
I Faked My Death to Escape Being His Wife
Chapter 3
The Sinclair Foundation's Annual Charity Gala was the social event of the season—a night when Manhattan's elite gathered to flaunt their wealth under the guise of philanthropy. As I stepped into the grand ballroom of The Plaza, a sea of designer gowns and tuxedos parted before me, conversations hushing momentarily before resuming with renewed vigor. I knew what they were whispering about. Who they were whispering about.
Me. Natalie Evans Sinclair. The wife Christian Sinclair couldn't be bothered to love.
"Mrs. Sinclair, welcome." The event coordinator greeted me with a practiced smile that didn't reach her eyes. "Let me show you to your table."
I followed her through the crowd, nodding politely at familiar faces while ignoring the pitying glances and barely concealed smirks. The coordinator led me not to the main table where Christian sat at the center, commanding the room with his mere presence, but to a side table near the service entrance.
"There must be a mistake," I said quietly. "I should be seated with my husband."
The woman's smile tightened. "I'm following the seating chart approved by Mr. Sinclair himself, ma'am."
Of course he had. I glanced toward the main table where an empty chair sat beside Christian—a chair I knew with sickening certainty wasn't meant for me.
"Natalie!" A syrupy voice called out. Lauren Parker glided toward me in a backless red gown that clung to her curves like a second skin. "Isn't this event just divine? Christian has outdone himself this year."
Before I could respond, she continued, "I should get to my seat. The auction is about to begin." With a triumphant smile, she turned and walked directly to the main table, sliding into the chair beside my husband. Christian leaned in as she whispered something in his ear, his lips curving into a genuine smile I hadn't seen directed at me in years.
I sat down at my assigned table, surrounded by the wives of junior executives and minor socialites—the B-list of New York society. The woman beside me squeezed my hand briefly, a silent acknowledgment of my humiliation.
"It's not right," she whispered. "The way they flaunt it."
I forced a smile. "I'm used to it."
And that was perhaps the saddest truth of all.
* * *
Three days later, I found myself in the Sinclair Holdings boardroom, seated in a chair against the wall while the actual board members occupied the table. Christian had insisted I attend—"family representation," he'd called it, though I knew it was merely for appearance's sake.
"And now," Christian announced from the head of the table, "Lauren Parker will present the marketing strategy for The Sinclair Residences."
Lauren stood, sleek in a tailored navy suit, her presentation polished and confident. I watched as board members nodded approvingly, as Christian's eyes followed her with unmistakable pride.
When a server appeared with refreshments, I reached for a glass of wine, desperate for something to occupy my hands. As I turned back toward the presentation, my elbow caught the edge of the table. The wine splashed across the pristine white tablecloth and onto Christian's silk tie.
The room fell silent.
Christian looked down at the spreading stain, his expression hardening to granite. "Accidents happen," he said, his voice arctic. "Though one might expect better coordination from someone with so little else to contribute."
Lauren's lips curved into a barely suppressed smile. "Let me help you with that, Christian." She dabbed at his tie with a napkin, her touch lingering, intimate.
"It was an accident," I said, my voice smaller than I intended.
"Of course it was," Lauren replied sweetly. "Just like your presence here today. We all know it wasn't your business acumen that brought you to Sinclair Holdings."
Laughter rippled through the room—quiet, uncomfortable, but laughter nonetheless. Christian didn't defend me. He merely straightened his papers and continued the meeting as if nothing had happened, as if I weren't silently crumbling in the corner of the room he'd assigned me to.
That evening, I confronted him in our penthouse, my patience finally at its breaking point.
"You humiliated me today," I said, standing in the doorway of his home office. "You let Lauren speak to me that way in front of your entire board."
Christian didn't look up from his laptop. "You humiliated yourself, Natalie. The wine was an unfortunate accident, but your reaction was childish."
"My reaction? I barely said a word!"
"Exactly." He finally looked up, his blue eyes cold. "A Sinclair would have handled it with grace, not silent self-pity."
"And what about Lauren? The way she speaks to me—"
"This jealousy is becoming tiresome." Christian closed his laptop with a decisive click. "Perhaps you should speak to Dr. Mercer again. This paranoia about Lauren isn't healthy."
"It's not paranoia when it's happening right in front of me!"
"What's happening," he said, rising from his desk, "is that you're creating drama where none exists. Lauren is a valuable business associate and an old friend. Your insecurity is your problem, not hers."
He walked past me without another glance, leaving me standing alone in the doorway, my words unheard, my pain dismissed as easily as he might brush lint from his immaculate suits.
The next morning, I discovered something that confirmed my worst suspicions. My personal assistant, Megan—hired by Christian but supposedly working for me—had been feeding Lauren information about my schedule, my appointments, even my private conversations.
"Why?" I asked, confronting her in my home office, holding up the text messages I'd discovered when borrowing her phone.
Megan's eyes filled with tears. "I'm so sorry, Mrs. Sinclair. She—she threatened me. Said she'd make sure I never worked in New York again if I didn't tell her what she wanted to know."
"How long has this been going on?"
"Since I started," she admitted, her voice barely above a whisper. "She said it was what Mr. Sinclair wanted. That he needed to know you weren't embarrassing the family name."
The betrayal cut deeper than I thought possible. Not just Lauren's machinations, but Christian's complicity. They had placed a spy in my daily life, invaded what little privacy I had left.
As Megan continued her tearful confession, I realized with startling clarity that the walls of my gilded cage were closing in. If I didn't find a way out soon, there would be nothing left of me but the hollow shell Christian Sinclair had married—a nameless, faceless obligation to be endured rather than loved.
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