
Husband's Twin Deception
Chapter 3
The doorbell rang at ten-thirty the next morning, cutting through the thick silence that had settled over the house like dust. I'd been sitting at the kitchen table for hours, staring at my untouched coffee, my mind still reeling from last night's revelation. The twins had left early—together, of course—claiming they needed to "discuss our situation" somewhere private.
I opened the door to find Amy standing on my porch, perfectly put together as always. Her honey-blonde hair caught the morning sunlight, and her designer handbag hung casually from her shoulder like an expensive accessory to her cruelty. The sight of her made my stomach clench with a familiar mix of inadequacy and dread.
"Hello, sister," she said, her voice dripping with false sweetness. "You look terrible. Rough night?"
I stepped back, but she pushed past me into the foyer, her heels clicking against the marble floor with predatory precision. "What do you want, Amy?"
She turned to face me, and for the first time in years, I saw her mask slip completely. The smile that curved her lips was sharp enough to cut glass, and her eyes glittered with malicious satisfaction.
"I came to see how you're handling the truth," she said, settling onto my living room sofa like she owned it. "Griffin called me this morning. He said you finally figured it out."
My hands clenched into fists at my sides. "You knew. You knew about Easton, about their... arrangement."
"Oh, darling." Amy laughed, the sound like breaking crystal. "I didn't just know about it. I helped design it."
The world seemed to tilt sideways. I gripped the back of a chair to steady myself, my knuckles white against the fabric. "What?"
"Did you really think two grown men would go through such elaborate trouble just for you?" Her voice was conversational now, almost gentle, which somehow made it infinitely worse. "You were never the prize, Layla. You were the consolation."
Each word hit me like a physical blow, but she wasn't finished.
"They both wanted me, you see. But I couldn't choose between them—they're both so useful in different ways. So we found a solution. I get both of them, and you get to play house with whoever's turn it is to babysit you."
The room spun around me. I sank into the chair, my legs no longer able to support my weight. "Five years," I whispered.
"Five years of the most pathetic charade I've ever witnessed," Amy agreed, examining her manicured nails. "Though I have to admit, watching you pour all that maternal love into Bella has been... entertaining."
Something cold and sharp twisted in my chest. "What do you mean?"
Amy's smile widened, revealing teeth like perfect white daggers. "Oh, sweet Layla. Did you really think that precious little girl was yours?"
The words hung in the air between us, impossible and devastating. I stared at her, my mind refusing to process what she was suggesting.
"Bella is my daughter," Amy continued, her voice soft and deadly. "My biological daughter. I carried her for nine months, gave birth to her, and then handed her over to you because motherhood was far too inconvenient for my lifestyle."
The coffee mug slipped from my numb fingers, shattering against the hardwood floor. The sound seemed to come from very far away.
"You're lying."
"Am I?" Amy pulled out her phone, swiping through photos with casual cruelty. "Here's me at six months pregnant. Here's my hospital bracelet from when she was born. And here—" she held up a legal document, "—is Bella's birth certificate. Notice whose name is listed as the mother."
I couldn't breathe. The room was closing in around me, suffocating me with the weight of this new betrayal. "But I... I raised her. I love her. She's my—"
"She's mine," Amy said simply. "I let you babysit her while I enjoyed my freedom. While Griffin and Easton took care of my needs and you took care of my responsibilities."
Tears burned my eyes, but I refused to let them fall. Not in front of her. "Why are you telling me this?"
"Because you need to understand your place," Amy said, standing and smoothing down her skirt. "You were never a wife. You were never a mother. You were a convenience. A placeholder. And now that you know the truth, you can stop pretending to be something you're not."
But she still wasn't finished. The worst was yet to come.
"Oh, and Layla?" Amy paused at the door, her hand on the handle. "All those miscarriages you had? They weren't accidents. Griffin made sure you'd never actually conceive a child that would complicate our arrangement. He's been very... thorough in preventing that possibility."
The words hit me like a physical assault. I doubled over, my body rejecting the horrific truth she'd just delivered. All those months of hoping, praying, grieving the children I thought I'd lost naturally—they had been stolen from me. Murdered before they could even begin.
"Sweet dreams," Amy called over her shoulder as she walked away, leaving me shattered on the floor of what I'd thought was my home.
I don't know how long I stayed there, curled up among the pieces of broken ceramic, my heart breaking along with them. But eventually, I heard the soft patter of footsteps on the stairs.
Bella appeared in the doorway, her dark hair tousled from her nap, wearing the pink pajamas I'd bought her last week. My heart, already in pieces, cracked further at the sight of her.
"Bella, sweetheart," I whispered, reaching out to her with trembling hands. "Can we talk?"
She looked at me for a long moment, her young face unnaturally cold. Then she crossed her arms and stepped back, as if my touch might contaminate her.
"Mama Amy told me you're not my real mommy," she said, her voice flat and emotionless. "She said you were just pretending."
The final piece of my heart crumbled to dust.
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