
Seven Years, A Secret Family
I took a bullet for my husband, Colt, a decorated Delta Force operator. The injury left me barren, but he swore I was all he ever needed.
Seven years later, I found him in a restaurant with another woman and a six-year-old boy who looked just like him. The boy called him "Dada."
My world shattered when I learned his family, his friends, and even my own father knew about his secret life. They all watched as he paraded his mistress, Chelsey, and their son, Jemal, in front of me. He even admitted I was just a "means to an end" for his family's legacy.
When Jemal went missing, Chelsey accused me of kidnapping him. Colt believed her. He locked me in our cellar for three days, a punishment for a crime I didn't commit. "He's not a bastard!" Colt roared when I questioned if the boy was even his. "He's my son! My blood!"
But his eyes darted away, filled with uncertainty.
As I stumbled out of the cellar, bruised and broken, my best friend arrived. "The divorce papers are filed, Em," she whispered fiercely. "It's done." I looked back at Colt, standing stunned on the porch. His empire of lies was crumbling, and I was finally free.
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Chapter 4
Emerson POV:
The next morning, the house was strangely quiet. I had spent the night in Bernice' s guest room, staring at the ceiling, every nerve ending frayed. The quiet was unsettling, like the calm before a storm. I finally dragged myself out of bed, my body stiff and sore.
I walked into the kitchen, the scent of coffee already brewing. Chelsey was at the counter, humming softly, meticulously arranging a plate of pancakes. Her hair was pulled back in a loose bun, and she wore a simple, faded t-shirt and jeans. An image of domestic bliss, carefully curated.
She looked up, her smile bright, almost too bright. "Good morning, Emerson! Slept well?"
My stomach rebelled. The question, laced with false cheer, made me want to gag. She looked almost… innocent. Like a demure housewife. But I knew the predatory glint in her eyes, the calculating mind behind the facade.
And then I saw it. Her left hand. On her ring finger, sparkling under the kitchen lights, was the diamond necklace Colt had given me for our fifth anniversary. He had worn it around my neck, whispering promises of forever. It was a unique, intricate design, custom-made. There was no mistaking it.
A wave of dizziness washed over me. That necklace. I remembered asking Colt for a similar one for my mother, a smaller version. He had refused, saying it was "too personal," "too special." But now, this woman was wearing it like a trophy.
My fist clenched, my nails digging into my palm. The pain was a distant hum compared to the roaring fire in my gut. I felt like a fool. A naive, trusting fool. How many others knew? How many of Colt' s colleagues, his friends, his family, had witnessed his double life and said nothing? The thought was suffocating.
I always prided myself on being smart, perceptive. But I had been so completely, utterly blind. Blinded by love, by trust. If Colt wanted a child so badly, he could have told me. We could have adopted. We could have explored other options. But he chose deceit. He chose to build a secret life, to mock our vows, to desecrate our shared future.
The memory of the night before, of Colt' s tender words to Chelsey' s son, the way he' d cradled the boy, it burned like a brand. I wanted him to hurt. I wanted him to feel every ounce of pain he had inflicted on me.
Just then, Colt walked into the kitchen. He looked refreshed, showered, his uniform still crisp despite the events of last night. He exchanged a quick, intimate glance with Chelsey, a silent language they shared.
He saw me then, and his forced smile faltered. "Emerson? You' re up. How are you feeling?" His voice was laced with a practiced concern that no longer fooled me.
"I' m fine, Colt," I said, my voice dangerously calm. "Just wondering what exactly is going on here." My eyes flickered to Chelsey, then back to him.
He cleared his throat, a nervous gesture. "Emerson, about this… I can explain. Chelsey and Jemal, they' re just… distant relatives. She' s had some trouble, and I was trying to help out. Family obligations, you know." Lies. More lies.
My rage, simmering just beneath the surface, threatened to boil over. "Family obligations? Is that what you call it, Colt? A six-year-old boy who calls you 'Dada' and a woman wearing my anniversary gift?"
His face paled. "Emerson, please. Not here. This isn' t what it looks like." He took a step towards me, his hand outstretched.
