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My life with Mark was perfect, a picture of happy marriage.
He and his identical twin, David, ran a thriving brewery, and together with my sister Jess, we were an unbreakable foursome.
Then, a shattering phone call.
David, always so full of life, had collapsed and died.
Weeks of agonizing grief followed, but the true nightmare began at a solemn family dinner.
Mark's mother, Brenda, demanded the unthinkable: I was to carry David's child for my sister, a vessel for the "Thompson legacy."
My own mother, always favoring Jess, twisted the knife, urging me to "be understanding."
I stood paralyzed, while Mark, my supposed anchor, vehemently defended me.
But that defense was a cruel facade.
One night, I found him in my guest room, not comforting my grieving sister Jess, but kissing her.
And then I heard it: "I want your baby, Mark. Openly. Not... not David's ghost."
Jess was pregnant with his child.
The man who swore to protect me was betraying me with my own sister, all while their desperate family tried to force me into a truly monstrous act.
Every loving gesture, every word of trust, twisted into a grotesque lie.
Was I truly so blind?
So easily manipulated?
Why me?
Why this profound and sickening betrayal?
That night, the naive wife died.
A cold, hard rage ignited.
I demanded a divorce, packed my bags, and moved halfway across the country.
But Mark, Jess, and their twisted family thought they could sweep me aside.
They were wrong.
I wasn't running; I was retreating to draw the battle lines.
This wasn't just about escape anymore.
It was about meticulously crafting the perfect retribution, a revenge so complete, they'd wish they never crossed me.
Chapter 1
Sarah Miller folded Mark's shirts, the scent of his detergent familiar and comforting.
It was a Tuesday morning, quiet, the kind she usually liked.
Mark was already at the brewery, a text from him earlier saying, "Big mash day. Love you."
She smiled, placing the neatly folded pile in his drawer.
Her own job at the community event planning company didn't start for another hour.
She was making coffee when her phone buzzed on the counter.
It wasn't Mark.
The screen showed "Brenda Thompson."
A knot formed in Sarah's stomach instantly. Brenda rarely called her directly, especially not this early.
Sarah answered, trying to keep her voice light. "Hi, Brenda."
"Sarah," Brenda's voice was tight, strained, not its usual commanding tone. "It's David."
A pause hung heavy, thick with unspoken fear.
"He collapsed at the brewery. An ambulance is taking him to St. Luke's. Mark is with him. You need to come."
Shock hit Sarah, cold and sharp. "Collapsed? Is he... is he okay?"
"They don't know. It's bad, Sarah. Just come." The line clicked dead.
David. Mark's identical twin, her sister Jess's husband.
The four of them were a unit, or supposed to be.
Sarah and Mark, married three years, a love she thought was her anchor.
Jess and David, married five, a more flamboyant pairing. Jess, her older sister, always the star, always getting what she wanted, especially from their mother, Karen.
Sarah often felt like a pale shadow next to Jess's vivid colors.
The Thompson twins co-owned the craft brewery, their father's legacy, now their success.
Brenda, their mother, a woman of iron will, saw the brewery and her sons as the Thompson dynasty. Grandchildren were essential to that vision.
Sarah's hands shook as she grabbed her keys and purse.
Her mind raced, a blur of terrible images. David, always so full of life, a mirror image of her Mark.
She drove to St. Luke's, her heart pounding against her ribs.
The emergency room waiting area was stark, smelling of antiseptic and anxiety.
She saw Mark first, his face ashen, his shoulders slumped. He looked lost.
He rushed to her, pulling her into a hug that felt desperate.
"They're working on him," he choked out. "It happened so fast."
Jess was there too, a crumpled figure on a plastic chair, her usually perfect makeup smudged by tears.
She was wailing, a raw, animal sound of grief that filled the small space.
Their mother, Karen, was beside Jess, stroking her hair, murmuring words Sarah couldn't catch.
Sarah went to Jess, placing a hand on her sister's shaking shoulder. "Jess, I'm so sorry."
Jess barely registered her presence, her eyes wide with panic and disbelief, fixed on the closed doors of the trauma room.
Mark took over, speaking in low tones to a nurse, his voice strained but trying to be practical.
Brenda Thompson arrived then, her formidable composure fractured.
She looked ten years older, her face a mask of anguish.
She didn't speak, just walked straight to Mark, her hand gripping his arm as if for support.
The air was thick with a shared, suffocating sorrow. David, the vibrant, laughing David, was fighting for his life, and the family felt like it was shattering around them.
A doctor finally emerged, his expression grim.
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