I pulled the perfectly baked Beef Wellington from the oven, its rich scent filling our Manhattan penthouse. For five years, I'd crafted this perfect life, but tonight, I'd discover my entire existence was a cruel, silent lie. The man I loved had built it all on betrayal. Preparing our anniversary dinner, I reflected on five years of building a flawless home for Blake, a dream I'd never known. Searching for a pen, I found a hidden compartment in Blake's desk containing a cheap black USB drive-a significant secret for a man who despised anything less than perfect. His MacBook unlocked with his birthday, not ours. The USB, after a near-data-wipe, revealed "The Archives": hundreds of photos of Blake with his college girlfriend, Isabelle, passionate love letters, and a wardrobe chosen to mirror hers. My name yielded "0 results found," while millions were wired to Isabelle. I was a meticulously funded stand-in, a ghost he dressed up to play house. My non-existence in his world and his financial betrayal ignited a cold, burning rage. Blake returned, dismissive, offering a delayed anniversary gift. I confronted him; he ripped the USB, snapped it, and stated, "Nothing changes, as long as you know your place." My obedience shattered: "I want a divorce," I declared, then destroyed dinner and packed my own bag.
I pulled the perfectly baked Beef Wellington from the oven, its rich scent filling our Manhattan penthouse. For five years, I'd crafted this perfect life, but tonight, I'd discover my entire existence was a cruel, silent lie. The man I loved had built it all on betrayal.
Preparing our anniversary dinner, I reflected on five years of building a flawless home for Blake, a dream I'd never known.
Searching for a pen, I found a hidden compartment in Blake's desk containing a cheap black USB drive-a significant secret for a man who despised anything less than perfect.
His MacBook unlocked with his birthday, not ours. The USB, after a near-data-wipe, revealed "The Archives": hundreds of photos of Blake with his college girlfriend, Isabelle, passionate love letters, and a wardrobe chosen to mirror hers. My name yielded "0 results found," while millions were wired to Isabelle.
I was a meticulously funded stand-in, a ghost he dressed up to play house. My non-existence in his world and his financial betrayal ignited a cold, burning rage.
Blake returned, dismissive, offering a delayed anniversary gift. I confronted him; he ripped the USB, snapped it, and stated, "Nothing changes, as long as you know your place." My obedience shattered: "I want a divorce," I declared, then destroyed dinner and packed my own bag.
Chapter 1
Cassie Baird POV:
I pulled the perfectly baked Beef Wellington from the oven, the rich scent of butter and roasted meat filling the penthouse.
I set the heavy ceramic dish on the marble dining table. The golden crust flaked slightly under the warm glow of the chandelier. Five years. I had spent five years meticulously crafting these moments, chasing the phantom of a flawless family dinner I never had as a child.
I reached out to adjust a stray red rose leaning too close to the crystal decanter. A thorn caught the pad of my index finger. A sharp sting sliced through my skin, leaving a tiny bead of bright red blood.
I wiped it away without a flinch. Everything had to be perfect.
I glanced at the vintage grandfather clock against the wall. Seven-thirty. Blake had promised to be home by eight. Thirty minutes left.
I picked up the gold-embossed anniversary card resting beside his plate. It was blank. I needed a pen, and not just any pen. Blake's aesthetic demands had bled into my own habits over the years.
I turned and walked down the long, quiet hallway, pushing open the heavy oak double doors to his study.
The room smelled of sharp cedarwood cologne and old paper. The blinds were drawn tight, blocking out the glittering Manhattan skyline. Blake guarded this room like a fortress. I rarely stepped foot inside.
I walked behind his massive mahogany desk and pulled open the top left drawer, searching for his silver Montblanc pen.
Nothing but dry, rolled-up architectural blueprints. I sighed and bent down to pull the deep bottom drawer.
It didn't budge. I pulled harder, the old metal tracks groaning in protest.
With a loud click, the drawer jerked free, nearly sliding off its rails. I caught it, my breath hitching in the quiet room.
I looked down. The bottom of the drawer was empty, but the wood paneling looked wrong. The grain didn't match the sides.
A heavy knot formed in my stomach. My mother always told me never to look for trouble in a man's pockets. But my fingers moved before my brain could stop them.
I pressed down on the edge of the mismatched wood.
It popped up.
Beneath the false bottom lay a small, shallow metal compartment. Inside sat a single, cheap black USB drive.
My heart kicked against my ribs. Blake despised cheap electronics. He threw away anything that wasn't the latest model. For him to keep this battered piece of plastic hidden in a secret compartment meant it held something he couldn't afford to lose.
I picked it up. The metal edge was freezing against my palm.
A sharp ding echoed from the hallway. The elevator.
I jumped, the USB slipping from my sweaty fingers and tumbling onto the wool rug.
I dropped to my knees, snatched it up, and listened. The sound faded. It was just the neighbor's elevator passing our floor. The penthouse doors remained locked.
My chest heaved. I sat in his chair and opened his MacBook.
The screen flared to life, demanding a password. I typed in our wedding anniversary.
Incorrect password. The screen flashed, emitting a harsh red beep that sounded like a siren in the dark room.
I bit my lower lip, tasting copper. I typed in Blake's birthday.
The screen unlocked.
I took a deep breath and shoved the black USB into the side port.
Nothing happened. I pulled it out and shoved it in again.
A black pop-up window violently hijacked the center of the screen. There was no folder name, no file directory. Just a single, blinking cursor inside a password box.
My palms grew clammy. Blake never hid his company's financial data from me. I was the one who balanced his early ledgers.
I typed in the founding date of his architecture firm.
Incorrect. 2 attempts remaining.
The air in the room felt too thin. I typed in my own birthday and slammed the return key.
Incorrect. 1 attempt remaining.
The pop-up window turned a bleeding, aggressive red. A line of text appeared beneath the box: Final attempt. Data will self-destruct upon failure.
I stared at the blinking cursor. My fingers hovered over the keys, trembling uncontrollably.
"Blake, what exactly are you hiding?"
No Longer His Ghost: My Life Begins
Johan Gorski
Modern
Chapter 1
29/04/2026
Chapter 2
29/04/2026
Chapter 3
29/04/2026
Chapter 4
29/04/2026
Chapter 5
29/04/2026
Chapter 6
29/04/2026
Chapter 7
29/04/2026
Chapter 8
29/04/2026
Chapter 9
29/04/2026
Chapter 10
29/04/2026
Chapter 11
29/04/2026
Chapter 12
29/04/2026
Chapter 13
29/04/2026
Chapter 14
29/04/2026
Chapter 15
29/04/2026
Chapter 16
29/04/2026
Chapter 17
29/04/2026
Chapter 18
29/04/2026
Chapter 19
29/04/2026
Chapter 20
29/04/2026
Chapter 21
29/04/2026
Chapter 22
29/04/2026
Chapter 23
29/04/2026
Chapter 24
29/04/2026
Chapter 25
29/04/2026
Chapter 26
29/04/2026
Chapter 27
29/04/2026
Chapter 28
29/04/2026
Chapter 29
29/04/2026
Chapter 30
29/04/2026
Chapter 31
29/04/2026
Chapter 32
29/04/2026
Chapter 33
29/04/2026
Chapter 34
29/04/2026
Chapter 35
29/04/2026
Chapter 36
29/04/2026
Chapter 37
29/04/2026
Chapter 38
29/04/2026
Chapter 39
29/04/2026
Chapter 40
29/04/2026