
Reclaiming Life After Lies
Chapter 3
The silence stretched between us like a chasm, filled only by the tick of the grandfather clock in the hallway. Lucian stood there, his words hanging in the air like poison—*You became exactly the kind of woman I could never actually want.*
Then I heard the soft click of heels on hardwood, and Rebecca appeared in the doorway. Gone was any pretense of concern or friendship. Her smile was sharp as a blade, triumphant.
"Oh good, you finally told her," she said, settling into the leather chair across from Lucian's desk as if she belonged there. As if this were her home, her life, her victory to claim. "I was getting tired of pretending to care about her feelings."
I stared at her, this woman I'd trusted with my deepest fears and greatest hopes. "How long?" My voice came out as a whisper.
Rebecca tilted her head, considering. "How long have I been working to destroy you? Or how long have I been teaching Duncan that his real mommy is dirty and shameful?" She laughed, the sound like breaking crystal. "About a year and a half for the serious work. Though I started planting seeds much earlier."
The room spun slightly. "Duncan... you did that to Duncan?"
"Someone had to protect him from your influence." Rebecca's tone was matter-of-fact, as if discussing the weather. "Do you know what I told him every time you left for work? I said, 'Mommy chooses dead people over you. Mommy likes being dirty more than being clean for her little boy.' Children are so wonderfully simple—they believe what they're told repeatedly."
Lucian nodded approvingly. "Duncan needed to understand the truth about what kind of woman his biological mother really was."
*Biological mother.* The phrase hit me like a physical blow. Not just *mother*—biological mother. As if I were already being erased, reduced to mere genetics.
"You should thank me," Rebecca continued, examining her perfectly manicured nails. "I gave your sacrifice meaning by proving Lucian could never really trust you anyway. All that suffering, all that degradation—it served a purpose. It showed everyone exactly who you are when stripped of pretense."
She leaned forward, her eyes bright with malicious satisfaction. "And legally? Duncan doesn't even need you. You were never really married, so you have no parental rights. I've been his real mother for months now—the one who feeds him, bathes him, reads him bedtime stories while you were out wallowing in other people's grief."
The two of them sat there, united in their cruelty, treating my devastation as vindication rather than evidence of their monstrosity. They had dissected my love, my devotion, my very soul, and found it wanting—not because it was insufficient, but because they were incapable of recognizing its value.
"Three years," I said, my voice growing stronger. "Three years of your elaborate theater."
"And you played your part beautifully," Lucian said. "Every tear, every humiliation, every moment of degradation—exactly what we needed to see."
Rebecca giggled. "Remember when that woman spat on her at the Johnson funeral? She just stood there and took it. I almost felt sorry for her." She paused. "Almost."
I looked between them—my husband and my best friend, the two people I'd trusted most in this world—and felt something fundamental shift inside me. Not breaking, but hardening. Crystallizing into something unbreakable.
"You're right," I said quietly. They both looked surprised by my calm tone. "I did play my part beautifully. But the performance is over."
I turned and walked out of that room, leaving them to their victory celebration. I could hear Rebecca's laughter following me up the stairs, bright and vicious. But it couldn't touch me anymore. I was done being their experiment, their test subject, their entertainment.
That night, I moved through the house like a ghost while they celebrated downstairs with wine, their voices carrying up through the floorboards. I could hear Rebecca's high laugh, Lucian's deeper chuckle, the clink of glasses toasting their successful manipulation.
I packed methodically, taking only what I'd brought to this marriage—my clothes, my mourning certificates, my few personal belongings. I left behind the jewelry Lucian had given me, the expensive dresses Rebecca had helped me choose, everything that belonged to the life I'd thought was mine.
At the last moment, I took a single photograph—Duncan as a newborn, before Rebecca's poison had taken hold, when he still looked at me with pure love and trust. I pressed it against my chest, memorizing the weight of it.
I emptied my savings account at the ATM on the corner, the machine humming in the pre-dawn darkness. Back in the kitchen, I placed the envelope of money—three years of my soul, counted and recounted—on the counter with a note: *I'm done proving myself to people who were never worthy of proof.*
One last look at Duncan, sleeping peacefully in his room, his small face relaxed and innocent. I memorized every detail—the curve of his cheek, the way his hair fell across his forehead, the steady rise and fall of his chest.
Then I walked out into the darkness, toward whatever came next.
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