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The Lie Behind His Perfect Life
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The Lie Behind His Perfect Life

Author: Luo Chengfeng
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Chapter 1

For three years, my husband Hudson convinced everyone I was crazy. My parents. Our friends. Even my own therapist.

He said my suspicions were just anxiety. PTSD from our miscarriage. That I needed my medication and a good night's sleep.

But a pink butterfly hair clip in his car told a different story.

It wasn't mine. And we don't have children.

When I confronted him, he sighed with practiced patience-the same sigh he'd perfected over three years of making me doubt my own mind. "It belongs to a client's daughter," he said, reaching for my pills. "Your anxiety is flaring up again."

I almost believed him. I always almost believed him.

But this time, I didn't back down.

I invited his mistress and their three-year-old son to our family dinner.

With the DNA test results in my purse, I was ready to burn his perfect world to the ground.

He thought he could gaslight me forever.

He was wrong.

Chapter 1

Cora Frank

For three years, my husband Hudson had expertly convinced everyone-my parents, our friends, even my own therapist-that my suspicions were symptoms of Generalized Anxiety Disorder and PTSD, triggered by our miscarriage. He systematically eroded my trust in myself, painting me as paranoid, fragile, and unwell.

But a single misplaced item shattered that carefully constructed narrative. It wasn't a dramatic discovery. Just my parking spot, stolen for the third time this month.

I pulled into the garage of our Boston townhouse and there it was-his black Mercedes, angled carelessly across the white line, occupying both his space and mine. I sat in my car for a long moment, staring at it.

He parked in my spot so I'd have to call him, I realized. That's how he always knows exactly when I'm coming home.

The thought sent ice through my veins.

I didn't call. Instead, I took a photo and posted it to my Instagram story. A mundane complaint. The kind of thing normal wives post about their normal husbands.

Within sixty seconds, a DM slid into my inbox. It was from Ayden Wolfe, the Gen Z intern at my architecture firm-the one who claimed to have dated eighteen people and had the emotional scar tissue to prove it.

"Cora. Based on my extensive experience with human garbage-if you want to save your marriage, call him and tell him to move the car. If you don't... go straight to the bedroom. And record everything."

My hands went cold.

I walked up the stairs to our unit, each step heavier than the last. My key turned in the lock. The door swung open.

Hudson sat on the living room couch, laptop open, typing with practiced focus. He looked up and smiled-that warm, reassuring smile that had convinced so many people he was the perfect husband.

"Hey, honey. Rough day?"

I studied him. The crisp white shirt. The relaxed posture. The way his eyes crinkled at the corners.

Then I noticed his tie.

This morning, he'd left wearing the navy blue silk with subtle gray stripes-the one I'd given him for our fifth anniversary. Now he wore a red polka dot tie I'd never seen before.

"Your tie," I said quietly.

He glanced down, his expression shifting into practiced exasperation. "Oh, this. Client meeting. Spilled coffee on the other one. Had to change." He shook his head. "Embarrassing, really. I'll get it dry-cleaned tomorrow."

He never hand-washes anything, I thought. That's what dry cleaners are for.

But I said nothing. I smiled. I nodded.

And I waited.

That night, after he fell asleep, I retrieved the tie from the laundry hamper. I held it under the bathroom light, examining every inch. Most of it was clean. But near the label, on the narrow end, I found a small white stain.

Coffee stains are brown. Even when washed, they leave a yellowish residue.

This was white. And when I brought it to my nose-beneath the synthetic lavender of laundry detergent-I caught something else.

The faint, unmistakable sweetness of baby formula.

            
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