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The Dead Wife’s Return Novel Cover

The Dead Wife’s Return

"I didn't kill your wife, Sebastian. You did." I was the perfect wife. I cooked, I cleaned, and I loved Sebastian Thorne with every fiber of my being. But on our anniversary, I found him with my stepsister, mocking me, defiling my mother’s memory. Broken and pregnant, I fled into the storm. My car plunged off the cliff. They never found my body. Five years later, I am no longer Elena, the weak, invisible housewife. I am Valeria Stone, the CEO of Phoenix Corp. I have returned with a new face, a new name, and a heart of ice. Sebastian Thorne thinks he can conquer me. He looks at me with those hungry eyes, obsessed with the woman who reminds him of his dead wife. He wants to own me. He wants to bed me. But he doesn’t know I’m the ghost he created. He doesn’t know about the son I’m hiding. And he certainly doesn’t know that I came back for one thing only: to burn his empire to the ground.
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Chapter 2

I stumbled down the hallway, my legs barely supporting me as I fled from the nightmare in my bedroom. The sounds behind me—their breathless laughter, the rhythmic creaking that had become my personal torture—followed me like ghosts. I needed to get away. I needed to hide.

The guest bathroom door slammed behind me with more force than I intended, the sound echoing through the house like a gunshot. My hands shook as I turned the lock, as if that flimsy piece of metal could somehow protect me from the devastation that had just torn through my life.

I collapsed against the door, sliding down until I hit the cold tile floor. My whole body trembled uncontrollably, shock settling into my bones like ice water. The taste of bile still burned my throat, but there was nothing left in my stomach to expel except the bitter reality of my situation.

Three years. Three years of marriage, and this was what it had come to.

I pressed my palms against my temples, trying to stop the spinning sensation that made the small bathroom feel like it was tilting on its axis. The pristine white tiles, the gleaming fixtures, the carefully arranged towels—everything looked exactly the same as it had this morning when I'd left for my trip. But nothing would ever be the same again.

A memory surfaced unbidden, sharp and cruel. Three years ago, when I'd lost the baby. I'd been twelve weeks along, just beginning to show, when the cramping started. The doctor's words echoed in my mind with devastating clarity: "The miscarriage has caused significant scarring to your uterine wall, Mrs. Thorne. I'm afraid conceiving again will be... extremely difficult."

Sebastian had barely looked at me during the consultation. When we'd gotten home, he'd disappeared into his study for hours. Later that night, when I'd tried to reach for him in our bed, seeking comfort in his touch, he'd pulled away.

"What's the point?" he'd said, his voice cold and clinical. "You can't even do the one thing women are supposed to do. You're like a broken machine, Elena. A hen that can't lay eggs."

The words had cut deep then, but I'd forgiven him. Grief makes people cruel, I'd told myself. He was hurting too. But now, seeing him with Bianca, I understood the truth. He hadn't been grieving our lost child—he'd been calculating. Measuring my worth. Finding me wanting.

I pulled my knees to my chest, wrapping my arms around them as if I could physically hold myself together. The bathroom was small, suffocating, but it felt safer than anywhere else in this house that had become a monument to my naivety.

That's when I saw it.

On the counter, forgotten from this morning's rushed routine, was a pregnancy test. I'd bought it weeks ago on a whim, during one of those moments when hope had flickered despite the doctor's grim prognosis. I'd been feeling strange lately—nauseous in the mornings, exhausted by midday, my breasts tender and swollen. But I'd dismissed it as stress from work, from Sebastian's increasing coldness, from the growing distance between us that I'd been too blind to understand.

With trembling fingers, I reached for the test. The plastic felt foreign in my hands, like an artifact from another life. A life where I'd still believed in miracles. In second chances. In love.

I didn't even remember taking it. My body moved on autopilot, muscle memory guiding me through the motions while my mind remained fractured, split between the horror upstairs and this small, desperate act of hope.

The waiting was agony. Three minutes had never felt so long. I sat on the edge of the bathtub, staring at the test on the counter as if I could will it to show me what I needed to see. What I desperately, impossibly needed to be true.

Two pink lines.

I blinked hard, certain I was hallucinating. Certain that shock had finally broken my mind completely. But when I looked again, they were still there. Clear. Unmistakable. Miraculous.

Pregnant.

A sob escaped my throat, part joy, part terror. After three years of trying, after countless negative tests, after being told it was impossible—this. This tiny miracle growing inside me while my world collapsed around me.

I pressed my hand to my still-flat stomach, wonder and protective instinct flooding through me like a tidal wave. My baby. My child. The one thing Sebastian had said I could never give him, and here it was, defying every medical prediction.

But the joy lasted only seconds before reality crashed back down.

Footsteps echoed in the hallway outside, followed by Sebastian's voice, low and intimate. He was talking to someone—Bianca, obviously—and they were moving toward the staircase. Toward the main floor of the house.

I pressed my ear to the door, my heart hammering so hard I was sure they could hear it through the walls.

"...only a matter of time now," Sebastian was saying, his tone casual, almost bored. "The merger failed, which means her father's company is more vulnerable than ever. Once I have control of Blackwood Industries, I won't need her anymore."

Bianca's laughter tinkled like wind chimes. "And what about the prenup? Doesn't she get half of everything?"

"Only if the marriage lasts five years," Sebastian replied, and I could hear the smile in his voice. "We're at three. I just need to find the right grounds for divorce. Something that voids the agreement entirely."

They'd stopped walking. They were right outside the bathroom door now, their voices clearer than I wanted them to be.

"What about children?" Bianca asked, and my blood turned to ice. "The prenup mentioned something about heirs."

Sebastian's laugh was harsh, cutting. "Elena? Pregnant? The doctors were very clear about that impossibility. Besides, even if by some miracle she managed to conceive, well..." His voice dropped to a whisper that somehow carried more menace than a shout. "Accidents happen. Especially to women under stress."

The pregnancy test slipped from my numb fingers, clattering against the tile floor. The sound seemed deafening in the small space, and I held my breath, praying they hadn't heard.

"But don't worry, darling," Sebastian continued, his voice moving away as they headed downstairs. "Once I'm free of that barren waste of space, you'll give me the heir I need. The Thorne name will continue through our children, not hers."

Their voices faded as they descended to the main floor, but Sebastian's words echoed in my mind with crystalline clarity. If he knew about the baby—my baby—he would find a way to take it from me. He would divorce me, claim the child, and give it to Bianca to raise as her own.

The woman wearing my mother's robe would become the mother of my child.

I retrieved the pregnancy test with shaking hands, staring at those two pink lines that had transformed from miracle to curse in the span of minutes. This baby—this impossible, precious life growing inside me—was my secret now. My only leverage. My only hope.

But it was also my greatest vulnerability.

I had to disappear. Tonight. Before Sebastian discovered the truth. Before he could destroy the last good thing in my life the way he'd destroyed everything else.

I pressed the test against my chest, feeling the plastic dig into my palm. This child would never know Sebastian's cruelty. Would never be used as a pawn in his games. Would never be raised by the woman who had helped destroy our family.

I would make sure of that.

Even if it meant losing everything else.

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