I recoiled as if he were diseased. "Isn' t what it looks like? What does it look like, Colt? Because from where I' m standing, it looks like you' ve been living a fucking double life!"
He flinched. "Emerson, keep your voice down. The neighbors. Look, my family… they' ve always been obsessed with lineage, with an heir. And after what happened in Afghanistan… I thought… I thought you couldn' t. I never meant to hurt you. I just wanted to secure the family name. But I love you. Only you. Jemal, he' s… I can send them away. I can make them disappear." His voice was desperate, pleading.
Send them away. The words were a mockery. My stomach churned with disgust. This was the man everyone believed was so devoted to me, so madly in love he' d defied his powerful family. The perfect husband. It was sickening.
Suddenly, a wail erupted from the next room. Jemal. He ran into the kitchen, his face red and tear-streaked. "Daddy! She' s being mean to Mommy!" He pointed a chubby finger at me.
"Jemal, enough!" Colt roared, his voice sharp and commanding. The boy instantly quieted, his lower lip trembling. Colt knelt, pulling the boy into a tight hug, his expression softening instantly. "Go back to your room, son. We' ll talk about this later."
Jemal, still sniffling, shuffled out of the kitchen, casting a venomous glance my way.
Chelsey stepped forward, her eyes wide with feigned hurt. "I' m so sorry, Emerson. He' s just a child. He doesn' t understand." She even dabbed at her eyes with a tissue. Then, she looked at Colt, her eyes filled with a desperate plea. "Colt, please. He needs you. We need you."
Colt looked from Chelsey to me, a conflicted expression on his face. He gently put his arm around Chelsey, pulling her closer. "It' s okay, Chels. I' m here." He even wiped a tear from her cheek. The gesture, so tender, so intimate, was a knife twisting in my gut.
My chest tightened, a searing pain radiating through me. I felt like I couldn' t breathe. My perfect husband, comforting his mistress, after his illegitimate son had just called me mean.
I tore my gaze away from their sickening display. I couldn't bear to look at him, at them, a single moment longer. "I' m done," I whispered, my voice barely audible.
I turned and fled, rushing towards our bedroom, slamming the door shut with all my might. I fumbled with the lock, securing it against the world, against him.
Colt' s frantic pounding on the door followed almost immediately. "Emerson! Open the door! Let me explain! I' ll send them away, I swear! Just talk to me!" His voice was muffled, desperate.
I slid down the door, my legs giving out beneath me. The cold hardwood floor was welcome against my burning skin. Send them away? He would just send them away, as if they were a package, an inconvenience. The sheer audacity.
A small slip of paper appeared under the door. Colt' s beautiful, elegant handwriting. It read: "Emerson, please. Don' t do this. I love you."
I crumpled it in my fist, my heart a hollow, aching void. Love. He spoke of love, while his hands were on another woman, his heart divided.
I looked towards the window, the faint light of the Patricks' guest house visible through the trees. A light was on in the master bedroom. My blood ran cold, a horrifying thought taking root in my mind.
I crept closer, pressing my ear against the wall. A muffled laugh, then a woman' s voice, low and husky. Chelsey. And then Colt' s voice, distinct. "You know I' d never choose her over you, Chels. She was just… a means to an end."
My world imploded. The air left my lungs. My knees buckled. I stumbled backward, clutching my mouth to stifle a scream. A means to an end. Seven years. My career. My body. All of it. A means to an end.
I rushed to the bathroom, throwing up violently into the toilet. My body convulsed, heaving out everything, trying to expel the poison of his words, of his betrayal.
I stared at my reflection in the mirror, my face a distorted mask of anguish and disgust. My eyes were bloodshot, my hair disheveled. I looked like a stranger. But in that moment, a flicker of my old self, the resilient, unbreakable Emerson, ignited.
The tears stopped. The nausea subsided. A cold, hard resolve replaced the agony. I wasn' t a means to an end. I was Emerson Wiley. And Colt Patrick was about to learn that.
The sun was just beginning to rise, painting the sky in hues of orange and purple. A new day. A new beginning. I would not cower. I would not beg. I would walk away, head held high. And I would make him pay. This was over.