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The Husband Who Chose Wrong Novel Cover

The Husband Who Chose Wrong

On her wedding day, a bride is horrified to discover that the man she just married is a dangerous imposter. The true groom has been replaced by his twin brother, a cold-blooded killer with a dark agenda. Trapped in a house of secrets, she must navigate a deadly game of deception to uncover her real husband's fate. As the mystery deepens, she realizes her life depends on outsmarting a criminal who knows her every move and desire.
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Chapter 2

I sat in the silence of our apartment, Damien's phone still warm in my trembling hands. The messages glowed like accusations on the screen, each word carving deeper into my chest. But I didn't scream. I didn't throw anything. Instead, something cold and calculating settled over me like armor.

I needed to know how deep this betrayal ran.

When Damien's key turned in the lock twenty minutes later, I was seated on the couch, his phone carefully placed back where I'd found it. I'd wiped away my tears, reapplied my lipstick, and arranged my features into the same loving expression I'd worn for five years.

"Hey, beautiful." His voice carried that familiar warmth as he dropped his briefcase and approached me. "You're home early."

He leaned down to kiss my forehead, and I forced myself not to flinch. His cologne—the one I'd bought him last Christmas—mixed with something else. Something floral and foreign. Her perfume.

"I wanted to surprise you for our anniversary," I said, my voice steady despite the storm raging inside me. "But I see you forgot your phone."

Damien's eyes flicked to the device, and for just a moment, something flickered across his face. Fear? Guilt? But it vanished so quickly I might have imagined it.

"Thanks, babe. Don't know what I'd do without you." He pocketed the phone without checking it, which told me everything I needed to know. He was expecting more messages. "What did you have planned for tonight?"

I gestured to the candles, the wine, the carefully prepared dinner. "Just us. Like old times."

His smile faltered slightly. "Actually, Em, I hate to do this, but something came up at work. Emergency project. The client's flying in from Tokyo tomorrow, and if we don't get these projections finished tonight..."

The lie rolled off his tongue so smoothly, so practiced. How many times had he used work as an excuse? How many nights had I eaten dinner alone, believing he was sacrificing for our future when he was actually building one with someone else?

"Oh." I let disappointment color my voice, just enough to seem genuine. "On our anniversary?"

"I know, I know. I'm the worst husband ever." He pulled me into his arms, and I breathed in the scent of betrayal clinging to his shirt. "But this promotion could change everything for us. Think about the house we could buy, the trips we could take."

The trips. Like the one to Cabo he'd planned with Sophia while I was losing our baby.

"I understand," I whispered against his chest. "Work comes first. It always has."

If he heard the double meaning in my words, he didn't show it. Instead, he tilted my chin up and kissed me—the same kiss that used to make my knees weak. Now it felt like a betrayal of my own lips.

"I'll make it up to you this weekend. Promise."

Another lie to add to his collection.

I watched him gather his things, noting how he checked his reflection in the hallway mirror, how he straightened his tie with the careful attention of a man preparing to see his lover. The man I'd married would have grabbed a coffee and rushed out the door for a real work emergency.

"Don't wait up," he called over his shoulder. "This could take all night."

The door closed behind him with a soft click that sounded like a death knell.

I waited exactly ten minutes before grabbing my keys.

The rain had intensified, turning the city streets into rivers of reflected neon. I followed Damien's car through downtown, my heart hammering against my ribs. Part of me hoped I was wrong, that he really was going to the office, that this was all some terrible misunderstanding.

But when his Mercedes pulled into the valet station of the Grand Meridian Hotel, that last shred of hope withered and died.

I parked across the street and watched him stride through the revolving doors, his step lighter than it had been at home. He moved like a man walking toward joy instead of obligation.

The hotel lobby was all marble and crystal, the kind of place we'd talked about staying for a special occasion but never could afford. Or rather, never could afford for us. Apparently, Sophia was worth the expense.

I found a corner chair partially hidden behind a decorative column and settled in to wait. The minutes crawled by like hours. Couples moved through the lobby—some holding hands, some arguing quietly, some looking at each other the way Damien and I used to. The way I thought we still did.

A text buzzed on my phone. From Damien: "Meeting running long. Love you."

I stared at those three words until they blurred. Love you. How easy it was to type a lie.

Three hours. Three hours I sat in that lobby, watching the elevator doors, ordering coffee I couldn't taste, pretending to read a magazine while my world crumbled around me. Every time the elevator chimed, my breath caught. Every time it wasn't him, a small part of me died.

Then, finally, the doors opened and there he was.

Damien stepped out first, his hair mussed, his tie loosened, looking satisfied in a way that made my stomach turn. And beside him...

Sophia.

She was stunning in that effortless way some women managed—tall, willowy, with the kind of bone structure that belonged in magazines. Her dark hair cascaded over her shoulders, and she wore a dress that made my breath catch.

The red dress. The exact shade of crimson, the same flowing silhouette, the same elegant neckline. It was the dress Damien had shown me online for my birthday last month, the one he'd said was "delayed in shipping" when the day came and went without a gift.

He'd bought it for her.

They moved through the lobby like they owned it, Damien's hand resting possessively on the small of her back. She leaned into him, whispering something that made him laugh—the deep, genuine laugh I hadn't heard in months.

I stood on unsteady legs, my body moving without conscious thought. They were almost to the exit when I stepped into their path.

"Damien."

The color drained from his face so quickly I thought he might faint. "Emma. What... what are you doing here?"

Sophia's eyes widened with what looked like genuine surprise, but then something shifted in her expression. Something calculating and cold.

"Oh," she said, her voice honey-sweet with an underlying edge, "Damien, this must be Emma." She stepped closer to him, her arm sliding possessively through his. "Your wife."

The way she said 'wife' made it sound like a disease.

Damien opened his mouth, probably to lie again, but Sophia continued, her smile sharp as a blade.

"I have to say, you're exactly what I pictured." Her eyes raked over me dismissively. "Damien's told me so much about you. How you're always so... understanding about his late nights. So trusting."

The words hit like physical blows. Damien's face had gone ashen, his mouth opening and closing soundlessly.

"Sophia," he started, but she wasn't finished.

"He says being at home feels like being trapped in a cage sometimes." Her smile widened, revealing perfect white teeth. "I suppose every man needs somewhere to fly free, don't you think?"

The lobby spun around me. The marble floor felt unsteady beneath my feet. Trapped in a cage. Those were his words, spoken to her, about me. About our marriage. About our life together.

"Emma, I can explain—" Damien finally found his voice, reaching toward me.

But I was already backing away, the red dress—my dress—burning itself into my memory. Sophia's triumphant smile. Damien's guilty, desperate expression.

"No," I whispered, then louder, "No."

I turned and ran, pushing through the revolving doors into the rain-soaked night. Behind me, I heard Damien calling my name, but his voice was swallowed by the storm.

I ran until my lungs burned and my legs gave out, finally stopping under a bus shelter three blocks away. The rain hammered against the plexiglass roof as I doubled over, gasping for air that felt like glass in my throat.

Five years. Five years of my life, and I'd been nothing more than a cage to him. A boring, clingy cage while she was his freedom, his joy, his real love.

The velvet box in my purse felt like it was mocking me. Forever Yours. What a beautiful, devastating lie that had turned out to be.

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