
My Husband Pretended to Be Dying for My Twin
Chapter 1
The townhouse is too quiet.
I notice it the moment I push through the front door, my messenger bag heavy with medical journals I'll never need again. The usual hum of the air purifier Reid requires for his "condition" is absent. No low murmur of the television from the darkened bedroom where he spends his afternoons. Just silence, thick and wrong, settling over the marble foyer like dust.
I set my keys in the ceramic dish by the door—the one we picked out together on our honeymoon, back when I still believed in us—and listen.
That's when I hear it. Laughter. Light, crystalline, unmistakably female. Then the clink of wine glasses.
My stomach drops.
Reid doesn't drink. Alcohol interferes with his medication, or so he's told me for five years. And he certainly doesn't entertain—not with his tremors, his fatigue, his carefully documented list of symptoms I've memorized like scripture.
I move toward the study, my flats soundless against the hardwood. The door is cracked open, spilling warm lamplight into the hallway. Through the gap, I see him.
Reid. My husband. Standing at the bar cart with his back to me, pouring red wine into two glasses with hands that don't shake at all.
"You really had her convinced you were dying," the woman says, and my breath stops.
I know that voice. I've known it longer than any other voice in my life.
Jolene.
My twin sister steps into view, perching on the edge of Reid's desk in a way that's too familiar, too comfortable. She's wearing the Chanel jacket I complimented last Christmas, the one she said was a gift from a "friend" in Paris. Her hair—the same shade as mine but professionally highlighted—catches the light as she tilts her head back and laughs again.
"It wasn't that hard," Reid says, handing her a glass. His voice is smooth, easy, nothing like the careful monotone he uses with me. "She wanted to believe it. Genevieve's always been the martyr type."
The words hit like a fist to the sternum.
"God, remember her face when you proposed?" Jolene takes a sip, her lips staining the rim. "Like you'd handed her the moon. Meanwhile, I was packing for the Sorbonne with her scholarship letter in my suitcase."
The floor tilts beneath me. I grip the doorframe, my nails digging into painted wood.
The Sorbonne. My scholarship. The one I gave up to marry Reid, to care for him, to be the wife he needed during his "decline."
"Your masterpiece," Jolene continues, swirling her wine. "Fake neurological disorder, complete with a sympathetic neurologist on your family's payroll. I still can't believe she bought it."
"She's brilliant in a lab," Reid says, and there's something almost fond in his tone that makes my throat burn. "Just not with people. She sees what she wants to see."
"And what she wanted to see was a husband who needed her." Jolene's smile is sharp. "Pathetic, really. Five years of playing nurse to a perfectly healthy man."
Reid moves closer to her, his hand settling on her knee. "Five years of freedom for you. Paris, the research position, the publications—all hers, all yours."
"All mine," Jolene agrees, leaning into him.
I watch them kiss, and something inside me—something I didn't know could break any further—splinters into dust.
I don't remember walking away. Don't remember the minutes that pass while I stand in the kitchen, staring at the marble countertop where I've prepared five years of carefully balanced meals for a man who was never sick. My hands are shaking now, the tremor Reid never had.
The front door opens and closes. Jolene's perfume lingers in the air as she leaves, laughing into her phone about dinner plans.
I wait.
Reid appears in the kitchen doorway ten minutes later, his expression already shifting into the mask I know so well—the slight furrow of pain, the careful slowness of movement.
"Genevieve," he says, surprised. "I didn't hear you come in."
"I heard you, though." My voice doesn't sound like mine. It's too steady, too cold. "I heard everything."
His face goes still.
"The Sorbonne scholarship," I continue, each word precise as a scalpel. "The neurologist on your family's payroll. Five years of Jolene living my life while I played nurse to a man who was never sick."
Reid's hand begins to tremble—the familiar tremor I've documented, worried over, adjusted my entire life around. He reaches for a glass from the cabinet.
I cross the space between us and knock it from his hand. It shatters against the tile, and the sound is satisfying in a way that terrifies me.
"Don't," I say. "Don't you dare."
The tremor stops. Just stops, like turning off a switch.
Reid's face changes. The careful invalid disappears, replaced by someone I don't recognize—someone cold and calculating and utterly in control.
"You want a divorce," he says. It's not a question.
"Yes."
"No." He straightens to his full height, and I realize I've never seen him stand like this—strong, healthy, whole. "You can make all the accusations you want, Genevieve. But who's going to believe you? Your parents certainly won't. They've been in on this from the beginning."
The kitchen floor seems to drop away beneath me.
"That's right," Reid continues, his voice soft and deadly. "Why do you think they pushed so hard for this marriage? Why do you think they never questioned my condition? They wanted Jolene in Paris. They wanted you here, out of the way, playing the devoted wife."
He steps closer, and I force myself not to retreat.
"So go ahead," he says. "Tell whoever you want. But you'll be the crazy, jealous wife making up stories about her sick husband and successful sister. And I'll be the victim, suffering through a marriage to a woman who's finally lost her mind."
He leaves me standing in the kitchen, surrounded by shattered glass and the ruins of five years I'll never get back.
I don't cry. I'm too empty for tears.
I just stand there, watching the wine from Jolene's glass seep into the grout, and begin to plan.
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