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My Husband Let Her Imitate His Dead Lover Novel Cover

My Husband Let Her Imitate His Dead Lover

I spent three years believing my marriage was real, unaware my husband was obsessed with his dead lover. He systematically molded me into her image, treating me as a mere substitute. The nightmare intensifies when a look-alike appears, and he forces her to mimic the deceased woman as well. Caught in a web of billionaire secrets and cruel imitations, I am desperate to break free from this chilling manipulation and reclaim my own life.
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Chapter 3

The cemetery was quiet the way only New England cemeteries were quiet—not empty, but settled. Like the ground itself had made peace with what it held.

I parked on the gravel path and carried the freesias in both arms. White, same as always. The florist on Route 9 knew me by now. She never asked who they were for.

Eliana's headstone was small and clean, gray granite with her name and two dates that still seemed too close together. I crouched down and arranged the flowers the way she would have liked them—loose, a little careless, the way she arranged everything. She hated stiffness. She used to pull the centerpieces apart at formal dinners and redo them with her hands, laughing while the catering staff tried not to stare.

I sat on the cold stone bench beside the grave and held the manila envelope in my lap.

I had been carrying it since eight that morning. The specialist's office on Park Avenue, the kind of office with thick carpet and framed diplomas and a doctor who spoke very carefully, who chose each word like he was handling something fragile. He had handed me the envelope and said, *Take all the time you need.*

I had thanked him, put the envelope in my bag, and driven three hours north.

Now I broke the seal.

The words *amyotrophic lateral sclerosis* appeared twice on the first page. I read them both times. I read the rest of it too—the projections, the progression timeline, the section titled *Prognosis* that used phrases like *significant functional decline* and *estimated eighteen to thirty months.* The language was precise and clean and left no room for negotiation. I respected that about it.

I folded the pages back along the original crease and returned them to the envelope.

The freesias moved slightly in the wind. A white petal loosened and settled against the base of the headstone.

I sat with it for a while. The cold of the bench came up through my coat. A crow landed somewhere behind me and then left.

Eliana, I thought. Of all the things.

She would have had something to say about this. She always had something to say—not the right thing, necessarily, but the real thing, the thing that cut through all the careful silence and landed where it needed to. She would have grabbed my hand. She would have said something terrible and funny and exactly correct, and I would have laughed despite myself, and that would have been the beginning of being able to bear it.

She was not here.

I looked at her name on the stone. Born. Died. Everything that had been Eliana Shaw compressed into those two dates and the eleven years between them that I had known her.

I thought about the treatment options the specialist had outlined. The protocols. The clinical trials in Boston, in Houston, in Zurich. The things that might buy more months, or might not, at the cost of everything those months contained. I thought about what those months would look like.

I thought about Callan.

Then I stopped thinking about Callan.

I stood up. I smoothed my coat. I looked at the freesias one last time—loose, a little careless, the way she would have wanted.

*I'm done waiting*, I told her, which was not something I had ever said aloud before.

I picked up my bag and walked back to the car.

The decision was already made.

---

Simon's practice was dark from the street, but the back office light was on. He had left the side door unlocked. He always left the side door unlocked when I texted ahead.

I found him at his desk with a cup of tea going cold beside his keyboard. He looked up when I came in and did not say anything—just waited, in that particular Simon way, like patience was a form of courtesy.

I sat down across from him and put both envelopes on the desk. The specialist's referral and the diagnosis. I slid them toward him without speaking.

He read slowly. He turned the pages with the same care he brought to everything—thorough, unhurried, nothing wasted. When he finished he set the papers down and looked at me.

He did not say *I'm sorry.* He did not say *we'll figure this out* or *there are options* or any of the other things people said when they needed to feel useful.

He asked: *What do you need?*

I had been holding myself very straight for three hours. I kept doing it.

'A way out of the country that Callan can't trace,' I said. 'And someone I trust to manage what comes after.'

He reached for his notebook. Small, green, the same kind he had been carrying since the eleventh grade. He opened to a fresh page.

'Medical care abroad,' he said. 'Palliative from the start, or—'

'Palliative from the start.'

He wrote that down.

'I know a clinic in the Maldives,' he said. 'Private. Good staff. The physician there is someone I trained with. She's thorough and she doesn't talk.'

'Good.'

'I'll need two weeks to arrange it properly.'

'That's fine.'

He wrote for another minute. I watched his handwriting—small and precise, slightly left-leaning. I had always found it steadying, that handwriting. Evidence that someone was paying attention.

'Margo.' He said my name the way he always did—no inflection, no performance, just the word. 'Are you sure about the treatment?'

'Yes.'

He looked at me for a moment. Then he nodded once and went back to writing.

That was the thing about Simon. He never made me defend myself. He just opened his notebook and got to work.

---

Callan moved fast. Faster than I expected, which meant he was frightened, which meant the filing had landed exactly where I aimed it.

His attorney filed the delay petition on a Thursday. By Friday afternoon, the pressure had migrated sideways—not toward the court, where he couldn't touch me, but toward the firm.

My managing partner, Richard, called me into his office at four o'clock on a Friday. He was a good man and a careful lawyer and he looked, when I sat down across from him, like someone who had been asked to do something he didn't want to do.

'There's been some concern,' he said, 'from a few of the senior partners. Given the active petition. The optics of a divorce attorney—your own divorce—'

'I understand,' I said.

He exhaled slightly. 'A brief leave. Voluntary. Just while the petition is pending. It protects you and it protects the firm.'

I looked at him. Richard, who had hired me nine years ago, who had championed my partnership track, who had sat in the gallery for three of my biggest wins and shaken my hand afterward like I'd done something worth witnessing.

I could see exactly how this had happened. The phone call from Callan's chief of staff. The polite, devastating implication. The way money spoke in this city without ever raising its voice.

'Thank you for telling me yourself,' I said.

I meant it. He could have had HR do it.

I walked back to my office, closed the door, and sat down at my desk. I straightened my pen. Turned my coffee cup handle east. Looked at the window for a moment—forty-one floors of city and glass and everyone down there living their lives in the dark.

Then I picked up my phone and called Diana.

She answered on the first ring.

'I heard,' she said.

'I need the Hartley file,' I said. 'And the Castillo affidavits. And I need you to set up a press briefing for Monday morning.'

A beat of silence. Then: 'How big?'

'Big enough,' I said, 'that no one is thinking about a leave of absence by Tuesday.'

I heard her pull her chair closer to her desk.

'Give me an hour,' she said.

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