
Marriage After Betrayal
Chapter 3
The morning light filtered through our living room windows, casting long shadows across the hardwood floors I'd spent hours polishing just last week. Sienna had been with us for four days now, and every surface in our home bore evidence of her presence—her magazines scattered across the coffee table, her sweaters draped over my carefully arranged throw pillows, her prescription bottles lined up on the kitchen counter like tiny soldiers claiming territory.
I paused in the doorway, watching her move through our space with surprising grace for someone supposedly recovering from a serious accident. Her sling hung loosely around her neck as she dusted the mantelpiece with her supposedly injured arm, humming softly to herself.
"You shouldn't be cleaning," I said, stepping into the room. "Peter said you need to rest."
Sienna turned, her green eyes wide with manufactured innocence. "Oh, I just wanted to help. You've been so kind, letting me stay here. I thought the least I could do was tidy up a bit."
My gaze drifted to the mantelpiece, where my mother's portrait sat in its silver frame—the only photograph I had left of her, taken just months before the cancer took her when I was sixteen. The glass caught the morning light, and for a moment, my mother's gentle smile seemed to offer the comfort I desperately needed.
"That's very thoughtful," I managed, though something in Sienna's posture made my skin crawl. "But you really should be careful with that arm."
"Of course." Sienna's smile was sugar-sweet, but her eyes held something darker. "I was just admiring this beautiful photo. Your mother was lovely."
The way she said it—past tense, final—made my chest tighten. "Thank you."
I moved toward the kitchen, needing coffee, needing distance from the way Sienna's fingers lingered near my mother's frame. Behind me, I heard the soft whisper of the dusting cloth, then a sudden crash that made my blood freeze.
"Oh no! Oh God, no!"
I spun around to find Sienna standing over the shattered remains of my mother's portrait, her good hand pressed to her mouth in horror. The silver frame lay twisted on the hardwood, and glass fragments sparkled like cruel diamonds around the torn photograph.
"What happened?" The words tore from my throat as I dropped to my knees, my hands hovering over the destruction, afraid to touch anything.
"I'm so sorry," Sienna whispered, tears already streaming down her cheeks. "I was trying to dust around it, and my arm—it just gave out. The pain shot through my shoulder and I couldn't hold onto the cloth properly."
My mother's face stared up at me from the torn photograph, a jagged crack running right through her smile. Seven years I'd treasured this portrait, seven years of keeping it safe, of polishing the frame weekly, of drawing strength from her memory during the hardest moments.
"You have to be more careful," I said, my voice shaking as I tried to gather the pieces. "This was—this is irreplaceable."
"I know, I know, and I'm devastated." Sienna's voice broke on a sob. "Please, let me pay to have it restored. There must be someone who can fix it."
But even as she spoke, I could see the extent of the damage. The photograph was torn in three places, the glass embedded in the paper itself. Some things, once broken, could never be made whole again.
The front door opened, and Peter's voice called out, "I'm home! How are my two favorite girls?"
Sienna's sobs grew louder, perfectly timed to his entrance. "Peter, thank God you're here. Something terrible has happened."
Peter appeared in the doorway, his face immediately shifting to concern as he took in the scene—me kneeling among the wreckage, Sienna standing with tears streaming down her face.
"What's going on?" His eyes found the broken frame, and his expression darkened. "Joelle, what did you do?"
The accusation hit me like a slap. "I didn't—"
"She's been so upset about the wedding registration," Sienna interrupted, her voice trembling with manufactured distress. "I think the stress has been building up, and when I accidentally bumped the table while cleaning, she just... she exploded. She grabbed the frame and threw it down, screaming that if she couldn't have her perfect day, then nothing else mattered either."
The lie was so smooth, so perfectly crafted, that for a moment I wondered if I was losing my mind. "That's not what happened. Peter, she was cleaning with her injured arm, and she knocked it over herself."
"Joelle." Peter's voice was cold, disappointed. "Look at yourself. You're shaking with rage even now."
I looked down at my hands, trembling as they clutched fragments of glass and photograph. But it wasn't rage making me shake—it was the devastating realization that the man I'd loved for seven years was choosing to believe a lie rather than trust me.
"I would never—" I started, but Peter was already helping Sienna to the couch, his arm around her shoulders.
"I think you owe Sienna an apology," he said, his tone leaving no room for argument. "She was trying to help, and you've traumatized her. Look at her—she's terrified."
Sienna peered at me from behind Peter's protective embrace, her eyes red with tears that seemed far too convenient. "I understand she's upset," she whispered. "I just never thought she'd take it out on something so precious."
"Apologize, Joelle." Peter's voice was firm, final. "Now."
I stared at him, this man I'd planned to marry, holding the woman who'd just destroyed my most treasured possession and lied about it with breathtaking skill. The words he wanted—the apology that would validate Sienna's deception—sat like poison on my tongue.
"I'm sorry," I whispered, the words scraping my throat raw. "I'm sorry for... for losing control."
Sienna's smile was gentle, forgiving, and absolutely triumphant. "I forgive you," she said softly. "We all do things we regret when we're hurting."
As Peter murmured comfort to his stepsister, I remained kneeling on the floor, surrounded by the shattered pieces of my mother's memory and the equally shattered remains of my faith in the man I'd thought I knew.
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