
Reclaiming Life After Lies
Chapter 1
The weight of the envelope in my hands should have felt triumphant. Three years. Three years of enduring whispered slurs, of cleaning off spit from strangers, of coming home with my clothes reeking of funeral flowers and other people's grief. But I'd done it. Every dollar Lucian needed for his prosthetic leg was finally here, counted and recounted until my fingers were raw from handling the bills.
I pushed through our front door, my body aching from the day's final ceremony—a particularly brutal one where the deceased's family had blamed me for their tears, as if I were the cause of their pain rather than simply its witness. The house felt different somehow, too quiet for early evening. Usually Duncan's laughter would echo through the halls, or I'd hear the television murmuring from the living room.
Then I heard voices drifting from Lucian's study. My heart lifted slightly—maybe he was on a work call, and I could surprise him with the money afterward. We could finally put this nightmare behind us. He could walk properly again, and maybe... maybe he'd look at me the way he used to, before the accident that had changed everything.
I approached the partially open door, the envelope clutched against my chest like a shield. But the voices stopped me cold.
"—honestly impressed she lasted this long." Rebecca's laugh was light, musical. The same laugh that had comforted me through countless difficult nights. "Three years of that disgusting job. I almost felt sorry for her a few times."
"Don't." Lucian's voice was sharp, familiar, but stripped of any warmth I'd ever heard in it. "This was necessary. After what happened with Melissa, I had to know Sierra's feelings were real. Anyone can say they love you when things are easy."
My hands began to tremble. The envelope crinkled softly, and I pressed it tighter against my ribs, as if it could somehow protect me from what I was hearing.
"Still, making her work as a professional mourner?" Rebecca's tone held admiration now. "Brilliant, really. The most degrading job you could think of, and she threw herself into it completely. Did you see her face when that woman spat on her last month? She just... took it."
"She had to prove herself." Lucian's chair creaked as he shifted. "Any woman can be sweet and loving when her husband is healthy and successful. But when he's broken, disabled, needing expensive medical care? That's when you see their true nature."
"And she passed your little test with flying colors." There was something else in Rebecca's voice now, something sharp and satisfied. "Though I have to admit, watching her degrade herself day after day while I played mommy to Duncan... it was almost too easy."
The floor beneath my feet seemed to tilt. My vision blurred at the edges, and I had to press my free hand against the doorframe to keep from falling. This couldn't be real. This had to be some horrible nightmare, brought on by exhaustion and grief.
"The leg was never injured," Lucian continued, his tone as casual as if he were discussing the weather. "The whole thing was staged. Rebecca's idea, actually. She said if Sierra really loved me, she'd sacrifice anything to help me heal."
"And if she didn't pass the test?" Rebecca asked.
"Then I'd know she was just another Melissa, ready to run at the first sign of real commitment."
I bit down on my lip so hard I tasted blood. Three years. Three years of scraping together every penny, of enduring humiliation and hatred, of missing bedtime stories with Duncan because I was too exhausted to function. Three years of believing I was saving the man I loved.
Three years of lies.
"Though I have to say," Lucian's voice dropped lower, "some nights when she comes home reeking of those funeral parlors, looking so... broken... it disgusts me. The irony is perfect—she's proving her love by becoming exactly the kind of woman I could never actually want."
Rebecca's laughter bubbled up again, and this time it sounded like breaking glass. "Poor Sierra. She has no idea that every tear she's shed, every humiliation she's endured, has been completely pointless. You were never hurt at all."
The envelope slipped from my numb fingers, hitting the hardwood floor with a soft thud that seemed to echo through my entire body. Inside that envelope was my soul, sold piece by piece over three years of hell. And it had all been for nothing.
Worse than nothing. It had been for their entertainment.
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