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My Billionaire Fiancé's Hidden Wife

My Billionaire Fiancé's Hidden Wife

My fiancé, Knox, was the man I’d spent ten years building a life with, the one I’d poured my family’s fortune into. But then I found the lockbox. Inside, a photo of him smiling, his arm around a heavily pregnant woman, marked: *To my only wife Deana.* I’d been looking for a charger in our Boston penthouse closet when I stumbled upon it. The faded Polaroid showed Knox, younger, beaming, with a heavily pregnant stranger. Its timestamp: "Ten years ago"—the exact year I funded his Ivy League PhD. Flipping the photo, I saw Knox’s familiar handwriting: *To my only wife Deana and our upcoming miracle.* My world crumbled. The man I’d loved had a wife, making me the unwitting mistress. My opulent life was built on his lies. His text, "Baby, I'm coming home to *our house*," twisted into a cruel joke. My tears froze. A decade of sacrifices, of family alienation—all for a man who used my money and trust—shredded in my mind. The fragile woman in me vanished; my eyes turned cold and clear. I relocked the box, smoothed the rug, and applied crimson lipstick. Practicing a flawless smile, I whispered, "Welcome home, my sweet liar."
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Chapter 1

My fiancé, Knox, was the man I’d spent ten years building a life with, the one I’d poured my family’s fortune into. But then I found the lockbox. Inside, a photo of him smiling, his arm around a heavily pregnant woman, marked: *To my only wife Deana.* I’d been looking for a charger in our Boston penthouse closet when I stumbled upon it. The faded Polaroid showed Knox, younger, beaming, with a heavily pregnant stranger. Its timestamp: "Ten years ago"—the exact year I funded his Ivy League PhD. Flipping the photo, I saw Knox’s familiar handwriting: *To my only wife Deana and our upcoming miracle.* My world crumbled. The man I’d loved had a wife, making me the unwitting mistress. My opulent life was built on his lies. His text, "Baby, I'm coming home to *our house*," twisted into a cruel joke. My tears froze. A decade of sacrifices, of family alienation—all for a man who used my money and trust—shredded in my mind. The fragile woman in me vanished; my eyes turned cold and clear. I relocked the box, smoothed the rug, and applied crimson lipstick. Practicing a flawless smile, I whispered, "Welcome home, my sweet liar." Chapter 1 Harper Morris POV: I was just looking for a spare phone charger. I pushed open the hidden panel at the very back of the walk-in closet in our Boston penthouse. The recessed lighting didn't reach this far back. The shadows were thick, pressing against my skin. My chest tightened automatically. *The sharp click of the lock. My mother's heels clicking away on the hardwood. The suffocating darkness of the coat closet.* I forced the childhood memory down and reached blindly into the gloom. My hand clipped a stack of old shoeboxes. They tumbled to the floor with a muffled thud, kicking up a cloud of stale dust. I coughed, the dry air scratching my throat. I knelt on the plush carpet to gather the scattered boxes. As my fingers brushed the floor, I felt it. A hard, unnatural bulge beneath the edge of the Persian rug. My heart skipped a beat. I dug my nails into the heavy wool and peeled the rug back. Nestled in a custom-cut recess in the floorboards was a cold, steel lockbox. I dragged the heavy box out of the shadows and into the bright, clinical light of the main closet. My hands were perfectly steady. I was trained to be steady. I stared at the digital keypad. I typed in the date we met. The red light flashed. *Error.* I took a breath and entered Knox's birthday. The red light blinked again. *Error.* I sat back on my heels. Knox was a man who guarded his mind like a fortress. He never left his laptop unlocked. He never drank past his limit. Except for one night, three years ago, when a fever had him delirious. He had mumbled a string of six numbers over and over in his sleep. I typed them in now, my fingers trembling slightly. *Click.* The heavy latch sprang open. The smell of old paper and metallic ink hit my face. I lifted the lid. Sitting on top was a thick stack of hospital billing receipts from a clinic in the Boston suburbs. I scanned the faded ink. My eyes locked onto the department stamp at the top right corner. *Obstetrics.* A high-pitched ringing started in my ears. My fingers turned to ice. I pushed the receipts aside and pulled out a Polaroid photograph buried beneath them. The edges were yellowed. A layer of dust coated the glossy surface. I rubbed my thumb over it, clearing the grime. The image sharpened. It was Knox. His face was younger, brighter, stripped of the calculated academic arrogance he wore now. He was smiling so hard his eyes were crinkled. I followed the line of his arm. He was holding a woman tightly against his side. She was a stranger, and she was heavily pregnant. My pupils dilated. My gaze dropped to the bottom right corner of the Polaroid. The timestamp was printed in stark, bleeding red ink. *Ten years ago.* Ten years ago. The exact same year I used the very first disbursement from my family trust fund to pay for Knox's PhD at an Ivy League university. A wave of pure, unadulterated absurdity crashed over me. My wrist went limp. The steel lockbox slipped from my grasp and slammed into the hardwood floor. The photograph fluttered out of my hand. It landed face down on the Persian rug. I dropped to my knees. Staring back at me from the white back of the photo was Knox's handwriting. The precise, slanted script I had spent a decade reading on love notes and anniversary cards. *To my only wife Deana and our upcoming miracle.* My stomach violently heaved. I clamped both hands over my mouth, swallowing down the hot, acidic bile rising in my throat. I scrambled backward on my hands and knees until my spine slammed hard against the floor-to-ceiling mirror. I stared at my reflection. I looked pale. Fragile. Behind me was the five-million-dollar closet I had meticulously designed, the nest I had built for the man I loved. My phone screen lit up on the vanity island. A text from Knox. *Baby, the meeting is over. I'm coming home to our house.* I stared at the words *our house*. The tears that had been burning the backs of my eyes froze instantly. I closed my eyes. I took one deep breath. Then another. Then a third. With every exhale, I took the last ten years of my life—the sacrifices, the late nights formatting his papers, the alienation from my family—and shredded them into confetti in my mind. When I opened my eyes, the fragile woman in the mirror was gone. My eyes were cold, dead, and utterly clear. I picked up the photo. I placed it back in the box exactly as I had found it. I locked the steel lid. I set it back in the hidden recess and smoothed the Persian rug over it until there wasn't a single wrinkle. I stood up and walked to my vanity. I picked up a tube of crimson lipstick and applied it slowly, perfectly tracing the curve of my lips. I looked at my reflection and practiced a flawless, adoring smile. "Welcome home, my sweet liar."

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