
My Groom's Mother Poisoned Me
My Groom's Mother Poisoned Me Chapter 1
I sat cross-legged on the cold floor of my dormitory-sized bedroom, staring at the small orange pill bottle in my hands. The white label read 'For Brain Tumor Treatment' in bold black letters that had become as familiar to me as my own reflection. Outside my window, fireworks exploded across the Boston skyline, painting the night with bursts of color celebrating Harvard's graduation day. Celebrating Olivia's graduation day.
Four years. Four years since the diagnosis that had stolen everything from me. Four years watching my twin sister live the life that should have been mine.
The distant pops and crackles of the fireworks seemed to mock me, each burst a reminder of another achievement I'd never experience. I rolled the bottle between my palms, feeling the weight of the pills inside. My daily ritual. My prison.
"Emily?" My mother's voice floated up from downstairs. "We need you to help with dinner preparations!"
Of course they did. The celebration dinner for Olivia's perfect day required my assistance, as always. I carefully set the pill bottle on my nightstand and moved toward my dresser, my fingers trembling as I unlocked the bottom drawer with a small key I kept hidden beneath my mattress.
Inside lay two treasures I couldn't bear to part with: my Harvard acceptance letter, now creased from the countless times I'd unfolded it, and a gleaming academic medal I'd won in high school for mathematics. I ran my finger over the embossed university crest on the letter, remembering how my hands had shaken with excitement when I'd first opened it. The day everything seemed possible.
"Emily!" My mother's voice was sharper now.
I quickly locked the drawer and headed downstairs, each step feeling like lead. The kitchen was a flurry of activity, with caterers moving efficiently around my mother, who was supervising the placement of flowers on the dining table. My father stood proudly beside Olivia, who was pointing at her graduation cake.
"I think the fondant Harvard shield should be centered more," Olivia said, her perfectly manicured nail tapping the cake's surface. "It's the focal point, after all."
"Whatever you think best, sweetheart," my father replied, his voice warm with pride. "It's your day."
Neither of them acknowledged me as I slipped into the kitchen and picked up a knife to begin chopping vegetables. I was invisible, as usual, unless I was needed for some task.
"The summa cum laude decoration should be in gold, not silver," my mother was saying to the pastry chef. "My daughter graduated at the top of her class."
My daughter. Not daughters. Just the one who mattered.
I focused on the rhythmic chopping of the knife against the cutting board, trying to drown out their voices with the steady sound. Slice. Slice. Slice. The carrots fell into neat orange discs under my blade.
"Emily, be careful with those vegetables. They need to be uniform for the presentation," my mother called over, barely glancing at me.
"Yes, Mom," I murmured, adjusting my cutting technique slightly.
Olivia laughed at something my father said, the sound like tinkling crystal. "Oh, Daddy, you're too much!"
I continued chopping, moving on to the celery, then the bell peppers. The kitchen was warm from the ovens, and I could feel sweat beginning to bead at my temples. A slight breeze drifted in from the garden door that had been left ajar to cool the overheated room.
That's when I heard it. Nathan's laugh, coming from the garden. My fiancé had arrived early for the celebration, but he hadn't come to find me first.
"It worked perfectly," a woman's voice said—Nathan's mother, Dr. Isabella Parker. "Four years, and she never questioned the diagnosis."
I froze, the knife suspended above the cutting board.
"The look on her face when she gave up her Harvard spot to Olivia," Nathan replied, his voice carrying clearly through the open door. "So noble, so self-sacrificing."
They both laughed, the sound slicing through me more sharply than any blade could.
"Was it difficult?" Dr. Parker asked. "Pretending all this time?"
"Please," Nathan scoffed. "Dating Emily was a small price to pay to stay close to Olivia. I've loved her since we were children, even when she kept rejecting me."
The knife slipped from my fingers, clattering loudly against the cutting board. But no one in the kitchen noticed—they were too busy fussing over Olivia's perfect cake, her perfect day, her perfect life.
My perfect lie.
My Groom's Mother Poisoned Me of Contents
New Release Novels

















