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Husband's Double Life Revealed: My Journey from Love to Betrayal Novel Cover

Husband's Double Life Revealed: My Journey from Love to Betrayal

The fluorescent lights of Metropolitan Hospital buzzed overhead as I settled into the familiar routine of my prenatal appointment. Seven months pregnant, and I still felt that flutter of excitement every time I came here. Today would bring another ultrasound, another glimpse of our baby growing strong and healthy inside me. "Mrs. Robertson?" The nurse's voice pulled me from my daydreaming. She held a clipboard, pen poised. "I just need to update your emergency contact information." "Of course." I shifted in the uncomfortable plastic chair, one hand resting on my rounded belly. "Shepherd Robertson, my husband. His number is—" "Actually, I'm showing some conflicting information in our system." The nurse frowned at her computer screen, fingers clicking across the keyboard. "We have a Shepherd Robertson listed, but his spouse is showing as...
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Chapter 2

Morning light filtered through the hospital blinds, casting thin stripes across my blanket as I stared at the ceiling. The doctor had been clear: the stress-induced contractions were a warning. My baby and I needed calm. Stability. Rest.

I almost laughed at the irony. How could I find calm when my entire life had just been revealed as a carefully constructed lie?

My phone buzzed on the bedside table—my mother again. I'd silenced her calls last night, unable to explain what had happened. How could I tell her that Shepherd, the man she'd welcomed into our family, had been married to another woman for eighteen months of our five-year marriage?

A soft knock at the door interrupted my thoughts. Expecting a nurse, I called out weakly, "Come in."

The woman who entered wasn't wearing scrubs. She carried a bouquet of pristine white lilies, her smile as perfectly arranged as the flowers. I recognized her instantly from photos I'd seen in Shepherd's old yearbooks—Dahlia Sullivan. My husband's "real" wife.

"Violet," she said, her voice musical and light. "I hope I'm not disturbing you."

She placed the lilies on the windowsill, their cloying sweetness immediately filling the small room. I fought the urge to throw them across the floor.

"I'm Dahlia," she continued, as if we were meeting at a garden party rather than in the aftermath of my world collapsing. "Shepherd's oldest and dearest friend. I just had to come see how you were doing."

My throat tightened. "Did you."

"Of course." She settled into the visitor's chair with practiced grace, smoothing her designer dress. "Shepherd has been beside himself with worry. I've been trying my best to support him through this... difficult time."

The calculated sympathy in her eyes made my skin crawl. She was beautiful in a polished, deliberate way—honey-blonde hair falling in perfect waves, makeup that enhanced without seeming obvious. Next to her, in my hospital gown with swollen eyes from crying, I felt like a creature from another species entirely.

"What exactly is your relationship with my husband?" I asked directly, one hand protectively covering my belly.

Dahlia's smile never faltered, but something flickered behind her eyes—satisfaction, perhaps. "Shepherd and I go back to childhood. I know him better than anyone else in the world, I think. We share a bond that goes back to before either of us really knew who we were."

"That's not what I asked."

She leaned forward, lowering her voice conspiratorially. "Shepherd is a complicated man, Violet. He's always felt torn between duty and desire. Between what others expect of him and what he truly wants."

Before I could respond, the door opened again. Shepherd stood frozen in the doorway, his eyes darting between us. The flowers caught his attention first—a flicker of recognition, followed by alarm.

"Dahlia," he said, his voice strained. "I didn't know you were coming."

What struck me most was the transformation in his face when he looked at her—genuine warmth flooded his features, relief evident in the softening of his shoulders. When he turned to me, his expression shifted to something careful and constructed—concern without connection.

In that moment, I saw the truth more clearly than any hospital record could show. He loved her. Whatever we had—whatever I thought we had—paled in comparison.

"I should let you two talk," Dahlia said, standing. She squeezed Shepherd's arm as she passed, a casual intimacy that spoke volumes.

Three days later, I was finally being discharged. The doctor had prescribed strict bed rest, but I couldn't bear another moment in the hospital where nurses gave me pitying looks and Shepherd made his obligatory visits, always checking his watch.

I drove myself home, moving slowly through traffic, my mind a fog of betrayal and uncertainty. At an intersection two miles from our house—my house—I waited for the light to change, one hand absently rubbing my belly.

The impact came from nowhere—a violent jolt that threw me forward against the seatbelt, which cut painfully across my pregnant belly. The airbag exploded in my face with stunning force. For several seconds, I couldn't breathe, couldn't think.

Through the shattered window, I saw a sleek silver luxury sedan—and behind the wheel, Dahlia, looking appropriately distressed but oddly composed. Our eyes met briefly before she flung her car door open and began wailing dramatically.

"The sun was in my eyes!" she cried to gathering witnesses. "I didn't see the light! Oh my God, is she okay?"

But I saw the calculation in her eyes, the precise timing of the collision. As pain ripped through my abdomen and warm wetness spread beneath me, I realized with terrifying clarity that this was no accident.

The last thing I remembered before the ambulance arrived was Dahlia's face peering into my window, her expression a perfect mask of concern—except for her eyes, which watched me with cold satisfaction.

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