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The Secret Wife Makes A Spectacular Comeback

The Secret Wife Makes A Spectacular Comeback

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10 Chapters
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On our third anniversary, I spent hours cooking my husband's favorite meal, waiting for him to come home. Instead of a greeting, I overheard him and his mother in the living room, planning to evict me. He was an A-list actor, and I was his secret wife-a "failed PR investment" they now wanted to erase with a $250,000 NDA. He told me my trailer-park background was a stain dragging his career down. Later, when I suffered a severe allergic reaction to a sleeping pill and nearly died, he didn't care. He stormed into my hospital room, accused me of faking a suicide attempt for attention, and called my late mother a pathetic drunk. Even the arrogant ER doctor treated me like a desperate, hysterical housewife wasting medical resources. I gave up three years of my life to be his unpaid maid and his shadow, only to be thrown away like garbage. But what my husband didn't know was that the mysterious, top-tier creator "Xen" he was desperately trying to sign a life-changing deal with to save his career... was actually me. I ripped the IV out of my arm, bleeding onto the hospital floor, and smiled at him. "I'm going to watch you fall." I hired the most ruthless divorce lawyer in LA to take half his fortune, and quietly canceled his dream contract. This time, I'm going to watch his gilded life burn to the ground.

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The Secret Wife Makes A Spectacular Comeback Chapter 1

The kitchen smelled like rosemary and butter. Carma Forbes wiped a smudge off the porcelain plate with her thumb, adjusting the angle of the silverware for the fourth time. The Beef Wellington sat in the center of the table, the golden pastry crust gleaming under the dim light of the taper candles. She had spent three hours on it. Kendall loved her Wellington.

She looked down at her left hand. The candlelight caught the simple gold band on her ring finger. It was a far cry from the diamond rings her friends wore, but it was hers. Three years ago, a justice of the peace in a dusty Nevada courthouse had slipped it on her finger. No family, no close friends from her past-just the two of them and a promise that felt bigger than the desert sky.

She had built a life in secret, and secrets kept people at a distance.

Her phone vibrated against the marble countertop. The screen lit up with a text from Emily.

"Happy Anniversary! What surprise did that husband of yours pull out of his hat?"

Carma typed back, her thumbs moving slowly across the glass. "The surprise is him walking through the front door on time."

She hit send and tucked the phone into her apron pocket. She picked up the leather-bound photo album she had spent the last month making. She had printed out the few photos they had from that day in Nevada, along with ticket stubs and pressed flowers from their rare trips. It was a history of a marriage no one else knew existed.

The rumble of a car engine broke the silence of the house. Carma's head snapped up. Her heart did a little flip in her chest. He was home. She smoothed down her hair and started toward the foyer.

Then she heard the second voice. High-pitched. Sharp.

"Kendall, you have to tell her tonight."

Carma stopped. Her sneakers squeaked slightly on the hardwood floor. She stepped back, pressing herself into the shadows of the archway leading to the dining room.

Mildred Kirby walked into the living room, her heels clicking against the floor. Kendall followed, loosening his tie. He looked exhausted, but it was the kind of exhaustion that came from annoyance, not hard work.

"The Oscar is sitting on the mantel, Kendall," Mildred said, her voice carrying through the open space. "You don't need to be tied to some Ohio charity case to prop up your image anymore."

"Mother, I know." Kendall sighed, dropping onto the Italian leather sofa. He rubbed his temples. "Marcus said it's time to clean up my personal life. It's bad for the brand."

Carma's stomach dropped. The coldness spread from her chest to her fingertips. The album slipped from her grasp. It hit the thick Persian rug with a soft, muffled thud. No one heard it.

"Clean up?" Mildred scoffed. She poured herself a brandy from the crystal decanter. "You make it sound like a spring cleaning. I only agreed to that ridiculous secret marriage because you thought her Ohio relatives had some back-channel to the Hurst family. A complete waste of time. It was a narrative, Kendall. A failed investment. It's run its course."

"It's done, Mother." Kendall's voice was flat. "The divorce papers are in my bag. My lawyer drafted a tight NDA. We give her a payout, she goes back to Ohio, and we pretend the last three years never happened."

"Money?" Mildred took a sip of her brandy, her lip curling. "She's lived rent-free for three years. She's been a glorified maid. She should be paying us for the exposure. A hundred grand is more than generous to keep her mouth shut."

Carma pressed her hand over her mouth. The taste of bile rose in her throat. Tears spilled over her lashes, burning hot against her cold skin. Her lungs felt like they were filled with wet sand.

Kendall didn't argue. He didn't defend her. He just stared at the blank TV screen. "It doesn't matter. The priority is the PR campaign with Deirdre Rocha. I can't be a leading man with a secret wife from the trailer park."

They sat there. Mother and son. Planning her eviction like she was a stain on the hardwood.

Carma pushed herself off the wall. Her legs felt like they belonged to someone else, but they held her weight. She wiped her face with the back of her hand. The tears stopped. The heat in her chest turned to ice.

She stepped out of the shadows.

"Happy Anniversary, Kendall."

Her voice echoed in the room. It didn't sound like her. It sounded hollow.

Kendall shot up from the sofa. Mildred froze with her glass halfway to her lips. The shock on their faces was almost comical.

Kendall recovered first. The mask slid into place. The charming, slightly apologetic smile he used on the red carpet. "Carma. You're home. Listen, I can explain-"

"Don't bother." Carma walked past the sofa. She looked at the dining table, the candles, the Wellington. It looked pathetic now. A shrine to a lie.

Kendall reached into his leather briefcase sitting by the coffee table. He pulled out a thick manila envelope and set it down on the glass surface. "Since you heard all that, we might as well get it over with."

Mildred sniffed, looking Carma up and down with undisguised disgust. "You were eavesdropping. How typical."

Carma ignored the old woman. She kept her eyes locked on Kendall. "So that's all I was? A prop? A miscalculation you made to try and get ahead?"

Kendall met her gaze, but there was no remorse there. Only impatience. "Carma, we're from different worlds. You don't fit into my life. You never did. You don't understand the industry, you don't like the events, and you certainly don't help my career. This is better for both of us."

He leaned forward, his voice dropping to a cruel whisper. "Your background is a stain, Carma. It doesn't wash out. It just keeps spreading and dragging me down with it."

The words hit her like a physical blow. The air rushed out of her lungs. She stared at the man she had loved, the man she had built a life around, and saw a stranger. A selfish, calculating stranger.

She nodded slowly. The last ember of hope in her chest sputtered and died, leaving nothing but ash.

"Okay," she said. Her voice was barely a whisper, but it was steady.

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