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For five years, I was the perfect, amnesiac wife to the tech mogul who "rescued" me from a helicopter crash.
Then, a video from his mistress shattered the lie. It wasn't just her ultrasound; it was a news clip showing my real fiancé, Caleb, had survived the crash. My memory came flooding back.
When I confronted their affair by setting fire to the vineyard he built for her, he chose to save his pregnant mistress over me.
At the hospital, surrounded by reporters she had called, he publicly disowned me to protect her.
"My wife has been unwell for some time," he announced, his words a final, cold betrayal.
But they mistook my silence for defeat. Facing the cameras, I traced a secret symbol over my heart-a message only one man would understand.
I leaned into the microphone, turning my humiliation into a call to arms. "Caleb," I whispered. "It's time to come home."
Chapter 1
Elia Mullins POV:
The first video Candida sent was of her and Evan in my bed. The second was her ultrasound. But it was the third video, a news clip from five years ago showing the burning wreckage of a helicopter, that finally broke the dam in my mind. The face that flashed on screen wasn't Evan's. It was Caleb's. My Caleb. And in that instant, I remembered everything.
The world dissolved into a sickening blur of then and now.
Five years of a gilded cage. Five years of a lie so perfect, so suffocatingly devoted, that I never thought to question it. Evan Mcmahon, the tech mogul who "rescued" me from the crash, the man who told me he was my husband, who nursed me back from the brink of death and the blank slate of amnesia.
He had been my world. A world of minimalist white walls, of private jets, of art galleries curated to my exact tastes. A world of possessive, almost pathological love. He chose my clothes, my food, my friends. His love was a blanket, and I had been too cold and lost to realize it was smothering me.
Lately, the blanket had grown thin. His attention, once a constant, searing beam, had started to wander. He was bored. Bored of his perfect, placid wife. Bored of the acquisition he had so desperately craved.
And so, he found a new toy. Candida Whitaker. His intern. Young, ambitious, with a manufactured innocence that she wore like a shield. I' d seen her around the office, her eyes always lingering on Evan, a hunger in them that I recognized because I, too, had once looked at a man with that same all-consuming adoration. But my love had been for Caleb. Pure and real.
The affair wasn't a secret he tried to keep. It was a spectacle. He paraded her around, mentored her, built her a goddamn vineyard in Napa Valley. A monument to his betrayal.
Then came the videos. A deliberate, malicious strike from Candida, designed to shatter my world.
She sent them an hour ago. I sat on the cold marble floor of our cavernous living room, the phone lying screen-up beside me. The news clip of the crash played on a silent loop. A reporter with a windswept face, the mangled metal of the helicopter behind her. "...tragic loss of renowned art curator Elia Mullins, presumed dead alongside the pilot. Miraculously, her fiancé, Caleb Flowers, CEO of Flowers Luxury Architecture, was thrown from the wreckage and survived, though he remains in critical condition..."
Caleb.
The name was a key, unlocking a room in my mind that had been sealed for half a decade.
The scent of salt air. The warmth of his hand in mine. The brilliant blue of the sky over the Hamptons on our wedding day. We were in the helicopter, laughing, champagne flutes in our hands. He was telling me about the house he was designing for us, a glass palace perched on a cliffside. His eyes, the color of warm whiskey, were filled with a future that was all mine.
"I' ll love you until the sky falls, Elia," he' d whispered, his thumb tracing the line of my jaw.
Then, a deafening roar. A violent lurch. The world tilting on its axis. Caleb' s arms wrapping around me, his body a shield. The last thing I saw was the terror and love warring in his eyes as he screamed my name.
The screen on the phone went dark.
In the reflection, I saw my own face. Pale, gaunt, my eyes hollow. The woman Evan had molded. Docile. Breakable.
That woman was gone.
In her place was a stranger, forged in the ice of betrayal. A cold fury began to crystallize in my veins, sharp and clear. Evan hadn't rescued me. He had stolen me. He had seen a prize, beautiful and broken, and he had claimed it. He built a cage of lies and called it love.
And Candida... she was nothing more than a vulgar tool, a cheap imitation desperate to take my place. She thought she was winning. She thought she had broken me.
The thought almost made me laugh.
They didn't know me. Not the real me. The woman who negotiated multi-million dollar art deals before she was thirty. The woman who could dismantle an opponent with a single, well-placed sentence. The woman who trained in Krav Maga twice a week, a detail Evan, in his obsessive cataloging of my life, had somehow missed.
My phone buzzed again. A new message from Candida.
Hope you enjoyed the show. Evan is on his way to you now. Try not to make a scene, darling. It' s so unbecoming.
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