
Rayne's Scheme: Betrayal of Her Husband
Chapter 1
I stared at the credit card statement in my hands, the numbers blurring as my eyes filled with tears. There it was again - another payment to Coastal Vista Properties, a company I'd never heard Elio mention in all our years of marriage. Five thousand dollars this month. Seven thousand last month. The pattern stretched back nearly a year.
My fingers trembled as I placed the statement on our marble kitchen counter. The house was silent except for the steady tick of the grandfather clock in the hallway - a wedding gift from Elio's mother that had counted away the hours of our increasingly hollow marriage.
"What are you looking at?" Elio's voice, cool and distant, startled me. He stood in the doorway, his tall frame casting a long shadow across the kitchen floor. His dark hair was perfectly styled, his suit impeccable as always. Not a wrinkle, not a hint of the disorder that was churning inside me.
"These payments," I said, pushing the statement toward him. "To Coastal Vista Properties. They're quite substantial, Elio. What are they for?"
He barely glanced at the paper before his lips thinned into that familiar dismissive line. "It's a business investment, Miriam. Nothing that would interest you."
"Nearly sixty thousand dollars over the past year would interest most wives," I countered, hating the slight tremor in my voice. "Especially when their husbands never mentioned it."
He sighed, the sound heavy with impatience. "Not everything requires your approval or understanding. Some things are complex."
"I have an MBA from Wharton, Elio. I think I can grasp business complexities." The rare flash of defiance surprised even me.
His dark eyes finally met mine, cold and unreachable. "It's handled, Miriam. That's all you need to know." He turned to leave, conversation dismissed.
"That's not good enough anymore," I whispered, but he was already gone, the sound of his study door closing with quiet finality.
---
Three days later, I followed him. The shame of it burned in my chest as I kept my car at a careful distance behind his sleek black Audi. Elio had mentioned another "business trip" over breakfast - the same hollow explanation he'd been offering every other weekend for months.
The coastal road wound along cliffs that dropped to the churning Pacific below. After an hour's drive, Elio turned onto a private drive partially hidden by towering cypress trees. I drove past slowly, noting the name on the discreet stone marker: Seacliff Villa.
I parked my car in a public lookout point half a mile down the road and walked back, my heart hammering against my ribs. The villa was stunning - a modern glass and stone structure perched on the edge of the cliff, offering unobstructed ocean views. Our home - the one we shared - was beautiful too, but this... this had been designed with passion.
I waited until I saw Elio's car leave, three hours later. The spare key to all Thompson properties hung from my keychain - a wedding gift from Elio's father that his son had probably forgotten about. It slid into the lock with terrifying ease.
The interior was sparsely but expensively furnished, with large windows that brought the ocean inside. But it wasn't the architecture that stopped my breath. It was the master bedroom.
A portrait dominated the wall opposite the bed - a stunning painting of a woman with copper-red hair and luminous green eyes. Helen. I'd seen photos of her before, tucked away in Elio's desk drawer. His first love. His dead first love.
The room was a shrine. Her books lined the shelves. A bottle of her perfume - I recognized the brand from Elio's wistful description years ago - sat on the vanity. A cashmere throw in her favorite shade of green was folded at the foot of the bed.
I sank onto the edge of the mattress, my legs suddenly unable to support me. This wasn't just memory or grief. This was obsession, preserved and tended like a garden.
That's when I heard it - a soft footfall from somewhere beyond the bedroom. A woman's gentle humming.
I moved silently toward the sound, following it to what appeared to be a solid bookshelf. But as I drew closer, I noticed the slight gap, the whisper of air from behind it.
My fingers found the hidden latch almost instinctively. The bookshelf swung open on silent hinges, revealing a hidden suite beyond - and there she was.
For one impossible moment, I thought I was looking at Helen herself, risen from the dead. The same copper hair, the same green eyes from the portrait. She sat at a vanity, applying lipstick, wearing a diamond necklace I recognized with a shock of betrayal - my grandmother's necklace that Elio had claimed was lost during our move three years ago.
She turned, those green eyes widening at the sight of me standing in the doorway. Not Helen. But someone who had been crafted to look exactly like her, down to the smallest detail.
"You must be Miriam," she said, her voice soft and musical. "I'm Rayne. I've been so looking forward to meeting you."
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