
Poisoned by False Love
Poisoned by False Love Chapter 1
I heard the front door open, followed by the sound of luggage wheels rolling across our marble foyer. Alexander was home from his London business trip, a day earlier than expected. I smoothed my cream silk blouse and walked toward the entrance, a practiced smile already in place. Six years of marriage had taught me the proper way to greet my husband—with polite warmth but never too much enthusiasm. That was our unspoken arrangement: respect without passion, coexistence without intimacy.
But as I rounded the corner, my steps faltered. Alexander wasn't alone.
"Charlotte," he said, his voice carrying an unfamiliar warmth that made me pause. "I'd like you to meet Sophia Blake."
The woman beside him was stunning in the most effortless way—honey-blonde hair falling in loose waves around a heart-shaped face, wide blue eyes that projected an almost childlike innocence. She couldn't have been more than twenty-five.
"Sophia saved my life in London," Alexander continued, his hand resting on the small of her back with a casual intimacy he had never shown me. "If not for her quick thinking when I collapsed at that café, I might not be standing here."
I felt my smile freeze. "Collapsed? Alexander, you never mentioned being ill."
"It happened so quickly," he said, his eyes not meeting mine but lingering on Sophia's face. "Some kind of allergic reaction. The doctors said if Sophia hadn't administered first aid..."
"I just did what anyone would do," Sophia interjected, her voice soft and melodic. "I couldn't let someone die right in front of me."
Something cold slithered down my spine as Alexander smiled at her—a real smile that reached his eyes and softened the hard lines of his face. In six years of marriage, I had never seen that expression directed at me.
"Sophia has nowhere to stay in Malibu," Alexander said, finally looking at me. "I've invited her to use our guest suite until she finds her footing."
It wasn't a request. It never was with Alexander.
"Of course," I said, the perfect wife. "I'll have Maria prepare the blue room."
---
Dinner that evening was an exercise in surreal theater. I sat at our expansive dining table, watching as my husband transformed into someone I didn't recognize. Alexander, who typically ate in methodical silence, punctuating the meal only with brief comments about business, was animated. He leaned toward Sophia, sharing stories of London I'd never heard, laughing at her observations, his eyes crinkling at the corners.
"And then," Sophia giggled, touching Alexander's arm, "the waiter just stood there, completely drenched!"
Alexander threw his head back and laughed—a full, rich sound I had never heard in our home. I took a long sip of my wine, the Cabernet bitter on my tongue.
"Charlotte," Sophia turned to me, her smile perfect, "Alexander tells me you're quite the pianist. Would you play for us after dinner?"
I caught Alexander's eye. "I didn't realize my husband discussed my hobbies."
"Sophia asked about the piano in the living room," he said, his tone carrying a subtle warning. "I mentioned you play occasionally."
Occasionally. As if he hadn't heard me playing late into the night for years, seeking solace in Chopin when sleep eluded me. As if my music wasn't the only true expression of myself I had left.
After dinner, I excused myself to the kitchen, needing a moment away from their private smiles and inside jokes. When I returned with coffee, I overheard Sophia's whispered words.
"She seems so... cold. Not at all what I expected."
"Charlotte is... practical," Alexander replied. "She understands her role."
I stood frozen in the doorway, the coffee tray heavy in my hands. My role. Six years of silent devotion, of saving his family's company with my trust fund, of building a life around his needs—reduced to a "role."
Later that night, I confronted him in our bedroom. "Who is she really, Alexander?"
"I told you," he said, loosening his tie. "She saved my life."
"And that earns her an indefinite stay in our home? There's something you're not telling me."
He turned, his expression hardening. "Careful, Charlotte."
"I've seen how you look at her," I whispered, my voice barely audible. "In six years, you've never once looked at me that way."
"Perhaps there's a reason for that."
His words cut deeper than any physical blow could have. I stepped back, steadying myself against the dresser.
"She's manipulative," I said, the words escaping before I could stop them. "Whatever she told you—"
Alexander moved with a speed that startled me. His fingers closed around my wrist, dragging me toward the balcony doors. "You need to cool down, Charlotte."
"Alexander, stop—"
He shoved me onto the balcony and locked the glass door behind me. The night air was frigid against my skin, the ocean winds whipping my hair across my face as I pounded on the glass.
"Alexander, please! It's freezing out here!"
His face was a mask of cold fury as he approached the door again. For a moment, I thought he was going to let me in. Instead, he unlocked it, stepped onto the balcony, and before I could process what was happening, his hands were on my shoulders.
"Perhaps a swim will clear your head," he said, and pushed me backward toward our infinity pool.
I felt nothing but air beneath my feet, then the shocking cold of the water as it closed over my head. The last thing I saw before I went under was my husband's silhouette against the night sky, watching impassively as I fell.
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