Rising From Ashes: The Betrayed Wife's Return

Addison POV:

I pushed Damien away, a desperate need for space overriding any pretense of affection. My body recoiled from his touch, the warmth of his hand a grotesque lie. I needed to move, to put distance between us before I shattered. I stood up abruptly, my head swimming. The room tilted slightly.

"I need to use the restroom," I mumbled, my voice strained. I practically fled to the bathroom, locking the door behind me.

I leaned over the toilet, dry heaving, the bitter taste of bile rising in my throat. It wasn't morning sickness anymore. It was pure, visceral disgust. My body was purging itself of his lies, rejecting the very air he breathed. As I splashed cold water on my face, I caught sight of myself in the mirror. My eyes were red-rimmed, my face pale and blotchy. But a new emotion was hardening my gaze: a cold, unwavering fury.

I looked at my reflection, really looked. Then I saw it. A faint, reddish mark on my neck, just below my ear. It was small, barely noticeable, but it was there. A love bite. A hickey. From her. A mark of their intimacy, carelessly left, carried into my home, transferred to me through his touch. A tangible, irrefutable stamp of his infidelity.

My stomach lurched again. I wanted to scratch it off, to scrub my skin raw until every trace of her was gone. The image of the locket, the framed photos, the casual mention of his name by Candace – they all clicked into place, forming a horrifying mosaic of deceit.

His recent behavior, usually so subtle, now screamed betrayal. The late nights he'd explained away as "important client meetings." The sudden, inexplicable mood swings, from overly affectionate to strangely distant. The way he sometimes flinched when I leaned too close, as if fearing I might detect someone else's scent. I had dismissed them all as stress from his demanding job, or perhaps my own pregnancy hormones making me paranoid. How utterly naive I had been. He hadn't just been cheating; he had been living a double life, meticulously maintaining two separate realities.

He was a master manipulator, a skilled attorney weaving narratives in court, now using those same talents to dismantle my world. He wasn't just weak; he was a coward, unwilling to face the consequences of his actions, choosing to hurt two women instead of making a single, honest decision.

A persistent knocking started on the bathroom door. "Addie? Are you okay in there? You've been in there a while." Damien's voice, muffled through the wood, sounded genuinely concerned. Another masterful performance.

Then, his phone rang, a loud, jarring buzz that cut through the silence. "Just a second, Addie," he called, his voice now slightly annoyed. I heard him answer, his tone shifting instantly to professional politeness. "Travis here. Yes, I'm listening... What? Right now?"

I pressed my ear against the door, strained to listen. It was a client, clearly in distress. Damien, the successful divorce attorney, was being pulled into a crisis. He spoke in hushed, urgent tones, his lawyer-brain clicking into gear. "I understand, Mrs. Albright. This is critical. But I'm with Addison right now. She's not feeling well."

He was trying to make it sound like I was more important. A fleeting thought crossed my mind, he's still putting on a show for me, even now. This was the man who would sacrifice anything for his career, yet he was pretending to prioritize my 'illness.' It was a hollow gesture, calculated to assuage his guilt, not genuinely care for me.

The client clearly wasn't having it. Her voice, though indistinct, rose in pitch. Damien sighed, a carefully modulated sound of professional resignation. "Alright, alright. I'm on my way. I'll be there in thirty. Just keep calm, and don't say anything until I arrive." He hung up with a decisive click.

More knocking on the door. "Addie, I have to go. Emergency client. Can you believe it? But I'll be back as soon as I can. Are you sure you're okay? I don't like leaving you like this."

I took a deep breath, steeling myself. I had to let him go. I needed him out of here. "I'm fine, Damien," I called back, forcing a lightness into my voice I didn't feel. "Just a bit of a headache. Go. Your client needs you."

"Are you sure?" he pressed, his concern still feigned.

"Yes, I'm sure," I said, a brittle edge to my tone. "I'll be okay."

I heard the rustle of his clothes, the jingle of his keys, the faint click of the front door closing. Then, silence. Utter, blessed silence.

The moment he was gone, the facade crumpled. I slid down the bathroom door, burying my face in my knees, allowing the raw, gut-wrenching sobs to tear through me. My body shook with an agony so profound it felt like every cell was screaming. The hickey on my neck, the evidence in Candace's apartment, his lies, his staged affections-it was all too much.

My mind replayed scenes from our past, a brutal highlight reel of shattered trust. I remembered meeting Damien during our freshman year of college. He was a brilliant pre-law student, always impeccably dressed, articulate and ambitious, destined for greatness. He was the golden boy, charming everyone he met. I, a shy art history major who dabbled in graphic design, was drawn to his vivacity, his unwavering confidence.

We were friends first, a platonic bond forged over late-night study sessions and shared dreams of shaping our respective worlds. He was always there, a steady presence. He' d meticulously proofread my essays, offering insightful critiques, even though art history was far from his sphere of interest. He remembered the small details about me, my favorite coffee, the way I bit my lip when I was concentrating. I had dated others, fleeting college romances, but Damien had always remained a constant, seemingly unwavering friend.

He had always been exceptionally kind, in a way that felt almost too good to be true. He would bring me coffee when I was pulling all-nighters, leave encouraging notes on my desk before big presentations. I had interpreted these gestures as pure friendship, never imagining a deeper affection. I was dating Mark at the time, a sweet but somewhat aimless philosophy student.

Then, one rainy night, after a particularly bad breakup with Mark, Damien showed up at my dorm room with my favorite takeout and a bouquet of wildflowers. He looked at me with an intensity I had never seen before. "Addison," he said, his voice soft but firm, "I can't stand seeing you with anyone else. I've loved you since the day I met you. More than a friend. More than anything."

He had confessed a secret, deep affection, a silent devotion he had held for years. It was overwhelming, romantic, a storybook revelation. He had patiently waited, loved me from afar, he said. He was my rock, my confidante, my protector. He was everything I had unknowingly craved after my parents' volatile relationship.

The memory of his declaration, once a cherished moment, now twisted into a grotesque parody. His "long-held secret love" was now exposed as a carefully constructed illusion, a tool to reel me in. His "patience" felt like a strategic wait, a calculated move.

My phone buzzed again, jarring me out of my grief. I wiped my face, my eyes stinging. It was a message from an unknown number. I hesitated, then opened it.

The message was brief, brutal. "I know you're at Damien's. You stole my diamond ring. The police are on their way. You will pay for this." It was Candace.

A mirthless laugh escaped my lips. She hadn't just hired me to discover the affair; she had set a trap. A theft accusation. A public spectacle. She wanted me not only heartbroken but utterly destroyed, professionally and personally. She was not just a mistress; she was a predator.

But her calculated cruelty had misfired. Instead of breaking me, it solidified something cold and hard inside. She had underestimated me. She thought I was a vulnerable, easily manipulated woman. She thought she had won. She was wrong. This wasn't just about survival anymore. This was about vengeance. And I would make her regret every single step of her elaborate, malicious game.

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