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Her Unanswered Messages

Chapter 4 

Word Count: 673    |    Released on: 30/06/2025

ng, a sharp, intrusive sou

arge, square box from a local bakery. "Deliver

, his eyebrows raised in a silent question. I

a'am," he said, ha

thday. In the whirlwind of my mother's death and Sarah'

something that might have been guilt, quickly extinguished. He had forgotten. Of course, he had forgotten.

g silence, I added, "It's nothing, really. My aunt is just a bit sentimental." I placed t

erful! We must celebrate." She glided over to me, her smile wide and predatory. "I feel so terrible, I didn't get you a

vagant gesture that was also deeply, profoundly insulting. It was a que

me. I looked from the bracelet to her perfectly made-up face. "No, tha

ted, trying to press it int

ed, taking a step bac

ile faltered, a flash of anger in her eyes before

ing between us. "Sarah is trying to be generous, and you're actin

n the face. He saw my refusal not as an act of sel

he commanded, his e

ne out of me as quickly as it had appeared. What was the point? I was just a

the cold, heavy bracelet from Sarah's

voice still tight with

er that night, long after Ethan had shown Sarah to her room and the house had fallen silent, I went into the kitchen. I open

he trash can in the laundry room and dropped it inside, burying it beneath a pile of used dryer sheets.

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Her Unanswered Messages
Her Unanswered Messages
“Today was my 27th birthday, and also the day I buried my adoptive mother-the only family I' d ever known. Standing in the silent funeral home, the heavy scent of lilies mixing with antiseptic, I clutched the cold urn, while my husband, Ethan Miller, was nowhere to be found. Not a call, not a text, not even a presence at the hospital when she passed, or here now to say goodbye. The brutal realization hit me: my marriage was as hollow as this empty room. Just as I resolved to leave, my life took a dark, unexpected turn. His sister, Chloe, sauntered in with a smirk, calling me a "placeholder" for Sarah Chen, her eyes dripping with disdain for my simple black dress. Then Ethan walked in, beaming, with Sarah by his side, holding a bouquet of gardenias-her flowers, not mine. He ordered me, his wife, to prepare the guest room next to his for his mistress, Sarah. Sarah, a woman who looked eerily like me, then offered me her diamond bracelet as a "birthday gift" -a cruel, glittering symbol of my humiliation. My refusal was met with Ethan' s seething rage; "Take the bracelet!" he snarled, as if my dignity was an inconvenience. My quiet compliance, my shell of a self, was not the reaction he expected. Later that painful night, a chilling revelation struck me: his pet name for me, "Lily-flower," was never for me at all-it was always for her, for Sarah, the gardenia. I was just a substitute. But the final blow arrived when Sarah staged a fake allergic reaction to my soup, blaming me. Faced with protecting Maria, our kind housekeeper, from their cruel lies, I took the blame. And for that, Ethan forced a vile, burning liquid down my throat. This was not just abuse; it was a twisted game orchestrated to break me. Lying on the floor, choking on the bitter taste of betrayal, I knew one thing: I would leave, and I would never look back.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10