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Love, Lies, And A Second Life

Chapter 3 

Word Count: 728    |    Released on: 09/07/2025

yed in my darkened bedroom, refusing food, speaking only in hushed, broken sentences. Martha hovered, her presence a constant, suffo

nted her to see: a wom

e drama. I allowed Martha to dress me in a simple black dress, my movements slow and l

orms a stark contrast to the somber room. Friends and neighbors filled the pews, their faces

rieving brother and the devastated family friend. He caught my eye and gave me a small, sad nod, a gesture of shared loss. The

d impatient, eager for this formality to be over so her new life could begin. Their arrogance was m

courage. He spoke about the man I had married, but he was talking about the man in the casket. Mark

up to the podium.

.. it' s a hole that will never be filled." He looked directly at me. "I see Sarah, my brave sis

t of his words settle. Emily

the lie rolling off his tongue so easily. "He told me once, 'If a

g twin. The plan was even more twisted than I' d realized. He wa

. We' ve decided... to face the future together. To honor David by building a life he would have wanted for his family. W

sacrifice. He was the dutiful brother stepping up. Emily was the caring friend supporting him. Peopl

w two s

see the vultu

even a protest. I gave them nothing. I just sat there, my face a blank canvas of shock, letting t

the harder his fall would be. An

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Love, Lies, And A Second Life
Love, Lies, And A Second Life
“The air in the room was stale, thick with the smell of antiseptic and despair. They told me I was sick, that grief had broken my mind. My mother-in-law, Martha, would visit, her concern a chilling mask, whispering to doctors how I was hallucinating, a danger to myself and my son, Billy. "She doesn' t understand that David is gone," she' d insist, loud enough for me to hear. But the real horror wasn't my madness; it was the truth. Three days after my husband, David, a decorated police officer, was supposedly killed, I stood at his memorial, expected to mourn. The man in the casket wasn't David. It was Mark, his identical twin, missing the faded scar David always had. That night, I found David, not dead, but alive in our summer cabin, with his childhood sweetheart, Emily Peterson. He confessed it all with chilling indifference: Mark was killed in a shootout, and David seized the chance for a new life, free from me and Billy. "I never loved you," he said, as if explaining a simple math problem. "It was always Emily." I tried to tell everyone-his mother, his captain-but they looked at me with pity, already conditioned by Martha and David' s lies. They had me committed to a white room, and David married Emily. My four-year-old son, Billy, was left in their care, crying for me every night. Then came the unbearable news: Billy was dead, a "tragic accident" from an overdose of cough medicine. My world shattered. Desperate, I fashioned a noose, remembering Billy' s bright laugh, the life David had stolen. My only regret was that David would never face justice. I kicked the chair away. Darkness took me. Then, a blinding light, and I was back on my living room couch, the day David was supposedly killed. I wasn' t dead. I was back. Martha' s face, a mask of practiced sadness, now held a triumphant curl. I heard David' s voice from the hallway, "Is she stable?" "She' s fragile, but she bought it," Martha replied. "She' ll break, just like we planned. We' ll have her committed, and Billy will be ours." "Good," David said. "Make sure she doesn' t get near the body. Mark didn' t have my scar." This time, I was not the grieving widow. I was the executioner.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10