
Wife Uncovers Big Lie
Chapter 3
I called in sick to work Friday morning, my voice steady as I lied to Marcus about a stomach bug. The irony wasn't lost on me—lying had become so commonplace in my life that I was getting better at it myself.
The drive to Millfield, Oregon took three hours through winding mountain roads that gave me too much time to think. I'd rehearsed what I might find: a modest farmhouse, maybe a trailer park, some evidence of the hardship Anastasia had subtly woven into her workplace conversations. "Growing up wasn't easy," she'd mentioned once, sighing as she looked at expensive lunch options in the company cafeteria. "Some of us learned to make do with less."
But as I turned onto Magnolia Lane, following the GPS coordinates from her employment file, my assumptions crumbled like stale bread.
The address led to wrought-iron gates that belonged in a magazine spread. Beyond them stretched a circular driveway lined with mature oak trees, leading to a mansion that could have housed three families comfortably. The architecture was colonial revival, all white columns and symmetrical windows, with wings extending from either side of the main structure. Two luxury cars—a BMW and a Mercedes—sat parked as casually as if they were garden ornaments.
I pulled over across the street, my hands trembling as I raised my phone to photograph the scene. The cognitive dissonance made my head spin. This wasn't poverty. This was generational wealth, the kind that came with trust funds and country club memberships.
A woman in gardening clothes emerged from behind a row of perfectly manicured hedges, and I seized the opportunity. I approached the gate, adopting my most helpless expression.
"Excuse me," I called out. "I think I'm lost. I'm looking for the White family residence?"
The woman—clearly a housekeeper based on her uniform—smiled kindly. "You found it, dear. This is the White estate. Miss Anastasia's childhood home, though she's rarely here anymore. Always busy with that job in Seattle."
"Seattle," I repeated weakly.
"Oh yes, she's quite successful now. Mrs. Eleanor is very proud, though she does worry about Anastasia working so hard." The woman's expression grew thoughtful. "Are you a friend of hers?"
"Something like that," I managed.
As if summoned by our conversation, a child's laughter rang out from the garden. A boy emerged from behind a fountain, chasing a red ball that bounced toward the gate. He looked to be seven or eight, with dark hair and the kind of energy that suggested he'd been cooped up too long.
My breath caught. I recognized him immediately from the framed photo on Anastasia's desk—Maverick White.
"Grandma Eleanor says I can't go past the gate," he announced, stopping just short of the iron bars. "But my ball did."
I retrieved the ball and handed it through the gate, studying his face with the intensity of a detective. His eyes were a distinctive hazel, flecked with gold—completely different from Zachary's warm brown. His nose was narrow and straight, his chin pointed. There was nothing of Zachary in this child's features.
"I'm visiting my grandmother," Maverick continued, apparently starved for conversation. "Mama's always busy with work in Seattle, so I stay here lots. Uncle Zach visits sometimes, but not much. He's nice though. He brings me books."
Uncle Zach. Not Daddy. Not Papa. Uncle.
"Your Uncle Zach sounds wonderful," I said carefully. "Do you spend a lot of time with him?"
Maverick shrugged. "Not really. Mama says he's very busy with important grown-up stuff. But my real daddy lives in California now. He sends me postcards with palm trees."
The words hit me like physical blows. Real daddy. In California. This child had never been Zachary's son, despite whatever implications Anastasia might have used to strengthen her psychological hold.
I made a decision that surprised even me. "Maverick, would you like to go get your grandmother? I'd like to speak with her."
Minutes later, I stood in the opulent foyer of the White mansion, facing Eleanor White—a woman in her sixties with silver hair and the kind of bone structure that spoke of good breeding. Her sitting room was a study in understated luxury: antique furniture, oil paintings, Persian rugs that probably cost more than my car.
"Mrs. Harper," Eleanor said after I introduced myself as Anastasia's employer. Her tone was carefully neutral, but I caught the wariness in her eyes. "How... unexpected."
"I need to ask you about your daughter's relationship with Zachary Mills."
Eleanor's composure cracked slightly. She set down her teacup with deliberate precision. "What exactly has Anastasia told you?"
"Very little. But I've found evidence that suggests they've known each other for fifteen years."
"Fifteen years." Eleanor's voice carried a weight of disappointment. "Yes, that sounds about right. My daughter became... fixated on Mr. Mills when she was twenty-three. He was working at some restaurant in Portland where she was a regular customer. A struggling young man, from what I gathered."
"She helped him?"
"She bought someone's loyalty," Eleanor corrected sharply. "Anastasia has always believed that money and assistance create permanent debts. She gave him financial help, made connections for him, and then spent the next decade and a half collecting on that investment."
The room felt airless. "And Maverick?"
"Is the son of Marcus Chen, Anastasia's ex-boyfriend from college. A perfectly nice young man who couldn't tolerate my daughter's... intensity." Eleanor's eyes met mine directly. "Mrs. Harper, I suspect you're here because you're beginning to understand what kind of person my daughter really is. She's never been honest about anything when it comes to that Mills man."
I stood to leave, my mind reeling with revelations. At the door, I turned back. "Mrs. White, would it be possible for Maverick to come back to Seattle with me? Anastasia mentioned she might want him to visit."
Eleanor studied me for a long moment, and I saw recognition dawn in her eyes—the understanding that I was gathering ammunition for a war I hadn't yet declared.
"Yes," she said finally. "Perhaps it's time some truths came to light."
As I walked back to my car with Maverick chattering excitedly beside me about his upcoming adventure, I felt the last of my illusions about my marriage crumble. Zachary hadn't just been keeping secrets. He'd been living an entirely fabricated reality, one where debts from fifteen years ago mattered more than vows made fifteen months ago.
The drive back to Seattle stretched ahead of us, and with every mile, I felt myself transforming from a confused wife into something sharper, more dangerous.
Someone who was finally ready to fight back.
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