
Reclaiming Life After Lies
Chapter 2
The days blurred together like watercolors in rain. I perfected the art of pretending—smiling when Lucian kissed my forehead, nodding when Rebecca offered to watch Duncan, maintaining the careful facade of a woman who hadn't heard her entire life dismissed as a cruel experiment. But beneath the surface, I was drowning.
During what should have been mourning appointments, I found myself at the county records office instead. The building smelled of old paper and bureaucracy, nothing like the suffocating floral arrangements I'd grown accustomed to. My hands shook as I approached the clerk's window, a kind-faced woman with silver hair and gentle eyes.
"I need to verify a marriage certificate," I said, my voice barely above a whisper.
She took the document I'd retrieved from Lucian's files, examining it with practiced efficiency. Her expression shifted almost imperceptibly—a slight tightening around her eyes, a pause that lasted a heartbeat too long.
"Ma'am, I'm afraid this certificate isn't in our system." Her voice was carefully neutral, professional. "The registration number doesn't match our records, and the seal... it's not quite right."
The words hit me like physical blows. "What does that mean?"
She leaned forward slightly, lowering her voice. "I think you should speak with a lawyer, dear. Soon."
I stumbled out of that building in a daze, the fraudulent certificate crumpled in my fist. Even our marriage—the very foundation I'd built my sacrifice upon—was a lie. I had no legal claim to anything. Not the house, not our shared accounts, and most devastating of all, not Duncan.
Sitting in my car in the parking lot, I gripped the steering wheel until my knuckles turned white. The leather creaked under the pressure, and I imagined it was Lucian's neck. For the first time since discovering their betrayal, I allowed myself to cry. Not the professional tears I'd perfected for strangers' funerals, but raw, ugly sobs that tore through my chest like broken glass.
* * *
Two days later, Rebecca sprung her trap with surgical precision.
"Sierra, you look exhausted," she said, appearing at my door with that same concerned smile I'd once found comforting. "Why don't you take Duncan shopping? Some mother-son time might be good for both of you."
I should have known. I should have seen the calculation behind her kindness. But I was desperate for any connection with my son, who still flinched when I reached for him.
The upscale mall buzzed with weekend shoppers, their conversations creating a comfortable hum. Duncan walked beside me reluctantly, his small hand limp in mine. When I stopped at a children's clothing store, he immediately began to fuss.
"I want Auntie Becca!" he wailed, his voice carrying across the store. "Mommy smells funny!"
Other shoppers turned to stare, their expressions shifting from mild annoyance to something darker when they took in my appearance. I was still wearing the black dress from this morning's ceremony, my hair pulled back severely, my makeup understated but unmistakably funeral-appropriate.
"Shh, baby," I whispered, kneeling to his level. "Mommy's here. We're going to find you something nice—"
"That's not my mommy!" Duncan's scream pierced the air. "She's dirty! She's scary!"
That's when the whispers started. A woman with perfectly styled blonde hair pointed at me, speaking loudly to her companion: "Isn't that one of those professional mourners? What's she doing with that child?"
Another voice joined in: "He said she's not his mother. Look how terrified he is."
The crowd began to gather, phones appearing like vultures circling carrion. Someone called security, and within minutes, uniformed guards approached with grim expressions.
"Ma'am, we've received reports of suspicious behavior," the lead guard said, his hand resting on his radio. "Can you provide identification and proof of your relationship to this child?"
My hands trembled as I fumbled for my wallet, but Duncan's continued screams for "Auntie Becca" only fueled the crowd's suspicion. Someone shouted about child trafficking, and the word spread like wildfire through the gathering mob.
"I'm his mother," I said, my voice breaking. "Please, he's just scared—"
"Mommy's at work!" Duncan sobbed. "This lady is dirty!"
That's when Rebecca appeared, like an angel of mercy in her pristine white dress. "Oh my goodness, what's happening?" she gasped, rushing to Duncan's side. He immediately threw himself into her arms, and she held him protectively against her chest.
"Thank goodness you're here," the security guard said. "Do you know this woman?"
Rebecca's performance was flawless. "This is Sierra, Duncan's... well, his biological mother. She's been under tremendous stress lately." Her voice carried just the right note of concern mixed with gentle disapproval. "I'm his godmother. Perhaps it would be best if I took him home?"
The crowd murmured approval as Rebecca swept Duncan away, leaving me to face two hours of interrogation while videos of my humiliation spread across social media. By the time Lucian arrived to confirm Duncan's parentage, the damage was complete. I was the monster mother, the professional mourner who couldn't even comfort her own child.
* * *
I returned home that evening emotionally shattered, my soul scraped raw by public humiliation. The house felt like a mausoleum—cold, empty, suffocating. I found Lucian in his study, the blue glow of his phone illuminating his face as he watched footage of the mall incident.
He was smirking.
Something inside me finally snapped. Three years of careful control, of swallowing my pain and doubt, exploded in a single moment of crystalline clarity.
"Enjoying the show?" I asked, my voice deadly calm.
He looked up, not even bothering to hide his amusement. "You have to admit, it's rather poetic. The professional mourner, rejected by her own child."
I threw the forged marriage certificate onto his desk, watching his expression shift from smugness to cold calculation. "Explain this."
Lucian leaned back in his chair, completely unruffled. "I wondered when you'd find that."
"Three years," I whispered. "Three years of hell, and you were never even hurt."
"I had to know," he said simply. "After Melissa left me for that rich banker the moment things got difficult, I needed to be sure. Real love requires real sacrifice."
"Real sacrifice?" My voice rose despite my efforts to control it. "I degraded myself for you. I endured hatred and humiliation—"
"And you were pathetic doing it." His words cut like a blade. "Did you really think crying at strangers' funerals made you special? You were just a test subject, Sierra. And you failed the moment you started complaining about the work."
He stood, circling his desk with predatory grace. "You want to know the truth? Watching you degrade yourself day after day, coming home reeking of death and desperation... it disgusted me. You became exactly the kind of woman I could never actually want."
The man I'd loved, the man I'd sacrificed everything for, stood before me dissecting my devotion like a scientist examining a failed experiment. No remorse. No recognition of my humanity.
Just cold, clinical satisfaction at a test completed.
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