Chapter 2

The ballroom glittered with champagne flutes and designer gowns, a perfect tableau of wealth and privilege. I stood in the corner, watching as Elio accepted birthday wishes from Boston's elite, his smile never reaching his eyes. The weight of what I was about to do pressed against my chest like a stone.

"Are you alright, Miriam?" Eleanor Thompson, my mother-in-law, touched my arm. Her concern seemed genuine, though she'd never truly warmed to me. "You look pale."

"I'm fine," I lied, my fingers tightening around my untouched champagne. "Just a little tired."

Across the room, Elio laughed at something Richard Blackwell, his business partner, said. For a moment, he looked like the man I'd fallen in love with – before Helen's ghost and Rayne's flesh-and-blood recreation had consumed him.

Three days had passed since I discovered Rayne in that hidden room. Three days of pretending nothing had changed while everything had shattered. I'd spent those days gathering evidence – bank statements, property deeds, photos. The weight of the USB drive in my clutch felt heavier than its physical presence should allow.

"Ladies and gentlemen," the event coordinator announced, "if you'd all gather around, Mrs. Thompson would like to say a few words for her husband's birthday."

All eyes turned to me. Expected words of adoration died on my lips as Elio approached, his expression a mask of practiced affection. Behind him, I caught a flash of copper hair – Rayne, here at my husband's birthday celebration. The audacity stole my breath.

"Miriam?" Elio prompted, his public smile firmly in place.

I stepped forward, my heart thundering so loudly I was certain everyone could hear it.

"I'd like to thank you all for coming tonight," I began, my voice steadier than I felt. "It's important to have witnesses when life changes irrevocably."

Confusion flickered across Elio's face.

"My husband has been keeping secrets," I continued, the room falling deathly silent. "A secret villa on the coast. A secret room. A secret woman named Rayne Allen, surgically altered to look exactly like his deceased first love."

Gasps rippled through the crowd. Elio's face drained of color.

"Miriam," he hissed, reaching for my arm. "Stop this immediately."

I stepped back, beyond his reach. "I've spent years trying to be enough for you, Elio. Cooking your favorite meals, remembering every detail you ever shared, loving a man who kept part of himself locked away where I couldn't reach."

My gaze found Rayne in the crowd, her green eyes wide with shock at being exposed. She wore my grandmother's diamond earrings – another piece of jewelry Elio had claimed was "lost."

"I want a divorce," I said clearly, the words ringing through the silent ballroom. "And I want everyone here to know exactly why."

The weeks that followed blurred together in a haze of legal meetings and media speculation. I moved into a hotel suite while our lawyers began the bitter process of untangling our lives. Then, on a rain-soaked Tuesday morning, the pregnancy test showed positive.

Two pink lines that should have brought joy instead filled me with complicated dread. A baby. Elio's baby. Our third chance at becoming parents after two previous losses early in our marriage.

I told him over coffee at a neutral location – a quiet café downtown where neither of us had memories.

"I'm pregnant," I said without preamble, watching his face for any reaction.

His eyes widened briefly, something unreadable flickering in their depths. For a moment – just a moment – I saw the man I'd once loved, the one who had held me through nights of grief after our previous losses.

"That's..." he began, then his phone buzzed. He glanced down, his expression hardening as he read the message. "I need to handle something."

"Of course you do," I said, bitter disappointment washing through me. "It's Rayne, isn't it?"

His silence was answer enough.

"She's upset," he finally admitted. "About the pregnancy."

I laughed, the sound sharp and wounded. "The woman who destroyed our marriage is upset about our baby? And you're rushing to comfort her?"

"It's not that simple, Miriam."

"It never is with you," I said, gathering my purse. "Goodbye, Elio."

I didn't expect his call three days later, or his request that I come to the house to discuss "arrangements." I certainly didn't expect to find Rayne sitting at our dining table when I arrived, her copper hair gleaming in the afternoon light.

"Elio wants you to make us dinner," she said, her voice honey-sweet with malice. "He says your pasta primavera is divine."

Elio emerged from his study, his expression unreadable. "Ah, Miriam. Good. Rayne is staying for dinner."

"You expect me to cook for your mistress?" I asked incredulously.

"I expect you to be civil," he replied coldly. "The kitchen is stocked. Rayne has specific dietary preferences. No garlic, light on the salt."

Rayne smiled, twisting the knife. "I've heard so much about your domestic skills, Miriam. I can't wait to experience them firsthand."

I stood frozen, one hand unconsciously moving to my still-flat stomach, protecting the tiny life within from this toxic atmosphere. In that moment, I knew with absolute certainty that I would never return to this house – or this man – again.

