
Unmasking the Harrison Lies
Chapter 2
The manila envelope sat on my desk like a viper coiled to strike. No return address, no postmark—just my name in block letters. I hadn't heard the delivery, hadn't seen who left it. But something in me already knew it contained poison.
My fingers trembled as I slid a letter opener beneath the seal. The contents spilled across the polished mahogany of my study desk—photographs, dozens of them, fanning out in a grotesque display. James and Sarah. Sarah and James. Entwined. Intimate. Loving.
I couldn't breathe. Each image was a knife, twisting deeper than the last. James pressing Sarah against a wall, his hands tangled in her hair. Sarah's head thrown back in ecstasy. The two of them laughing in a restaurant I'd never seen, their fingers intertwined across a table set for two.
Beneath the photos lay a small digital recorder. My thumb found the play button before my mind could protest.
"Mommy, when are you coming home?" Michael's voice, but not directed at me. Never at me.
"Soon, my darling." Sarah's voice, honey-sweet and maternal in a way I'd never heard from her before. "Aunt Victoria is just keeping things warm until we can all be together."
Chloe's giggle filtered through the tiny speaker. "You're our real mommy."
"Yes, sweet girl. I am."
Leo's voice, smaller than the others: "I wish Aunt Victoria would go away."
A pause, then Sarah's voice again, lower now, confiding: "She's just the nanny, my loves. A very expensive nanny."
Laughter—all four of them, James included.
I slammed my hand on the stop button, bile rising in my throat. The room spun around me, reality cracking like thin ice beneath my feet. I staggered to the bathroom just in time to empty my stomach, heaving until nothing remained but hollow, aching sobs.
When I finally pulled myself up, the woman in the mirror was a stranger—pale, hollow-eyed, destroyed. I splashed cold water on my face, trying to wash away the truth that clung to me like a second skin.
The nanny. A very expensive nanny.
I spent the night in my study, the photos and recorder locked in my desk drawer, poison I couldn't bear to touch again. Sleep never came. Instead, I watched darkness give way to the first pale streaks of dawn, my mind cycling through twelve years of memories, rewriting each one with this new, terrible knowledge.
James found me there as morning light spilled across the floor. He looked perfect—freshly showered, impeccably dressed in a charcoal suit, not a hair out of place. The sight of him made me physically ill.
"Victoria?" Concern creased his brow as he approached. "Have you been here all night? You look terrible."
I stood, legs unsteady beneath me. "Who am I to you, James?"
He blinked, confusion crossing his features. "What are you talking about?"
"The children. Are they mine?"
A flicker—something dark and calculating—passed behind his eyes, so quick I might have missed it if I hadn't been watching for it. Then his face softened, and he crossed the room to take my hands in his.
"Of course they're yours, darling." His thumbs traced gentle circles on my skin. "You're their mother. You carried them. You gave birth to them."
Carefully chosen words. Not lies, exactly, but not the truth either.
"And Sarah?"
His smile never faltered. "Sarah? What about her?"
I pulled my hands away. "I know, James. I have the pictures. The recordings."
He sighed, taking my face between his palms. His touch, once comforting, now made my skin crawl. "Victoria, you're exhausted. You've been ill. Your mind is playing tricks—"
"Don't." I jerked away. "Don't you dare try to make me think I'm crazy."
"I would never." He looked wounded, the performance so convincing I almost doubted myself. "But you've been under tremendous stress. The pneumonia, Michael's birthday... perhaps you should see Dr. Winters again. Get something to help you rest."
The perfect husband, concerned for his fragile wife. It was masterful.
"I know what I saw. What I heard."
He smiled—that same smile that had once made me feel like the most precious woman in the world—and kissed my hand. "You're overreacting, my love. Why don't you lie down? I'll have Eleanor bring you some tea."
And just like that, he was gone, leaving me standing in a pool of sunlight, questioning my own sanity.
I might have believed him. Might have convinced myself the photos were manipulated, the recordings staged. Might have swallowed the lie that I was simply overwrought, imagining conspiracies where none existed.
But three hours later, I walked into my kitchen and screamed.
Hanging from a butcher's hook—the one James used for his pretentious Sunday roasts—was a bloody organ, dripping crimson onto the white marble floor. A uterus. Animal, surely, but the message was unmistakable.
Beneath it, a note in flowing script: "You can never bear life again."
I backed away, trembling violently, memories of my mysterious hysterectomy flooding back—the pain, the confusion, James's soothing explanations about "complications" and "necessary measures."
This was no hallucination. No product of stress or illness.
I ran, slamming and locking the door to my study behind me. I dragged a heavy chair across the floor, wedging it beneath the doorknob. Only then, barricaded against the horror in my kitchen and the lies that had become my life, did I allow myself to break completely.
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