down the marble steps, her crimson dress billowing around her like spilled blood. Her screams echoed off the vaulted ceiling, raw and convincing. Each impact against the stone steps produced sickening thuds that would haunt my nightmares.
"She pushed me!" Violette's voice cracked with manufactured agony as she lay crumpled at the bottom of the stairs. "Alice pushed me! My baby—oh God, my baby!"
The crowd erupted into chaos. Guests pressed forward, some trying to help Violette, others turning to stare at me with expressions of shock and disgust. I stood frozen at the top of the staircase, my mouth open in silent protest.
"I didn't touch her," I said, but my words were lost in the pandemonium. "I didn't—she fell on purpose!"
Security guards materialized from nowhere, their hands already reaching for me. The cameras were flashing constantly now, capturing every angle of my stunned face, every moment of what appeared to be my guilt.
"Ma'am, we need you to come with us," one of the guards said, his grip firm on my arm.
Below us, paramedics were already attending to Violette, whose performance never wavered even as they loaded her onto a stretcher. Through her tears and moans of pain, her eyes found mine across the chaos.
She smiled.
A small, satisfied smile that no one else could see—the smile of a predator who had just ensnared her prey perfectly.
As the security guards led me away from the scene, I caught sight of the security cameras mounted in the corners of the hall. Every single one had a small red light blinking—the universal sign of malfunction.
Even the surveillance system had been turned against me.
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