
The Dead Wife’s Return
Chapter 1
The house felt different when I returned from my business trip—colder somehow, despite the late afternoon sun streaming through the windows. Three days away had felt like an eternity, and all I wanted was to collapse into Sebastian's arms and forget about the failed merger that had consumed my week.
I dropped my suitcase by the front door, the familiar weight of exhaustion settling into my bones. The silence struck me as odd. Usually, Sebastian would greet me with that crooked smile of his, pulling me close before I could even set down my bags. But today, nothing.
"Sebastian?" I called out, my voice echoing through the empty foyer.
No response.
Maybe he was in his study, buried in work as usual. Or perhaps taking a shower. I kicked off my heels, relishing the cool marble against my bare feet as I padded toward the staircase. The familiar scent of our home—lavender and cedar—should have been comforting, but something felt off. There was another fragrance lingering in the air, something floral and cloying that didn't belong.
As I climbed the stairs, a sound drifted down from our bedroom. Soft at first, almost indistinguishable from the hum of the air conditioning. But as I reached the landing, it became clearer. A rhythmic creaking, accompanied by something else—voices, muffled and breathless.
My heart began to race, though I couldn't quite name why. Maybe Sebastian was watching something on his laptop. Maybe he'd fallen asleep with the TV on. I told myself these things as I approached our bedroom door, even as my palms grew damp and my chest tightened with an inexplicable dread.
The door was slightly ajar, just enough to let those sounds escape. I reached for the handle, my fingers trembling as I pushed it open.
Time seemed to fracture.
The scene before me carved itself into my retinas with brutal clarity. On our bed—the bed where Sebastian had whispered promises of forever just a week ago—was my sister Bianca. She was on her hands and knees, wearing nothing but my mother's silk robe, the one I'd treasured since her death. The delicate champagne fabric hung open, exposing her pale skin as it caught the golden light filtering through our bedroom windows.
And behind her, his hands gripping her hips with a familiarity that made my stomach lurch, was my husband.
Sebastian's face was flushed with exertion, his dark hair damp with sweat as he moved against her. The sounds I'd heard from downstairs—the breathless gasps, the rhythmic creaking of our mattress—suddenly made horrifying sense.
I couldn't move. Couldn't breathe. Couldn't process what I was seeing.
Bianca's head was thrown back in ecstasy, her blonde hair cascading down her bare shoulders like silk. She looked beautiful, radiant even, in a way that made my chest constrict with something beyond betrayal. This wasn't some drunken mistake or moment of weakness. This was practiced. Intimate. Real.
"Stop," I whispered, the word barely audible even to myself.
Neither of them heard me. Or if they did, they didn't care.
Sebastian's movements became more urgent, more desperate, and Bianca responded with soft moans that seemed to echo off our bedroom walls. The same walls where our wedding photos hung. The same room where Sebastian had carried me over the threshold three years ago, promising to love and cherish me until death do us part.
"Stop!" I screamed this time, my voice cracking with the force of it.
Sebastian's head snapped up, his eyes meeting mine across the room. For a moment, I expected shame. Guilt. Some flicker of the man I'd fallen in love with. Instead, his face twisted with irritation, as if I were nothing more than an unwelcome interruption.
He didn't pull away from Bianca. Didn't scramble to cover himself or stammer out explanations. He simply glared at me with naked annoyance and growled, "Get out! Don't ruin this!"
The words hit me like physical blows. Each syllable carved away another piece of my heart, leaving raw, bleeding wounds in their wake.
Bianca turned to look at me then, her face glowing with post-coital satisfaction and something else—triumph. She didn't have the decency to look ashamed or even surprised. Instead, she smiled, a cruel, satisfied curve of her lips that I'd never seen before.
"Oh, Elena," she purred, her voice husky and breathless. "You're home early."
Sebastian still hadn't withdrawn from her, his hands still possessive on her skin as if claiming territory that had never belonged to me at all.
Bianca's smile widened, and she let out a soft, deliberate moan before speaking again. "Sebastian was just telling me how much tighter I am than you. Weren't you, darling?"
The words shattered something fundamental inside me. Not just my heart—that had already been destroyed the moment I'd opened the door. This was deeper. This was the complete annihilation of everything I'd believed about my life, my marriage, my family.
The room began to spin. My mother's robe—the last tangible piece of her I had left—draped over my sister's naked body like a mockery of everything sacred. The betrayal was so complete, so devastating, that my body rebelled against it.
I doubled over, bile rising in my throat as my stomach contracted violently. The taste of acid filled my mouth as I retched, my body purging itself of the horror I'd witnessed. I barely made it to the hallway before vomiting again, my knees hitting the hardwood floor as waves of nausea crashed over me.
Behind me, I could hear Bianca's laughter, light and musical, as if my complete destruction was nothing more than entertainment. Sebastian said something in response, his voice low and amused, but I couldn't make out the words over the sound of my own ragged breathing.
I knelt there on the floor of my own home, surrounded by the wreckage of my life, and wondered how I'd been so blind. How long had this been going on? How many times had they laughed about me behind my back? How many lies had I believed?
The sounds from the bedroom resumed, more urgent now, as if my presence had only heightened their excitement. Each moan, each whispered endearment, each creak of the bed drove the knife deeper into my chest.
I was still kneeling there, trembling and broken, when I heard my sister's voice drift from the bedroom one last time: "Don't worry about her, Sebastian. She'll get over it. She always does."
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