A Wife's Bitter Reckoning
img img A Wife's Bitter Reckoning img Chapter 2
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Chapter 5 img
Chapter 6 img
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
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Chapter 2

The confirmation email from Blackwood Privacy Solutions arrived a week later. Phase One Complete. Your new identity documents are being processed. Estimated completion: 4-6 weeks. A wave of relief, so potent it felt like a physical release, washed over Kelsey. She was no longer just a victim; she was an architect of her own escape.

Paris. The word echoed in her mind. Not the Paris she knew with Bennett-the one of five-star hotels and Michelin-starred restaurants. This would be her Paris. A small apartment in Le Marais, a quiet life, a job at a small, independent art gallery. A life where no one knew the name Randolph.

She began the slow, painful process of dismantling her life. She moved through the penthouse like a ghost, sorting through fifteen years of shared memories. Tucked away in a velvet box at the back of her closet was a diamond necklace, the Randolph family heirloom Bennett had given her on their wedding day.

"This belonged to my grandmother," he had told her, his eyes sincere. "It represents the future of our family. It's yours now, forever."

Forever. The word was a bitter joke. She looked at the cold, glittering stones. They weren't a symbol of a future; they were the price of her silence, the payment for her complicity in her own heartbreak.

She walked to a nearby charity auction house and donated it anonymously. The release form felt heavier than the necklace itself.

Other things, she couldn't give away. The photo albums filled with smiling, fraudulent memories. The silly souvenirs from their early, happier trips. The handwritten notes he used to leave on her pillow.

That night, she took them to the large fireplace in the living room. One by one, she fed them to the flames. She watched as their faces, captured in moments of feigned happiness, curled, blackened, and turned to ash. The fire consumed their past, a pyre for a love that had been a lie.

Bennett returned from his "business trip" the next day, humming a tune she didn't recognize. He noticed the empty space on the mantel where their wedding photo used to sit.

"Where's our picture, Kels?" he asked, his brow furrowed in mild confusion.

"I sent it out to be reframed," she lied smoothly. "The glass was cracked."

He accepted the explanation without a second thought. He was too distracted, too full of his secret life. She could smell it on him-a faint, floral perfume that wasn't hers. She saw a single, long dark hair on the collar of his cashmere coat. The evidence was everywhere, yet he moved through their home with the blissful ignorance of a man who believed he was getting away with everything.

"I have a surprise for you," he announced a few days later, his arm looping around her waist. "A party. For your birthday, to make up for me being away. I've invited everyone."

Her real birthday had been weeks ago, the one she had spent alone. This party wasn't for her. It was for him. A performance for their social circle, a way to maintain the facade of the perfect couple.

"That's... thoughtful," she said, her voice devoid of emotion.

She attended the party in a simple black dress, a stark contrast to the glittering gowns of the other women. She felt like an observer at her own execution. The penthouse was filled with flowers, champagne flowed freely, and a string quartet played in the corner. It was a perfect picture of opulence and happiness.

And then she saw her.

Aria Diaz. Standing near the grand piano, looking lost and out of place in a vibrant red dress that was a size too small.

A guest, an older woman dripping in diamonds, drifted past Kelsey. "My dear, you look stunning tonight," the woman said, her eyes fixed on Aria. "That red is a bold choice for you!"

The woman patted Kelsey's arm and moved on, leaving Kelsey frozen. They thought Aria was her. The replacement was so blatant, so obvious, that people were confusing the copy for the original.

Aria looked terrified. She was clutching a small purse to her chest like a shield, her eyes wide and darting around the room. She was a child playing dress-up in a world she didn't understand.

Bennett, seeing her distress, immediately broke off his conversation and moved to her side. He placed a protective hand on the small of her back, whispering something in her ear that made a faint blush rise on her cheeks.

Kelsey walked over to them, her steps feeling heavy, as if she were wading through water.

"Bennett," she said, her voice low and even. "What is she doing here?"

Bennett flinched, but recovered quickly. He plastered on a charming smile. "Kelsey, darling! I wanted you to meet Aria properly. I thought, since she's carrying our child, she should feel like part of the family."

He turned to the crowd that had started to notice the small tableau. "Everyone," he announced, his voice booming with false bonhomie. "This is Aria Diaz. She's a dear friend of the family who has graciously offered to help Kelsey and me start our family. Think of her as Kelsey's... little sister."

Little sister. The words were a public demotion. She was no longer the wife, the other half of the power couple. She was the benevolent older sister, graciously accepting this younger, more fertile woman into their lives. The humiliation was a physical thing, a hot flush that spread from her chest to her face.

Bennett's attention was already back on Aria. He guided her through the crowd, introducing her to his powerful friends, his hand never leaving her back. Kelsey watched them, a pair orbiting their own sun, leaving her in the cold, outer darkness.

She saw him laugh, a genuine, unforced laugh she hadn't seen in years. She watched him tuck a stray strand of hair behind Aria's ear, a gesture so intimate and tender it made her own heart clench.

She forced herself to mingle, to smile, to accept condolences for her "sprained arm" and compliments on the "lovely party." But her eyes kept drifting back to them.

Two women, friends of hers from the museum board, were whispering behind their champagne flutes.

"Can you believe the nerve?" one said. "Bringing his mistress to his wife's birthday party?"

"I saw them," the other whispered back, her eyes wide. "Last week, at Dr. Evans' fertility clinic. They were holding hands in the waiting room. Everyone was staring."

Dr. Evans. The most exclusive, most expensive fertility specialist in the city. The one Bennett had claimed was "impossible to get an appointment with."

The pieces of the puzzle clicked into place, forming a picture of betrayal so vast and elaborate it was breathtaking. This wasn't just a recent affair. This was a long-term, calculated deception. A double life lived in plain sight. Her perfect marriage wasn't just cracked; it had been a hollow shell from the start.

            
            

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