Michael Miller. My husband. The man whose funeral I attended three years ago. The man whose ashes, or what I was told were his ashes, sat in an urn on the mantle.
He looked healthy. Tanned. He' d gained a little weight around the middle, but it was him.
He wasn' t alone.
A woman with blonde hair and a tight dress clung to his arm. Beside them stood two children, a boy and a girl, both with Michael' s dark hair and pale blue eyes. They looked about two years old.
They stared up at me, their faces hostile.
"Ava," Michael said, his voice smooth, as if he' d just come back from a business trip. "I' m home."
My mind went blank. The world tilted on its axis.
He gestured to the woman. "This is Chloe Davis. And these are our children, Jasper and Ruby."
Chloe gave me a smug little smile. It was a look of pure victory.
"It' s a long story," Michael said, starting to walk up the stairs toward me.
I finally found my voice. It came out as a raw whisper. "You died. The plane crash."
He waved his hand dismissively. "A misunderstanding. I had to get away, Ava. The company was going under, the debts were crushing. I faked my death. I went abroad."
He said it so casually, as if he were explaining why he was late for dinner.
"You faked your death?" The words felt foreign in my mouth.
Suddenly, the front door burst open again. It was Eleanor, Michael' s mother, followed by his sister, Sarah, and brother, Ben. They rushed in, not with shock, but with relief.
"Michael, my boy!" Eleanor cried, hugging him tightly. "You' re finally back!"
She turned to me, her face stern. "Ava, don' t look at him like that. He had amnesia. He didn' t remember anything until recently."
Amnesia. The oldest, weakest lie in the book.
"He did what he had to do," Eleanor continued, her voice rising. "Miller Corp was bankrupt. He was protecting the family."
Michael put his arm around Chloe, pulling her and the twins closer. It was a public display, a staking of a claim.
He looked at me, his eyes cold. "I heard the company is doing well again. That' s good. Now I' m back to take my rightful place."
Chloe stepped forward, her smile widening. "Michael told me all about you. It must have been so hard for you, all alone. But don't worry, we' re here now. We' re a family."
Her words were meant to sound sweet, but they were coated in poison.
Jasper, the little boy, pointed a chubby finger at me. "Mommy, who' s that lady?"
"That' s just someone who lives in our house for now, sweetie," Chloe cooed.
Michael looked at me, his patience clearly wearing thin. "Ava, I expect you to be reasonable about this. Accept Chloe and the children. We' ll all live here together. I' ll give you one night to think it over."
He thought he was giving me an ultimatum. He thought he still held all the power.
I looked at his arrogant face, at his mother' s smug expression, at Chloe' s triumphant sneer.
They had no idea.
They saw me as the grieving widow, the dutiful wife who had held things together. They didn' t see the woman I had become in the fire of his betrayal.
They didn' t know that the thriving Miller Corp they heard about was no longer theirs. It was mine.
Michael tried to justify himself again. "I had no choice, Ava. The creditors were going to take everything. I did it for us."
For us. The laugh that wanted to bubble out of me was hysterical.
"So you expect me to just... what? Move into a guest room? Welcome your new family with open arms?" I asked, my voice dangerously calm.
"Of course," he said, as if it were the most natural thing in the world. "You' re still my wife. It' s your duty."
My duty. I thought about the nights I spent staring at the ceiling, wondering how I would pay the salaries of hundreds of employees. I thought about the endless meetings, the begging for loans, the humiliation of asking for help from people who used to look up to us.
I thought about the stress, the constant, grinding pressure that had settled deep in my bones.
I thought about the child we were supposed to have. The child I lost.
That was a secret I had kept buried, a piece of grief too heavy to share with anyone. The stress of saving his company, of dealing with his fake death, had cost me our baby.
And here he was, standing in front of me with two new children, expecting me to be grateful.
He stepped forward, trying to take my hand. "Ava, I' m the head of this family. I' m the CEO of Miller Corp."
I pulled my hand back.
"Are you?" I asked, a real smile touching my lips for the first time. It was a cold, sharp thing.
Chloe' s son, Jasper, suddenly ran forward and kicked my shin. It was a weak, childish blow, but it was the intent behind it that mattered.
"Go away, old witch!" he yelled. "This is my daddy' s house!"
Chloe simply giggled. "Oh, kids will be kids."
That kick, that laugh, it was the final crack in the dam.
The memory hit me with the force of a physical blow. The doctor' s office. The ultrasound machine, cold against my skin. The silence that was too long. The doctor' s gentle, pitying voice. "There' s no heartbeat."
I had been three months pregnant when Michael' s plane "crashed." The shock, the grief, the sudden weight of a crumbling empire... it had been too much. I had miscarried a week after his funeral, alone in this big, empty house.
I had bled for our family, for his legacy, while he was off starting a new one.
And he dared to bring his new life, his new children, into my home and lecture me about duty.