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Lies Cost Her Everything Novel Cover

Lies Cost Her Everything

The phone call came at 3 a.m., shattering the silence of our penthouse bedroom. "Mrs. Reed? Your husband had an accident during his climbing expedition. He's at Mount Sinai Hospital." My hands trembled as I dressed, my jade bracelet—Mother's last gift—clicking softly against my wrist. Atticus did this every year, shouting my name from those terrifying cliffs like some romantic declaration. I'd begged him to stop, but he insisted it was his way of proving his love remained as fierce as the day he completed those 99 impossible tasks Father had set. The hospital corridor reeked of antiseptic and fear. I pushed through the doors to find Atticus conscious, bruised, but alive. Relief flooded through me until I noticed her.
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Chapter 1

The phone call came at 3 a.m., shattering the silence of our penthouse bedroom.

"Mrs. Reed? Your husband had an accident during his climbing expedition. He's at Mount Sinai Hospital."

My hands trembled as I dressed, my jade bracelet—Mother's last gift—clicking softly against my wrist. Atticus did this every year, shouting my name from those terrifying cliffs like some romantic declaration. I'd begged him to stop, but he insisted it was his way of proving his love remained as fierce as the day he completed those 99 impossible tasks Father had set.

The hospital corridor reeked of antiseptic and fear. I pushed through the doors to find Atticus conscious, bruised, but alive. Relief flooded through me until I noticed her.

A woman sat beside his bed, her hand resting possessively on his arm. She had delicate features and calculated tears glistening in her eyes—the kind of tears that seemed rehearsed rather than genuine.

"You must be Lena," she said softly, her voice carrying false warmth. "I'm Maryam Baker. I caught your husband when his rope snapped."

"Thank you." The words felt inadequate. "Thank you for saving him."

Atticus looked at her with something I'd never seen in his eyes before—a mixture of gratitude and fascination that made my stomach clench. "She knew exactly where to position herself, Lena. Like she'd been waiting for me to fall."

Maryam's smile was too perfect. "I've always been good at reading situations."

Over the following days, Maryam became a constant presence. She brought Atticus rare photography books, discussed his abandoned dreams with intimate knowledge, visited during the precise windows when I had to leave for errands. Each time I returned, I found them deep in conversation, their heads bent close together.

"She understands me," Atticus said one evening, his tone almost defensive when I asked about her constant visits. "She sees who I really am, not just the businessman I became."

The words stung more than he knew. I'd watched him sacrifice his photography for me, guilt eating at my conscience despite his insistence that he chose it willingly.

On the fifth day, Maryam's visits took a darker turn. I arrived with homemade soup to find her crying softly, Atticus holding her hand with fierce protectiveness.

"What happened?" I set down the soup, concern overriding the strange jealousy twisting in my chest.

Maryam looked up, her eyes red-rimmed but somehow calculating beneath the tears. "I'm sorry, Lena. I didn't want to say anything, but the memories are becoming overwhelming."

"Memories?"

"From my past life." She spoke the words like a confession, watching Atticus rather than me. "I've been having these vivid dreams since childhood. When I saw Atticus falling, everything clicked into place. We knew each other before—all three of us did."

I should have laughed. I should have recognized the manipulation. Instead, I felt ice spreading through my veins as Atticus leaned forward, completely captivated.

"Tell her," he urged. "She needs to know the truth."

Maryam's next words destroyed my world with surgical precision.

"In our past life, Lena, you married Atticus for his money. You bankrupted his family business with extravagant spending, then divorced him to take half his assets. You left him with nothing—no fortune, no dreams, just debt and despair."

The room tilted. "That's insane. Atticus, you can't possibly believe—"

"She knew about the photography," he interrupted, his voice cold in a way I'd never heard directed at me. "She knew about the extreme sports, about the 99 tasks. She even knew about the specific lens I sold to buy your engagement ring—a detail I never told anyone."

"Because she researched you!" My voice cracked with desperation. "This is manipulation, can't you see that?"

But he was already looking at me differently—with suspicion, with calculation, measuring my worth against fabricated memories of betrayal.

When Atticus finally came home two days later, our penthouse felt like foreign territory. He walked past me without the usual kiss, his shoulders rigid with new distance. I reached for him, and he flinched.

"I need to review our finances," he announced, settling into his study without meeting my eyes. "I need to understand where the money actually goes."

"Atticus, please. We need to talk about this rationally—"

"Rationally?" He laughed, bitter and sharp. "You want rational? Maryam saved my life and asked for nothing. You've been spending my money for years. Which one of you sounds more trustworthy?"

The accusation landed like a physical blow. I thought of the redecorating plans I'd been so excited to show him—the photography studio I'd secretly been designing in our east wing, a surprise to reignite his abandoned passion. Now those plans felt like evidence of my alleged greed.

That night, I discovered the transferred shares quite by accident. His laptop lay open on our bed, displaying legal documents that made my blood run cold. Sixty percent of the company shares that should have been placed in my name per our prenuptial agreement had been transferred to Maryam Baker, effective immediately.

The notation read: "Compensation for past-life suffering caused by L. Garcia-Reed."

I stood there holding those documents, my hands shaking so violently the papers rustled like dying leaves. In the bathroom, water ran as Atticus showered, washing away the hospital smell, washing away apparently any memory of the man who once climbed mountains and completed impossible tasks just to prove his love.

The jade bracelet felt heavy on my wrist—a reminder of family, of loyalty, of a mother who'd raised me to be strong. I touched it gently, drawing comfort from its smooth surface.

I didn't know it then, but this was only the beginning. Maryam's lies would cost me everything I held dear. The question wasn't whether I could survive the betrayal.

The question was whether anything would be left of me to survive at all.

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