Chapter 2

The basement had never been meant for living. As Wyatt's footsteps echoed down the concrete stairs, each step deliberate and measured, I pressed myself against the cold stone wall and tried to make sense of how my world had crumbled so completely in just three days.

"This is where you belong now," he said, his voice carrying none of the warmth I'd known for twenty years. The man standing before me wore Wyatt's face, but everything else—his posture, his tone, the ice in his dark eyes—belonged to a stranger. "Until you decide to tell me the truth about how long you've been lying to me."

The basement was furnished with only the bare essentials: a narrow bed with thin sheets, a small table, and a single lamp that cast harsh shadows across the concrete walls. My suitcase from Chicago sat in the corner, still packed, as if my entire life could be reduced to that one piece of luggage.

"Wyatt, please," I whispered, hating how my voice cracked. "I know how this looked, but I swear to you, I wasn't—"

"Don't." He held up his hand, and I flinched at the sharp gesture. "Don't insult my intelligence with more lies. Opal told me everything, Serenity. About the hotel rooms, the secret meetings, the promises you made to her."

Hotel rooms? Secret meetings? The accusations hit me like physical blows, each one more bewildering than the last. "What are you talking about? I never—"

"She showed me the texts." His voice was deadly quiet now. "The ones where you told her you were tired of playing the perfect wife. That you wanted something real for once."

My legs nearly gave out. "That's impossible. I never sent any texts like that. Wyatt, you have to believe me—"

"Believe you?" He laughed, but there was no humor in it. "I believed you for months while you played the devoted wife upstairs and snuck around behind my back. I believed you when you said those late business trips were necessary. I believed you when you claimed you loved me."

The concrete floor was cold beneath my knees as I sank down, the weight of his accusations crushing me. "I do love you. I've loved you since we were children. How can you think I would—"

"Because I saw you!" The words exploded from him, raw and furious. "I saw you in our bed with her, Serenity. I saw how comfortable you looked, how natural it seemed. Like you'd done it a hundred times before."

Confusion swirled through my mind like fog. "You saw me? But I found you with her. You were the one—"

"Stop." His hand slammed against the wall beside my head, making me jump. "Just stop with the lies. I know what I saw."

Footsteps on the stairs interrupted us—light, feminine steps that made my stomach clench with dread. Opal appeared in the doorway, her expression carefully arranged into something that looked like concern.

"Wyatt, maybe we should give her some time to think," she said softly, placing a gentle hand on his arm. The gesture was so intimate, so natural, that it sent fresh pain shooting through my chest. "This must be overwhelming for her."

She looked at me with what appeared to be genuine sympathy, but something flickered in her dark eyes—something that reminded me of a cat playing with a wounded mouse.

"You're right," Wyatt said, his voice gentling slightly when he spoke to her. "Serenity needs time to process what's happening."

He turned back to me, and the coldness returned. "Your credit cards have been canceled. Your phone and car keys are upstairs. When you're ready to tell me the truth—the real truth—about what you've been doing behind my back, maybe we can discuss your situation."

"My situation?" The words came out as a broken whisper.

"You're my wife," he said, each word precise and cutting. "That means something to me, even if it never meant anything to you. But trust? Respect? Freedom? Those are things you earn back."

As they turned to leave, Opal glanced back at me over her shoulder. For just a moment, her mask slipped, and I saw something that made my blood run cold. Satisfaction. Pure, undiluted satisfaction.

The basement door closed with a final click, and I heard the sound of a lock turning. In the sudden silence, I could hear my own ragged breathing, the frantic beating of my heart, and somewhere far above, the sound of Opal's laughter drifting through the house that had once been my home.

I pulled my knees to my chest and tried to understand how the man who had once promised to protect me from the world had become the very thing I needed protection from.

Chapter 3

The china plate trembled in my hands as I placed it before Wyatt, the steam from the roasted chicken rising between us like a fragile barrier. He didn't look up, didn't acknowledge my presence at all. Instead, his attention remained fixed on Opal, who sat in my chair at our dining table, wearing a dress I recognized from my own closet.

"This looks delicious, doesn't it, darling?" Opal cooed, reaching across to touch Wyatt's hand in a gesture so intimate it made my stomach clench.

"It does," he agreed, finally glancing at me with cold detachment. "You can serve yourself now, Serenity. In the kitchen."

I swallowed hard against the lump in my throat, fighting the wave of dizziness that had become my constant companion. The cancer was progressing—I could feel it in my bones, in the constant fatigue that dragged at my limbs, in the pain that radiated from my chest in pulsing waves. But nobody believed me. Not Wyatt, who called it another manipulation, and certainly not Opal, who watched my deterioration with barely concealed satisfaction.

In the kitchen, I leaned against the counter and pressed my palm against my breast where the lump had grown larger, harder. How many nights had I now spent in that basement, separated from my medication, from proper care? How much time did I have left?

Through the doorway, I could see them eating, laughing, playing the part of lovers so convincingly that sometimes I wondered if I was the one who had lost touch with reality. Opal fed Wyatt a bite from her fork, and he kissed her fingers afterward, a casual intimacy that twisted the knife deeper into my heart.

"Remember when we went to that little bistro in Paris?" Opal was saying, her voice carrying clearly to where I stood. "And you said you'd never felt so alive before?"

Wyatt nodded, smiling at a memory that couldn't possibly exist. We had gone to Paris for our honeymoon. Opal had never been there. But somehow, she had inserted herself into our history, rewriting it so thoroughly that even Wyatt believed the new version.

I couldn't take it anymore. The charade, the cruelty, the constant pain—it was too much. While they were distracted with each other, I slipped out the kitchen door into the cool night air. The nearest hospital was three miles away. In my weakened state, it would take hours to walk there, but I had to try. Someone had to believe me.

I had barely made it past the garden when I heard the door slam open behind me.

"Where do you think you're going?" Wyatt's voice cut through the darkness, and I froze, terror washing over me in an icy wave.

"I need a doctor," I whispered, turning to face him. "Wyatt, please. I'm sick. I'm really sick."

His laugh was hollow, echoing in the night air. "Another lie? Another manipulation?" He grabbed my arm, his fingers digging into my flesh. "I'm getting tired of your games, Serenity."

He dragged me across the lawn toward the swimming pool, its surface glittering under the moonlight. Understanding dawned with horrifying clarity.

"No," I gasped, struggling against his grip. "Wyatt, don't—"

The water hit me like a shock, stealing my breath as he pushed me under. His hands held me down, the weight immovable as I thrashed beneath the surface. Just as my lungs began to burn, he pulled me up, allowing me one desperate gasp before shoving me back down.

"Tell me the truth," he demanded when he let me surface again, water streaming from my hair, my clothes, my eyes. "Tell me about the affair. About how long you've been lying to me."

"There was no affair," I choked out between ragged breaths. "I swear to you, Wyatt. I never—"

Under again. The chlorine burned my eyes, my nose, my throat. The world reduced to nothing but pressure and pain and the desperate need for air. When he pulled me up this time, I couldn't even speak, could only cough and gasp and sob.

From the edge of the pool, I saw Opal watching, her arms crossed over her chest, her expression one of perfect, calculated concern. In her hand was a small stack of papers.

"I found these in her suitcase," she called to Wyatt. "Hotel receipts. Love letters. There's even a photo."

More lies. More fabrications. But as Wyatt's face darkened with renewed fury, I knew it didn't matter. The truth had drowned long before he ever pushed me into this pool.

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