
Stolen Wife's Revenge
Chapter 3
The flash drive felt like it weighed a hundred pounds in my pocket as I returned to my hotel room. Each piece of evidence I uncovered was another nail in the coffin of my marriage—a marriage that had apparently ended three years ago without my knowledge.
I couldn't sleep. The image of Marcus cradling his son—his real family—burned behind my eyelids whenever I closed them. I needed to know more about the woman who had replaced me. The woman who was now officially Mrs. Sterling.
With trembling fingers, I contacted a private investigator recommended by a concierge who didn't ask questions when I slipped him five hundred dollars.
"I need everything on Vanessa Crawford Sterling," I told the investigator, a former police detective named Reyes. "Every detail, no matter how small."
"This'll cost you," he warned.
"Money isn't an issue," I replied, surprising myself with the steel in my voice. Marcus had always ensured I had access to substantial funds—perhaps the price of his guilt.
Three days later, Reyes delivered a comprehensive background report. I spread the pages across my hotel bed, my heart pounding as I absorbed each revelation.
Vanessa Crawford. Age 32. A woman with a history that included a restraining order from a former boyfriend and two charges of petty fraud that had been mysteriously dropped. The photos showed a stunning blonde with perfect features and a smile that never quite reached her eyes.
But it was the last page that made my blood run cold. Before meeting Marcus, Vanessa had worked briefly for the same car service company that had driven me the day of my accident—the accident that had left me unable to walk properly or bear children.
The coincidence was too perfect.
"Can you find out if she was working on October 17th, 2018?" I asked Reyes over the phone, my voice barely above a whisper.
"The date of your accident," he noted, having clearly researched me as well. "I'll see what I can dig up."
I couldn't wait for confirmation. Something deep inside me already knew the truth. The accident that had destroyed my body, my career, and my future had been no accident at all.
I needed more evidence—not just of their betrayal, but of their ongoing surveillance of me. Marcus always seemed to know my schedule, my moods, my progress in physical therapy. The thought that they might be watching me made my skin crawl.
My physiotherapy sessions were the one constant in my life—three times a week at an exclusive clinic in Manhattan. Marcus had insisted on the best care money could buy, and now I understood why. It wasn't love; it was guilt. Or perhaps just maintenance of his perfect façade.
I purchased a tiny camera disguised as a bottle of pain relief spray and placed it on the shelf in my private therapy room. For two weeks, I recorded every session, reviewing the footage each night, looking for anything unusual.
On the tenth day, I found it.
Twenty minutes after I left the clinic, the door to my therapy room opened. Vanessa Crawford Sterling—my replacement—slipped inside, dressed in scrubs with a fake ID badge. She moved purposefully, photographing my exercise charts, flipping through my medical file, even taking pictures of the specialized equipment customized for my rehabilitation.
She was studying me. Learning my routines. Monitoring my progress.
The realization hit me like a physical blow. This wasn't just about Marcus maintaining two households. They were actively tracking me, perhaps waiting for the moment I might discover their deception.
I needed to see their home—the real home Marcus had built with his real wife. The estate in Connecticut where they raised their son together.
I created a new identity—Emily Parker, a real estate photographer working for an exclusive agency. With a blonde wig, glasses, and makeup that subtly altered my features, I looked nothing like the Isabella Sterling who appeared in society photographs.
"The Crawfords are considering selling," I lied smoothly to the housekeeper who let me in. "They've commissioned preliminary portfolio shots while they're away."
The mansion was everything Marcus had once promised we would build together. I photographed each room methodically, maintaining my professional facade while my heart shattered anew with each discovery. Their wedding portrait hanging above the fireplace. Family photos lining the hallway. A life built on the ruins of mine.
When I reached the nursery, I nearly dropped my camera. The room was perfect—a showcase of love and care for their precious son. But there, taped to the baby monitors, were photos of me. Recent photos, taken during my physical therapy sessions.
And scrawled across my face in red marker: "NEVER AGAIN."
My hands shook as I photographed the monitors. This wasn't just surveillance. This was obsession. This was hatred.
As I slipped out of the house, clutching evidence of their twisted fixation, I realized that I wasn't just fighting to reclaim my identity.
I was fighting for my life.
You may also like