Chapter 3

The charity auction at the Grand Ballroom of the Four Seasons was in full swing when I first saw her. Not hiding in secret rooms or skulking in shadows, but standing boldly in the center of Boston's elite society, her copper hair gleaming under the crystal chandeliers like a beacon of my humiliation.

I froze at the entrance, my hand instinctively moving to my stomach where our child grew. Three months pregnant now, though barely showing, I'd forced myself to attend this event for the children's hospital – the same cause Helen had championed before her death.

"Miriam, darling!" Margaret Whitmore swept toward me, her diamond tennis bracelet catching the light. "You look radiant. That emerald gown is divine on you."

"Thank you," I managed, though my eyes remained fixed on Rayne. She wore a stunning black cocktail dress that hugged her surgically perfected curves, and around her throat – my breath caught – was my mother's pearl choker. Another piece Elio had claimed was "misplaced."

"Oh, you must meet Helen's cousin," Margaret continued, oblivious to my distress. "She's just arrived from California. Rayne, dear!"

The world tilted as Margaret led me directly toward her. Rayne turned, those impossible green eyes – Helen's eyes – meeting mine with calculated sweetness.

"Miriam Thompson," Rayne said, extending a manicured hand. "I've heard so much about you. I'm Rayne Nelson, Helen's cousin. I was so sorry to hear about your... marital difficulties."

The lie rolled off her tongue with practiced ease. Helen's cousin. The audacity of it stole my breath.

"How interesting," I replied, my voice steady despite the rage building in my chest. "Helen never mentioned having family in California."

"We weren't close," Rayne said with a delicate shrug. "But blood calls to blood, you know. Especially when someone needs... comfort."

The implication hung between us like poison. Around us, conversations continued, glasses clinked, but I felt as though we were in a bubble of mutual hatred.

"Ladies and gentlemen," the auctioneer's voice boomed across the ballroom. "Our next item is particularly special – a jade bracelet from the estate of Helen Nelson, donated by the Thompson family."

My blood turned to ice. Helen's jade bracelet – the one she'd worn in every photo, the one Elio had sworn was buried with her.

"Oh my," Rayne breathed, her hand fluttering to her throat in perfect mimicry of Helen's old gesture. "How thoughtful of Elio to honor Helen's memory this way."

The bracelet appeared on the display screen, its intricate carved dragons seeming to writhe in the projected light. I knew every detail of that piece – Helen had shown it to me once, years ago, when she and Elio were still together.

"The bidding starts at five thousand dollars," the auctioneer announced.

Hands shot up around the room. Ten thousand. Fifteen. Twenty.

"Thirty thousand," I heard myself call out, my voice ringing clear across the ballroom.

Heads turned. Murmurs rippled through the crowd. Why would Elio's wife bid on his dead girlfriend's jewelry?

"Thirty-five thousand," came a familiar voice from across the room.

Elio. My husband. Bidding against me.

Our eyes met across the crowded ballroom, and in that moment, I saw everything I needed to know. He wasn't bidding for the charity. He wasn't bidding for Helen's memory. He was bidding for Rayne, who stood beside me with barely concealed triumph.

"Forty thousand," I called, my voice stronger now.

"Fifty thousand," Elio countered without hesitation.

The room had gone silent except for the auctioneer's voice. Everyone could see what was happening – a husband publicly choosing his mistress over his wife, using his dead girlfriend's jewelry as the weapon.

"Sixty thousand," I said, my hand trembling as I raised it.

Elio's jaw tightened. He glanced at Rayne, who gave him the slightest nod, her lips curved in Helen's signature smile.

"Seventy-five thousand," he declared.

I could go higher. My trust fund could easily cover it. But as I looked around the ballroom – at the shocked faces, the whispered conversations, the pity in Margaret Whitmore's eyes – I realized the damage was already done.

Elio had chosen. Publicly. Definitively.

"Sold to Mr. Thompson for seventy-five thousand dollars," the auctioneer announced.

Applause filled the ballroom, but it felt hollow, strained. Rayne's smile was radiant as she accepted congratulations from nearby guests, playing her role of grieving cousin to perfection.

I stood frozen as the auction continued around me, my husband's public betrayal burning through my chest like acid. He had humiliated me in front of everyone who mattered in our social circle, choosing to spend nearly a hundred thousand dollars on jewelry for his mistress rather than let his pregnant wife have even this small piece of dignity.

The baby fluttered in my womb, and I placed both hands protectively over my stomach. Whatever happened next, I would not let this child grow up witnessing such cruelty.

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