When My Husband’s Mistress Was My Own Sister

The crystal tumbler shattered against the wall, sending amber liquid splashing across the pristine white paint. Sterling didn't flinch as glass shards rained down around him.

"Again?" Avery's voice dripped with disdain from the doorway. "This is the third time this month you've destroyed something in this house."

I wasn't there to see it, of course. But Marcus, Sterling's younger brother, described it to me later—how Sterling had descended into drunken rages since I'd left, how Avery's smug satisfaction had curdled into annoyance at his increasingly erratic behavior.

"The staff won't clean it up," Sterling slurred, his expensive shirt wrinkled and stained. "You hired them, you deal with it."

Avery's heels clicked sharply against the marble floor as she retreated, calling over her shoulder, "I'm going shopping. Don't bother coming to the gala tonight."

After she left, Sterling stumbled to the bar cart, reaching for the bottle of Macallan I'd given him on our second anniversary. His fingers trembled as he poured another drink.

"Evangeline," he whispered to the empty room, "what have I done?"

---

The sketchbook was wedged beneath the kitchen trash can, its leather cover stained with coffee grounds. Sterling had been searching for his phone charger when he found it—my old design portfolio, the one Avery had mockingly tossed aside weeks ago.

"Trash," she'd called it.

He flipped through the pages now, squinting through the haze of alcohol. My sketches—designs for dresses I'd never had the chance to create—filled each page with intricate detail.

A maternity dress with flowing lines that seemed to capture movement. A wedding gown with sleeves like wings. A simple silk blouse with a collar that somehow managed to look both delicate and strong.

"These aren't trash," he murmured, tracing my pencil lines with a fingertip.

He remembered then—the way I'd sketch in the evenings while he worked late, how I'd show him my designs with hopeful eyes that gradually dimmed when he dismissed them as "nice little drawings."

Nice little drawings.

Sterling closed the book and pressed it against his chest, a sob tearing from his throat.

---

Six months after leaving Chicago, I stood backstage at New York Fashion Week, my heart hammering against my ribs.

"Five minutes, Phoenix," the stage manager called.

Phoenix. My pseudonym. My rebirth.

"Are you ready?" Emmett appeared beside me, his presence steady and calming.

"As ready as I'll ever be," I replied, smoothing the fabric of my own creation—a simple black dress with sleeves that unfurled like wings when I raised my arms.

The collection behind me told my story—designs inspired by constraint and liberation. Dresses with corsets that transformed into flowing skirts. Jackets with hidden pockets for escape. Shoes that looked like shackles but were designed for running.

"They're going to love it," Emmett said softly.

I nodded, unable to speak past the lump in my throat.

When the lights dimmed and the music started, I watched from the wings as my creations moved down the runway. Each model carried herself with the quiet confidence I was still learning to embrace.

The audience erupted in applause.

---

Hours later, at the after-party, Emmett found me on the balcony overlooking the Manhattan skyline.

"Congratulations," he said, handing me a glass of champagne. "Phoenix has risen."

I smiled, accepting the glass. "Thank you for believing in me."

"I didn't believe in you," he corrected gently. "I saw you. There's a difference."

The cool night air carried the scent of rain and possibility. Below us, the city sparkled like scattered diamonds.

"I know who you are, Evangeline," Emmett said quietly.

I stiffened, nearly spilling my champagne.

"I've always known," he continued. "But it doesn't matter. What matters is who you're becoming."

His eyes held mine, warm and steady. "I admire your strength."

Something shifted between us—a current of electricity that made my skin tingle.

"Emmett..." I began, not sure what I wanted to say.

He stepped closer, his hand gently brushing a strand of hair from my face. "I know you're still healing," he whispered. "I can wait."

I pulled back slightly, my heart racing. "I'm still broken," I admitted.

His fingers traced my cheek with feather-light pressure. "No one who creates beauty like you is truly broken."

---

The magazine lay open on Sterling's desk, its glossy pages displaying my collection under the headline: "PHOENIX RISES: FASHION'S NEWEST STAR."

Sterling's fingers trembled as he touched the photograph of my signature piece—a dress with a high collar that concealed the wearer's neck, just like the one I'd designed years ago when we were still together.

"Find her," he told the private investigator across from him. "Find my wife."

The PI nodded, already compiling a dossier. "The Williams Group protects their designers' privacy well, but I'll have an address by tomorrow."

Sterling stared at my photograph—the first clear image he'd seen of me since I'd left. I looked different now. Stronger. My eyes held a confidence he'd never seen before.

"She's mine," he whispered, more to himself than to the investigator. "She's always been mine."

A mix of possessiveness and twisted regret ignited in his chest. He would find me. He would bring me home.

And this time, he wouldn't let me go.

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