The Substitute Wife Escapes Her Gilded Cage
img img The Substitute Wife Escapes Her Gilded Cage img Chapter 3
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Chapter 7 img
Chapter 8 img
Chapter 9 img
Chapter 10 img
Chapter 11 img
Chapter 12 img
Chapter 13 img
Chapter 14 img
Chapter 15 img
Chapter 16 img
Chapter 17 img
Chapter 18 img
Chapter 19 img
Chapter 20 img
Chapter 21 img
Chapter 22 img
Chapter 23 img
Chapter 24 img
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Chapter 3

Liv POV

The end of my marriage didn't come with a bang, but with a whisper in the dark that shattered my bones.

It was a week after the dinner. Marcus stumbled through the front door late again, the scent of expensive scotch clinging to his suit like a second skin. He was rarely sloppy, usually the picture of composed elegance, but tonight, the mask had slipped.

I was in the kitchen, nursing a glass of water, trying to settle the nausea that had become my constant companion.

He saw me and stopped. His eyes were red-rimmed, unfocused. He walked toward me, not with the predatory grace I was used to, but with a heavy, tragic gait.

Suddenly, he seized my face between his hands. His palms were searing hot.

"I can't do it anymore," he slurred, his voice thick with misery. "I can't pretend."

My heart hammered a frantic rhythm against my ribs. "Who are you talking to, Marcus?" I asked softly.

He leaned his forehead against mine, his breath hitting my skin in ragged puffs.

"I love you," he whispered. "I only love you. Always you."

For a split second, a foolish, desperate part of me wanted to believe him. Wanted to believe that the coldness, the cruelty, was the act, and this was the truth.

Then, he shattered me.

"Why did you have to be my cousin, Izzy? Why?"

The air left my lungs. It was a physical impact, like a car crash. He wasn't looking at me. He was looking *through* me, projecting her face onto mine.

He pulled back, swaying, and looked into my eyes with a devastating intensity.

"But she looks like you," he muttered, tracing my jaw with a trembling finger. "She has your eyes. It's almost enough. Almost."

He let go of me and stumbled toward his study, leaving me standing in the kitchen, freezing cold in the middle of summer.

I didn't go to our bedroom. I followed him.

I moved like a phantom, my bare feet silent on the hardwood floors. The study door was ajar. I heard his voice, low and pleading. He was on the phone.

"I'm looking at her, and all I see is you," he was saying.

I pressed myself against the wall, holding my breath until my chest ached.

"I know, Izzy. I know it's the only way."

There was a pause. He was listening to her.

"Why did I marry her?" he laughed, a harsh, bitter sound. "Because she was the closest thing to you I could find without breaking the law. Because I needed a broodmare, and she was... available."

I slid down the wall, covering my mouth with both hands to stifle the sob that threatened to rip my throat open.

A broodmare. Available.

He continued, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper.

"She's just a stand-in, Izzy. A placeholder. Once she gives me an heir... if it's a girl, I'm naming her Isabella. After you. So I can say your name every day and no one will question it."

My stomach turned. Bile rose in my throat.

He was going to take my child-our child-and turn it into a monument to his incestuous obsession. He was going to erase me from my own motherhood.

I stood up. My legs were shaking, but my mind was suddenly, violently clear.

I wasn't a person to him. I was a mirror. I was an incubator.

I heard him sigh, a sound of deep, tortured longing.

"She'll never know," he said. "She's too simple. She loves me too much. She'd never leave."

A laugh bubbled up in my chest. It was a jagged, ugly thing.

*Too simple.*

I turned around and walked away. I didn't go to the bedroom. I went to the guest room. I locked the door.

I sat on the edge of the bed and stared at the moon outside the window.

He was wrong. I wasn't simple. I was shattered. And sharp pieces cut.

The next morning, I waited until he left for the office. I drove to a lawyer's office three towns over, a man who had no connections to the D'Angelo family. I paid in cash.

"I need a change of environment," I told the lawyer, my voice steady. "I need papers drawn up."

"Divorce?" he asked, arching a brow.

"Eventually," I said. "But first, I need to sever the financial ties. I need to disappear on paper before I disappear in person."

I signed the documents with a steady hand.

When I walked out into the sunlight, my phone rang. It was Izzy.

"Liv, darling," she purred, her voice dripping with false sweetness.

My skin crawled.

"What is it, Izzy?"

"We're going to the cemetery today," she said. "To visit Nonna's grave. Marcus wants you to come. It's a family thing."

I closed my eyes, summoning every ounce of strength I had left.

"I'll be there," I said.

I hung up.

I would go. I would play the part one last time. I would let them think I was the simple, loving canary.

And then, I would open the cage and fly straight into the sun.

            
            

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