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My Husband Believed Her Lies and Ended Our Child Novel Cover

My Husband Believed Her Lies and Ended Our Child

The rain slashed against the windshield of the Mercedes, a relentless drumbeat matching the suffocating tension inside the cabin. I gripped the leather steering wheel, my knuckles stark white under the dashboard’s glow. Beside me, my mother stared out at the blurred taillights of the New York highway, oblivious to the heavy silence emanating from the backseat. Julian. My husband of three years, my protector of eighteen. He sat directly behind me, his broad shoulders encased in a charcoal bespoke suit. And beside him—Jane. My adopted sister. She wore a pristine, pastel-pink cashmere cardigan, her hands folded neatly in her lap. Then, the tires lost the road.
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Chapter 1

The rain slashed against the windshield of the Mercedes, a relentless drumbeat matching the suffocating tension inside the cabin. I gripped the leather steering wheel, my knuckles stark white under the dashboard’s glow. Beside me, my mother stared out at the blurred taillights of the New York highway, oblivious to the heavy silence emanating from the backseat.

Julian. My husband of three years, my protector of eighteen. He sat directly behind me, his broad shoulders encased in a charcoal bespoke suit. And beside him—Jane. My adopted sister. She wore a pristine, pastel-pink cashmere cardigan, her hands folded neatly in her lap.

Then, the tires lost the road.

A violent hydroplane. The world spun into a dizzying vortex of headlights and black asphalt. Metal shrieked. Glass exploded inward like a shower of diamonds. The crushing impact knocked the breath from my lungs as the car slammed into the concrete median, folding the front end like paper.

Silence, save for the hiss of the radiator and the rain.

I gasped, tasting copper. Smoke curled from the deployed airbags. A jagged piece of the dashboard pinned my legs, creating a crushing vice of agony. "Mom?" I choked out.

My mother slumped against the shattered passenger window, a wet, rattling wheeze escaping her lips.

"Julian," I rasped, turning my heavy head toward the backseat. "Julian, help."

Through the haze of smoke, my eyes found him. He wasn't looking at me. He hadn't even glanced at the front of the car. Julian had unbuckled his seatbelt. His large frame was draped entirely over Jane, acting as a human shield against the shattered glass. His hand, the one wearing the gold wedding band I had placed there, was buried in her hair.

"I've got you," he murmured, his voice thick with a frantic, raw terror I had never heard him use for me. "I'm right here, Jane."

My chest hollowed out. A coldness, far sharper than the winter rain, flooded my veins.

"Julian," I whispered, the sound swallowed by the storm.

Jane shifted beneath him. She pushed his chest gently, her doe-like eyes wide as she peered over his shoulder. She looked at Julian, then at me. For a fraction of a second, the trembling victim vanished. Her gaze was flat, assessing, and utterly devoid of fear.

"I need to help Mommy," Jane breathed, her voice taking on that manufactured, fragile sweetness. She slipped out from under Julian’s protective bulk and crawled over the mangled center console toward the front seats.

"Don't," I choked out, fighting the black spots dancing in my vision. "Spinal... don't move her..."

Jane ignored me. She reached my mother, whose breathing was shallow and erratic. Jane's fingers brushed her pearl necklace—a nervous tic I knew all too well—before her hands clamped down on my mother’s shoulders.

Jane looked directly into my eyes. The corners of her mouth twitched upward.

With a sudden, violent jerk, Jane hauled my mother’s limp body backward.

A sickening pop echoed over the rain. My mother’s head lolled at an unnatural angle. The wet, rattling wheeze stopped instantly.

"No!" I screamed, tearing at the metal crushing my legs, the agony blinding me. "What did you do?!"

Jane shrank back, burying her face in her hands. "Julian!" she wailed, the pitch shrill and erratic. "She's not breathing! I tried to pull her to safety, and she just stopped!"

***

The antiseptic stench of bleach and iodine dragged me back to consciousness. Harsh fluorescent lights stabbed at my eyes. I lay in a stiff hospital bed, an IV taped to the back of my hand, my ribs wrapped tight, throbbing with every shallow breath.

The door swung open. Julian stepped into the room.

His custom-tailored suit was ruined, stained with rain and soot. His jaw was clenched so tight the muscle leaped under his skin. He didn't rush to my side. He didn't ask if I was in pain. He stood at the foot of my bed, a towering monument of cold authority.

Jane clung to his right arm, her pastel cardigan now bearing a smudge of dirt. She was weeping softly, her fingers anxiously twisting her pearl necklace.

"Where is she?" I asked, my voice a hollow scrape. I already knew the answer.

"She didn't make it, Elena," Julian said. His tone was clipped, devoid of the warmth that used to anchor my world.

I pushed myself up, ignoring the fire in my ribs. My eyes locked onto Jane. "You killed her. I saw you. You snapped her neck."

Jane let out a strangled sob, burying her face into Julian’s sleeve. "Julian, please. I can't bear this. I was trying to save her from the smoke..."

"Stop this, Elena," Julian commanded, his voice dropping an octave, a warning growl. "You're hysterical."

"I am not hysterical!" The monitors beside me blared an accelerated rhythm. "She moved her on purpose! And you—you shielded her! You left me to die, and you shielded her!"

Julian’s eyes darkened, refusing to meet mine. He shifted his weight, a subtle barrier between me and Jane. "You drove us off the road in a storm. You were reckless. And now, to assuage your own guilt, you're blaming your sister for trying to help?"

"Help?" A bitter, jagged laugh tore from my throat. My thumb unconsciously found the faint, old scar on my left wrist, pressing into it to ground myself in reality. "You're sleeping with her, aren't you?"

Julian stiffened. The micro-expression was fleeting—a tightening around the eyes, a slight flare of his nostrils—but after eighteen years, I knew his face better than my own. Guilt.

He didn't deny it. Instead, he placed a protective hand over Jane's trembling fingers.

"I'll have the nurses bring you a sedative," Julian said, his voice a sheet of ice. "You've done enough damage for one night."

He turned his back on me, guiding a weeping Jane out the door. The latch clicked shut, leaving me completely, utterly alone in the blinding white room. My family was dead. My marriage was a lie. And the monsters who had orchestrated it all were walking away together.

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