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Wife Rejects Cheating Husband Novel Cover

Wife Rejects Cheating Husband

The rain hammered against our living room windows with relentless fury, each droplet seeming to echo the unease that had settled in my chest since Timothy's phone rang an hour ago. I watched from the kitchen doorway as he paced near the fireplace, his jaw tight with concern. "She has nowhere else to go, Cassidy," he said, running his hand through his dark hair—a gesture I'd learned to recognize as his tell when he was trying to convince himself as much as me. "Evangeline's landlord kicked her out tonight. Some dispute over lease violations. She's sitting in her car in this storm." I set down my coffee mug with deliberate care, studying my husband's face. Timothy had always been a rescuer, drawn to wounded birds and lost causes. It was one of the things I'd fallen in love with in college—his instinct to protect, to shelter. But something about this situation felt different. Wrong.
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Chapter 3

I found her in our bedroom, her slender fingers rifling through my jewelry box. The sight froze me in the doorway—Evangeline, hunched over my most personal possessions, examining my grandmother's pearl earrings with an expression of calculated interest.

"What are you doing?" My voice came out sharper than I intended, but the violation deserved no gentleness.

Evangeline startled, dropping the earrings back into the velvet-lined compartment. She spun around, her hand flying to her chest in a perfect portrait of innocence.

"Oh! Cassidy, you scared me." Her voice trembled just enough. "I was just looking for some tissues. I thought I saw a box in here earlier..."

I stepped forward, closing my jewelry box with a decisive snap. "The tissues are in the guest bathroom. Where they've always been."

Her eyes filled with tears so quickly I almost believed they were genuine. Almost. "I'm so sorry. I didn't mean to intrude. I just—" Her voice broke perfectly. "I feel so lost right now."

Footsteps in the hallway announced Timothy's arrival before I could respond. He appeared behind me, his expression shifting from curiosity to concern when he saw Evangeline's tears.

"What's going on?" he asked, moving past me to place a protective hand on Evangeline's shoulder.

"Nothing," she whispered, wiping at her eyes. "I was looking for tissues and Cassidy... it's fine. I shouldn't have been in here."

Timothy's gaze hardened as he turned to me. "Cass, what did you say to her?"

The accusation in his tone hit me like a physical blow. "I didn't say anything. I found her going through my jewelry."

"I wasn't going through it," Evangeline protested softly. "I just opened the wrong drawer."

"She's our guest," Timothy said, his voice low with disapproval. "She's going through a difficult time, and you're treating her like she's some kind of criminal."

I stared at him, disbelief washing over me in cold waves. "She was in our bedroom, Timothy. Going through my things."

"It was a misunderstanding," he insisted, his arm now fully around Evangeline's shoulders. "You're being paranoid and unwelcoming."

Evangeline leaned into him, her eyes meeting mine over his shoulder with an expression that chilled me to the bone—triumphant, calculating, and utterly devoid of the tears that had so convinced my husband.

---

The racing track had always been my sanctuary. Behind the wheel, everything else disappeared—Evangeline's manipulation, Timothy's growing distance, the fractures in my marriage. There was only speed, precision, and the perfect harmony between machine and driver.

"You're going to crush it today," Marcus said, checking my helmet one last time. As my racing partner and friend, he knew how much I needed this win.

I nodded, scanning the crowd out of habit. My heart stuttered when I spotted them—Timothy and Evangeline, standing together near the pit lane. She wore oversized sunglasses and clung to Timothy's arm as if she needed support to remain upright.

"What is she doing here?" I muttered.

Marcus followed my gaze. "Your husband mentioned he was bringing a friend. Is that her? The houseguest?"

Before I could answer, they approached. Timothy smiled tentatively. "We came to support you. Evangeline's never seen a race before."

"How exciting," Evangeline gushed, her voice carrying just the right note of enthusiasm. "Timothy's told me so much about your racing. It's so brave of you."

I forced a smile, hyperaware of the other drivers watching us. "Thanks for coming."

As I walked away, I heard her ask Timothy in a stage whisper: "Is it really safe? Those cars go so fast..."

I pushed her voice from my mind as I settled into my car. The familiar embrace of the racing seat centered me, and when the signal came, I launched forward with practiced precision.

Three laps in, I was in my element, perfectly positioned for the lead. Then I saw it in my mirror—Evangeline's borrowed car, weaving through the pack with reckless speed. She shouldn't have been there; she wasn't registered, wasn't qualified.

The realization hit me just as her car slammed into mine at the curve. The impact was targeted, deliberate—catching my rear quarter panel at precisely the angle needed to send me spinning. Metal screamed against metal as my world became a blur of sky and track. The barrier rushed toward me with horrifying speed.

The crash felt endless—a symphony of breaking glass and twisting metal. When stillness finally came, pain bloomed across my body, most intensely in my right leg, which was pinned beneath the crushed dashboard.

Through the haze of shock, I saw emergency crews rushing toward me. And beyond them, standing motionless amid the chaos, was Evangeline—her sunglasses removed, her eyes fixed on my wrecked car, her lips curved in the faintest smile of satisfaction.

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