He Saw Her, Not His Wife
img img He Saw Her, Not His Wife img Chapter 3
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Chapter 6 img
Chapter 7 img
Chapter 8 img
Chapter 9 img
Chapter 10 img
Chapter 11 img
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Chapter 3

Aliyah POV:

Harrison' s retaliation was swift and brutal. By the time I landed in New York, my credit cards were declined. My bank accounts, frozen. He had cut me off completely. He thought he could starve me into submission, force me to come crawling back.

He still didn't get it. I wasn't the same woman who arranged her entire life around his disability. That woman was gone. She had died in a French jail cell.

I had my own money, a trust fund my parents had left me that Harrison could never touch. It wasn't his billions, but it was enough. It was more than enough. It was freedom.

Before I disappeared completely, before I changed my name and built a new life, I allowed myself one last act of rebellion. One final goodbye to the ghost of Aliyah Lang.

I walked into Bergdorf Goodman, the palace of fashion I had once frequented with Harrison's black card. Today, I used my own.

"I need a new wardrobe," I told the bewildered personal shopper. "Everything. And nothing blue."

She looked at me, my face now recognizable from every news site on the planet. "Of course, Ms. Potts."

For hours, I tried on clothes. Rich burgundies, deep emeralds, fiery reds. Colors that felt alive. I shed the skin of the blue ghost and found myself again, piece by piece. The woman who loved art and poetry, who wore bold colors and laughed too loud.

I was in a fitting room, admiring a vibrant scarlet dress in the mirror, when the door swung open.

Kassie Crane stood there, a smug, pitying smile on her face. She was flanked by two security guards, a new accessory Harrison had undoubtedly provided.

"Well, well," she purred, her eyes raking over my dress. "Trying a new color? Does it hurt, knowing he'll never even notice?"

I met her gaze in the mirror, my expression unreadable. "What do you want, Kassie?"

"I just wanted to see the woman who threw away a fairytale," she said, leaning against the doorframe. "It's pathetic, really. You had everything. A handsome, powerful husband. A life of luxury. And you threw it all away because you were insecure."

"I threw it away because my husband didn't know who I was," I corrected her.

She laughed, a high, tinkling sound that grated on my nerves. "Oh, he knows who you are, Aliyah. You're the sad, clingy woman he was forced to marry. A placeholder. He told me all about it."

The words were meant to hurt, but they were nothing I hadn't already told myself.

"And now he has me," she continued, stepping closer. "The woman he actually wants. The woman he sees." She ran a hand down the sleeve of her own dress, a pale, forgettable beige. "He's buying me the entire new collection. As a little 'sorry you had to deal with my crazy ex' present."

I looked at her, at the triumphant gleam in her eyes, and I felt nothing but a profound sense of pity. She thought she had won. She had no idea she was just the next ghost in line, another brand for Harrison to memorize.

I turned back to the mirror. "I'll take this one," I said to the hovering sales associate. "In fact, I'll take all of them. Everything I tried on."

Kassie's smile faltered. "You can't afford that."

I pulled out my own platinum card. "Charge it to the Potts family trust," I said, my voice clear and firm.

The sales associate' s eyes went wide. She knew the name. Everyone in New York society knew the name.

I turned to Kassie, a slow, deliberate smile spreading across my face. "You see, Kassie, Harrison's money was just a convenience. I never needed it. But you? You're nothing without him. You're a brand he bought, and one day, he'll get tired of you, too."

Her face contorted with rage.

"Now," I said, turning to the store manager who had materialized at the commotion. "I am a private client of this establishment. I would like this person removed. She's harassing me."

Before the manager could respond, a familiar voice cut through the tension.

"What's going on here?"

Harrison. He strode into the private shopping area, his eyes immediately finding Kassie. He didn't even glance in my direction.

"Harrison!" Kassie cried, running to him and burying her face in his chest. "This woman... she was saying horrible things to me!"

He wrapped his arms around her protectively, glaring into the fitting room. He looked right at me, at my face, at the scarlet dress. And he saw a stranger.

"Who is this?" he demanded of the manager, his voice dripping with contempt. "I don't care who she is, I want her out of here. She upset Kassie."

The manager stammered, "Mr. Lang, sir, this is a private suite..."

"I'm buying the clothes Kassie wants," Harrison announced, pulling out his own black card. "And I am paying to have this... person... removed from the store. I don't want to see her face again."

He looked at me, this time with a sneer. "Some people just don't know their place."

Kassie peeked up at him from the safety of his arms, a victorious smirk on her face. "Thank you, Harrison. You're my hero."

He smiled down at her, a soft, tender look I hadn't seen in years. "Anything for you," he murmured.

The world seemed to slow down. He, the man who couldn't remember his own wife's face, was defending the woman who had stolen her life, against the very wife he couldn't recognize. The irony was so thick, so suffocating, I thought I might choke on it.

I didn't say a word. I simply stepped out of the fitting room, walked past them both without a glance, and left the store. The bags with my new life would be sent to my hotel.

I took a taxi to the one place that had ever felt like home. The grand, sprawling mansion overlooking Central Park that had been my prison for three years.

As the taxi pulled up, I knew something was wrong. There was a moving truck outside.

I walked up the stone steps and put my key in the lock. It didn't turn. The locks had been changed.

I rang the doorbell. After a long moment, the door opened.

Kassie stood there, wearing one of my silk robes. My favorite one, the one with the hand-painted birds.

"Can I help you?" she asked, her voice dripping with false sweetness.

Behind her, in the grand foyer, I could see movers carrying boxes. Her boxes.

"What are you doing here, Kassie?" I asked, my voice dangerously quiet.

"I live here now," she said with a shrug. "Harrison insisted. He said he couldn't bear the thought of me staying in a hotel after that awful scene you caused. He wants me to feel safe."

She had taken my husband. She had taken my name. And now she had taken my home.

"You are pathetic," I said, the words falling flat in the cold air.

"No," she corrected me, a cruel smile playing on her lips. "I'm a winner. And you... you're yesterday's news."

She reached into the pocket of the robe and pulled something out. It glinted in the afternoon sun. My wedding ring. The simple platinum band Harrison had placed on my finger three years ago.

"I believe this is yours," she said, her voice laced with triumph. "We won't be needing it anymore."

She dropped it on the stone step at my feet. It landed with a soft, metallic clink, the sound of a final, definitive end.

Then she closed the door in my face. The heavy oak door clicked shut, sealing me out of my old life for good.

I stood there for a long moment, staring at the closed door, at the ring lying on the ground. I didn't feel sadness. I didn't feel anger. I felt... nothing. A vast, empty peace.

I didn't bend down to pick up the ring. I left it there, a relic of a life that no longer belonged to me.

I turned my back on the house, on the life inside it, and walked away. The sun was warm on my face.

I pulled out my phone and dialed a number I knew by heart. My oldest friend, a gallery owner in SoHo.

"Eddy," I said when he answered. "It's me."

"Aliyah? I saw the news. Are you okay?"

"I've never been better," I said, a real smile finally touching my lips. "I'm coming to New York. For good. And I need a job."

            
            

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