icon 0
icon TOP UP
rightIcon
icon Reading History
rightIcon
icon Sign out
rightIcon
icon Get the APP
rightIcon

The Impostor Husband, The Vanished Daughter

Chapter 2 

Word Count: 833    |    Released on: 09/07/2025

niable fact in my hand. Lily' s drawing. The sun she had drawn in the

y sweet, s

a had been there that day, and I always had a cold feeling about it, a suspicion I could never prove.

o the waistband of my jeans, the corner digg

to fin

in the kitchen, their voices a low murmur. I slipped ou

houses were old, the paint peeling, the yards overgrown. A handful of people were out, sweeping po

bborn weed. "Have you seen a little girl? About ten

She wiped her hands on her apron a

"Haven' t seen any little

to her weed, a

ing on a bench, an old woman watering her roses. The answer was al

of ghosts. They were all in on it.

I saw

ung man at all. He was a dwarf, with the wizened face of someone much older and kind, sad eyes.

ime, I didn't see emptiness in someone's eyes. I

eaking. "You have to help me.

thing, just kept h

is Lily. Sh

woods where an old, dilapidated building stood. It looked like

ow, rough whisper, "things that get

his chin towar

arked in my chest. Before I could ask

liv

s marching toward me, h

out here? You' re sup

, her fingers digg

y daughter," I said

ice sharp enough to cut. "You are embarrassi

d back at the man on the wall, but he was gon

iel was waiting. He ha

p for me to see. "Look. Look

ugh the gallery. Pictures of me and Daniel. Pictures of la

no L

school pictures from her bookshelf, the family portrait on the mantelpiece, the snapshots I kept

slipping from my numb fingers. "The pict

el said, his voice dripping with false

waistband felt l

hought of

Claim Your Bonus at the APP

Open
The Impostor Husband, The Vanished Daughter
The Impostor Husband, The Vanished Daughter
“The first sign that something was wrong was the silence. It was a heavy, unnatural quiet where my daughter Lily' s humming should have been. "Lily?" I called out, my voice too loud in the dusty living room of my husband Daniel's childhood home. No answer. A knot of unease tightened as I searched the house, my heart beginning to pound. When I found Daniel upstairs, he was calm, too calm. "I can' t find Lily," I said, breathless. He smiled, but his eyes were empty. "Olivia, honey, we' ve been over this. You don' t have a daughter. There is no Lily." The world tilted. He pulled out medical records, diagnoses of postpartum psychosis, years of therapy. Every piece of my memory, twisted, manipulated. My husband and his mother, Patricia, looked at me with pity and annoyance, like I was a problem, not a person. "You' re lying," I whispered, holding a small drawing I found, a crayon picture of a girl in a yellow dress, with one word: LILY. They had erased every trace-photos, her booster seat, everything. Even my best friend, Sarah, my supposed therapist, denied Lily' s existence. I was trapped, my reality crumbling around me. But the real Daniel was allergic to peanuts. The man beside me ate the peanut butter toast without a flinch. He wasn' t my husband. He was an impostor, and he, along with the whole town, was involved in something ancient and evil. They were preparing a sacrifice. My daughter. Lily was real, and she was in danger. I had to save her, no matter the cost.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10