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His Trophy Wife, Her Secret Life

His Trophy Wife, Her Secret Life

img Short stories
img 11 Chapters
img 67 View
img Gavin
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About

My wife, Sophia Hayes, was beautiful, poised, and utterly detached. For five years, our marriage had been a bizarre, silent transaction: she'd disappear for days, even weeks, to "support" her childhood sweetheart and his failing tech startup. Each time she returned, a lavish "guilt offering" would appear – a vintage Patek, a signed first edition, a priceless Ming vase. Ninety-nine such gifts now filled our sterile mansion, each a screaming monument to her absence and my bitter complicity. I was no longer the man who' d clung to hope, who' d screamed and shattered expensive crystal. Today, as she fastened a diamond bracelet, preparing for her hundredth departure, she waved away my feigned concern for our anniversary, prioritizing his celebration. "I need you to sign this," I said, offering a document I' d subtly placed among her latest "gift." She signed, carelessly dismissing it as a prenup addendum, already thinking of David. She didn' t read the fine print. She never did. "PETITION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE" it read, the final decree awaiting its ironclad confirmation. The world saw her as a successful patron, supporting a talented founder, but at a glamorous gala, the veil slipped. A reporter, sensing blood, asked, "Are you two an item?" Panic flashed in Sophia' s eyes, and in her fear, she sought me out – her hidden husband – to rescue her public image. I stepped from the shadows, played my part, and then watched as she rushed not to me, but to him, murmuring reassurances. That night, she didn't come home; the next morning, she arrived, exhausted but triumphant, thanking me for "saving us." She dismissed my quiet anger as humility, oblivious. "You asked me to be there, Sophia," I said, watching her carefully curated world unravel. "I did? When?" she asked, genuinely bewildered. Her memory, a weapon of convenience, had erased my very existence. I nodded, utterly calm as she detailed her next trip with David, making another empty promise for "us" once she returned. That date was the day our divorce would be finalized. A cold, hard satisfaction settled in my gut; the world she had built was about to come crashing down. Just not in the way she expected.

Introduction

My wife, Sophia Hayes, was beautiful, poised, and utterly detached.

For five years, our marriage had been a bizarre, silent transaction: she'd disappear for days, even weeks, to "support" her childhood sweetheart and his failing tech startup.

Each time she returned, a lavish "guilt offering" would appear – a vintage Patek, a signed first edition, a priceless Ming vase.

Ninety-nine such gifts now filled our sterile mansion, each a screaming monument to her absence and my bitter complicity.

I was no longer the man who' d clung to hope, who' d screamed and shattered expensive crystal.

Today, as she fastened a diamond bracelet, preparing for her hundredth departure, she waved away my feigned concern for our anniversary, prioritizing his celebration.

"I need you to sign this," I said, offering a document I' d subtly placed among her latest "gift."

She signed, carelessly dismissing it as a prenup addendum, already thinking of David.

She didn' t read the fine print. She never did.

"PETITION FOR DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE" it read, the final decree awaiting its ironclad confirmation.

The world saw her as a successful patron, supporting a talented founder, but at a glamorous gala, the veil slipped.

A reporter, sensing blood, asked, "Are you two an item?"

Panic flashed in Sophia' s eyes, and in her fear, she sought me out – her hidden husband – to rescue her public image.

I stepped from the shadows, played my part, and then watched as she rushed not to me, but to him, murmuring reassurances.

That night, she didn't come home; the next morning, she arrived, exhausted but triumphant, thanking me for "saving us."

She dismissed my quiet anger as humility, oblivious.

"You asked me to be there, Sophia," I said, watching her carefully curated world unravel.

"I did? When?" she asked, genuinely bewildered.

Her memory, a weapon of convenience, had erased my very existence.

I nodded, utterly calm as she detailed her next trip with David, making another empty promise for "us" once she returned.

That date was the day our divorce would be finalized.

A cold, hard satisfaction settled in my gut; the world she had built was about to come crashing down.

Just not in the way she expected.

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