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Wife Uncovers Big Lie Novel Cover

Wife Uncovers Big Lie

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Chapter 2

The next three days at the office felt like walking through a minefield blindfolded. Every interaction with Anastasia became a study in deception, every glance between her and Zachary a clue I needed to decode. I found myself arriving early and staying late, watching, waiting, cataloging the small intimacies that had been hiding in plain sight.

During Tuesday's marketing meeting, I noticed how Anastasia leaned forward when addressing Zachary, her voice dropping to a softer register. "Zach," she said, the nickname rolling off her tongue like a caress, "I think we should reconsider the Portland campaign timeline." Zach. I'd called him that maybe a dozen times in our entire relationship, preferring the formality of his full name. But from her lips, it sounded like a secret password, a key to a door I'd never been invited to open.

"Good point, Anastasia," he replied, and I caught the way his fingers drummed nervously against his coffee cup—the same tell he'd shown when lying about the train tickets.

Wednesday brought another revelation during lunch prep in the break room. I was heating leftover soup when Anastasia wrinkled her nose at someone's sandwich. "Cilantro," she said with disgust. "Zach hates it too. Says it tastes like soap." She looked directly at me as she said it, her smile sharp as a blade. "Some people are just more sensitive to certain flavors."

The casual intimacy of the comment hit me like a physical blow. I'd been married to Zachary for fifteen months and had never known he disliked cilantro. I thought back to all the meals I'd prepared, the Mexican restaurants we'd visited, the herb garden I'd planted last spring. Had he been silently enduring my cooking choices while sharing his true preferences with her?

"I didn't know that," I managed, stirring my soup with mechanical precision.

"Oh." Anastasia's eyebrows rose in mock surprise. "I just assumed... well, you know how it is with couples. You learn these little things."

That afternoon, I mentioned casually to Zachary that we should stay in this weekend, maybe try that new recipe I'd found. Something flickered across Anastasia's face when she overheard—a darkness that transformed her features before she smoothed them back into professional neutrality. But I'd seen it: possessiveness, anger, and something that looked disturbingly like ownership.

That evening, while Zachary showered, I slipped out to his car. My hands shook as I opened the glove compartment, and there it was—a second phone, sleek and black, hidden beneath the registration papers. The screen lit up at my touch, revealing a string of messages from "A."

*I need you.*

*Remember what I did for you.*

*Don't forget where you came from.*

*You owe me everything.*

The messages were demanding yet plaintive, each one a thread in a web of manipulation I was only beginning to understand. I photographed the screen quickly, my pulse hammering as I heard the shower turn off upstairs.

Thursday evening arrived with deceptive normalcy. Zachary and I were sharing dinner—takeout Thai food that I now realized probably contained cilantro he was politely choking down—when his regular phone rang. The caller ID made his entire body go rigid: Anastasia White.

He glanced at me with guilt-stricken eyes before answering. "Hello, Anastasia."

Her voice carried clearly through the speaker, sweet and needy. "Zach, I need you to make me those sweet potato dinner rolls like you used to. Remember? The ones you learned from me?" A pause, then her voice dropped to something almost vulnerable. "I'm having a difficult time and only those will help. You know how much they mean to me."

I watched my husband's face crumble. Whatever power she held over him, this request was a direct invocation of it. "Anastasia, I—"

"Please, Zach. Remember everything I did for you when you had nothing? When no one else would help?" Her voice carried the weight of old debts, old obligations. "I just need this one thing."

Zachary closed his eyes. "I'll... I'll see what I can do."

After he hung up, he couldn't meet my gaze. "I need to run to the store," he said, already reaching for his keys.

"At eight o'clock?"

"Just... some ingredients I forgot for tomorrow's client meeting."

Another lie, smooth and practiced. I watched him leave, then followed twenty minutes later to find him in the baking aisle, studying sweet potatoes with the intensity of a man solving a mathematical equation. He spent the next three hours in our kitchen, and I'd never seen him cook with such meticulous care.

The sweet potatoes were roasted to perfection, their flesh scooped and mashed with butter and spices I didn't recognize. The dough was kneaded with patient precision, left to rise in our warmest spot. The scent that filled our home was intoxicating—yeasty and sweet, rich with promise.

"Those smell incredible," I said, appearing in the doorway. "Are they for me?"

Zachary's hands stilled on the rolling pin. "They're for... the client meeting tomorrow. Important presentation."

The lie hung between us like smoke. I knew, and he knew I knew, but neither of us was ready to shatter the pretense completely.

I went to bed that night listening to him wrap the finished rolls in careful layers of parchment and foil, each one a love letter written in flour and devotion—just not for me.

Friday morning, I woke before dawn and positioned myself at our bedroom window. Sure enough, at 6:30 AM, Zachary emerged from the house carrying his carefully wrapped package. But instead of heading toward the office, he turned south, toward downtown.

I was dressed and in my car within minutes, following at a distance that felt both ridiculous and necessary. My hands gripped the steering wheel as I watched him navigate the early morning traffic with the determination of a man on a sacred mission.

He stopped at an upscale apartment building I'd never seen before, parking in a visitor's spot. I pulled into a coffee shop parking lot across the street and watched as he walked to the entrance, the rolls cradled against his chest like an offering.

Anastasia appeared in the doorway before he could knock, as if she'd been waiting. She wore a silk robe the color of champagne, her dark hair loose around her shoulders in a way that spoke of intimacy, of mornings shared. She accepted the rolls with both hands, her fingers brushing his as she spoke words I couldn't hear. Then she touched his arm—a lingering caress that made him look down in what I recognized as shame.

Or resignation.

He stayed twenty minutes. Twenty minutes while I sat in my car, watching the woman who had been slowly dismantling my marriage from the inside accept the fruits of my husband's labor, his time, his devotion. Twenty minutes while the sweet potato rolls—made with a recipe she had taught him, in a kitchen I had designed, with ingredients he had lied to obtain—disappeared behind her apartment door.

When Zachary finally emerged, his shoulders were slumped with the weight of whatever had transpired inside. He drove away without looking back, but I remained frozen in my car, staring at Anastasia's building until the morning sun climbed high enough to burn away the shadows.

I understood now that this wasn't just about hidden train tickets or secret phone calls. This was about recipes and rituals, about debts that ran deeper than money, about a woman who had woven herself so thoroughly into my husband's life that untangling her would require destroying everything we'd built together.

The sweet potato rolls had been a message, and I'd received it loud and clear: she wasn't just his past. She was his present. And if I didn't act soon, she'd be his future too.

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