
Uncover My Husband's Imposter Truth
Chapter 2
The morning after I'd uttered those life-altering words across our dining table, I found myself sitting alone in our sunlit kitchen, my untouched coffee growing cold. The silence in our Fifth Avenue apartment felt oppressive, as if the very walls were holding their breath, waiting for what would happen next.
Michael—or the man I'd thought was Michael for three decades—had barely spoken to me since. He'd slept in the guest room and left early for work, his face a mask of wounded confusion that almost made me doubt myself. Almost.
The doorbell rang, startling me from my thoughts. When I opened it, I found David standing there, his usually warm eyes hard with concern. Behind him stood Sarah, my sister, and Michael's parents, Eleanor and George Harrison. Their synchronized arrival was too perfect to be coincidental.
"Mom," David said firmly, walking past me into the apartment. "We need to talk."
I closed the door slowly, a cold weight settling in my stomach. "I see Michael's been making calls."
"Dad is worried sick about you," David said, pacing our living room. At thirty-two, he was the spitting image of his father—the man I'd fallen in love with at UCLA, not the stranger who'd replaced him. "He says you want a divorce because of a guinea pig. A guinea pig, Mom!"
"It's not that simple, David."
"Then explain it," Sarah interjected, her practical nature asserting itself. "Because from where we're standing, it sounds like you've lost your mind."
I took a deep breath. "Pip reacts to your father with absolute terror. Every single time. Animals sense things we can't."
"So you're ending a thirty-year marriage based on rodent behavior?" David's voice rose incredulously. "Mom, you need help. Professional help."
"I've already found her help," Eleanor Harrison said, stepping forward with the smooth authority that had always intimidated me. "Dr. Lansing is the best marital psychiatrist in Manhattan. He's agreed to see you this afternoon."
I looked at my mother-in-law's perfectly composed face, wondering what secrets lurked behind those calculating eyes. Had she known all along? Had she helped orchestrate this monstrous deception?
"I don't need a psychiatrist," I said firmly. "What I need is a divorce attorney, and I've already contacted one."
David's face flushed with anger. "Mom, this is insane! You can't throw away everything over nothing!"
"It's not nothing," I insisted, my voice rising to match his. "Something is wrong. I can feel it. I've felt it for months."
"Feelings aren't facts," Eleanor said dismissively. "Michael has been nothing but devoted to you."
I turned to her, a sudden clarity cutting through my confusion. "Has he? Or has someone else?"
A flicker of something—alarm? recognition?—crossed Eleanor's face before she composed herself. That tiny reaction confirmed what I'd begun to suspect: she knew.
"I'm filing the divorce papers today," I said, grabbing my purse from the entryway table. "You can all wait here for Michael if you'd like, but I have an appointment at the Manhattan family court."
"Catherine, please," Sarah caught my arm as I reached for the door. "At least see Dr. Lansing. What could it hurt?"
I hesitated, then nodded. "Fine. After I file the papers."
---
Dr. Lansing's office overlooked Central Park, the autumn trees creating a tapestry of gold and crimson beyond his floor-to-ceiling windows. The psychiatrist himself was a silver-haired man with penetrating eyes and a voice like warm honey.
"Mrs. Harrison," he said, gesturing to a leather chair across from his. "Your husband tells me you're experiencing some... unusual decision-making patterns."
"My husband," I said carefully, "is not who he claims to be."
Dr. Lansing's expression remained neutral as he made a note. "And you believe this because a guinea pig reacts negatively to him?"
"I know how it sounds," I admitted. "But it was like a key turning in a lock. Suddenly, all these little inconsistencies over the years made sense."
"What inconsistencies?"
I paused, struggling to articulate the subtle wrongness I'd felt. "He doesn't react to things the way he used to. His laugh is different. Sometimes he doesn't remember things from our early relationship."
"Mrs. Harrison, marriages evolve. People change."
"Not like this," I insisted. "Not fundamentally."
Dr. Lansing leaned forward. "Catherine—may I call you Catherine?—what you're describing sounds like a projection of deeper issues. Many women your age struggle with feelings of disconnection in long-term marriages. It's quite common during midlife transitions."
I stared at him, wondering if Michael had paid him to say exactly this. "You think I'm having a midlife crisis?"
"I think," he said gently, "that it's easier to believe your husband has been replaced than to confront the reality that your marriage has changed. That you've both changed."
I stood up, suddenly suffocating in the elegant office. "Our session is over, Dr. Lansing."
---
The whispers started the moment I entered the Harrington Foundation Gala. Michael and I had attended this charity event for years, but tonight I came alone, determined to maintain some semblance of normalcy despite the chaos of my personal life.
I wore a midnight blue gown that had once been Michael's favorite, my hair swept up in an elegant chignon. But no amount of designer fabric could shield me from the sidelong glances and hushed conversations that followed me across the ballroom.
"There she is," I overheard a woman in crimson whisper to her companion. "The guinea pig divorcée."
A ripple of laughter followed, piercing me like tiny daggers. I kept my chin up, accepting a glass of champagne from a passing waiter.
"Catherine," Eliza Thornton, the chairwoman of the foundation, approached with a too-bright smile. "We're so glad you could make it. And... no Michael tonight?"
"No," I said simply. "We're separated."
"Yes, I'd heard," she said, her eyes gleaming with barely concealed curiosity. "Something about... a pet?"
Behind her, I could see a group of women watching us, their expressions ranging from pity to amusement. The story had clearly made the rounds.
"Excuse me," I murmured, turning away. But everywhere I went, the whispers followed.
"...completely lost it..."
"...throwing away thirty years because a guinea pig squeaked..."
"...always thought she was so put together..."
The room began to spin slightly, the lights too bright, the music too loud. I set down my untouched champagne and made my way toward the exit, tears threatening to spill despite my best efforts.
As I pushed through the heavy doors into the cool night air, I caught a glimpse of my reflection in the glass—a woman alone, surrounded by shadows, doubting everything she'd ever known. But beneath the doubt was something stronger, something growing: certainty.
Because what no one else knew—what I hadn't told anyone yet—was that I'd taken a photo of Pip's reaction to Michael. And there was something in that image that couldn't be explained away by any psychiatrist's theory or society gossip. Something that would change everything.
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