The Substitute Wife's Spectacular Comeback

The Substitute Wife's Spectacular Comeback

HONEY MULLINS

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When Chloe accidentally sliced her hand open, she immediately called her husband of three years for comfort. Bentley claimed he was stuck in Chicago on a business trip. But when Chloe went to the hospital for stitches, she saw him in a VIP room, tenderly kissing the hand of a fragile woman who looked exactly like her. Breaking into his locked study, Chloe found his hidden journal. She realized she was just a cheap substitute. He had only married her because she was a dead ringer for his fiancé, Blair, who had been in a coma. Now that Blair was awake, Bentley brought her to Chloe's private dress fitting. "Give her the dress. You're being selfish," Bentley demanded coldly. He forced Chloe to strip off her custom-made Met Gala gown to please Blair. He even secretly laced Chloe's daily tea with pills to ensure she never got pregnant. For three years, Chloe had built her life around him, only to realize her entire marriage was a cruel joke. How could he hold her tightly in their bed, whisper another woman's name in his sleep, and expect her to just accept it? When Bentley ripped up the divorce papers and threatened to destroy her architectural career, Chloe didn't shed a single tear. She packed up her blueprints, secured a billion-dollar island project with a mysterious tycoon, and walked out the door. This time, the substitute was resigning.

The Substitute Wife's Spectacular Comeback Chapter 1

The blade slipped.

One second Chloe Caldwell was tracing the grain of the balsa wood, the next the X-Acto knife skidded across the surface and sliced into her left palm. The pain didn't register immediately. It was a clean, sharp bite, followed by a hot rush that soaked into the white architectural model she had spent the last six hours building.

"Damn it," she hissed, dropping the knife. It clattered against the drafting table.

Blood welled up instantly, a thick, dark red that dripped onto the floorboards of her Manhattan studio. She grabbed the hem of her oversized flannel shirt and pressed it hard against the wound. The white cotton bloomed with color. Her hands were shaking. These were her tools. Her livelihood. If the tendon was cut...

She fumbled for her phone with her good hand, her thumb hitting the contact name without thinking. Bentley. It was instinct. Three years of marriage had wired her to reach for him when things fell apart.

The line rang. And rang. Static crackled in the background before the call connected.

"Chloe?" Bentley Morrow's voice was low, smooth, but held a slight echo, like he was in a large, empty room. "What's wrong?"

"I cut myself," she said, her voice thinner than she wanted it to be. She watched a drop of blood fall from her shirt to the wood. "Badly. With my knife."

"Where?" His tone sharpened, shifting into the CEO mode she knew so well.

"My hand. The studio."

"Listen to me," he said. She heard the faint clink of glass in the background. "I'm in Chicago. The merger dinner just ended. I can't be there, but I'm sending Alex right now. Don't move. Don't touch it."

Chicago. Right. She squeezed her eyes shut, the sting of tears mixing with the throb in her hand. "It's fine. I'll just drive-"

"No." The word was final. "Alex is in the city and will be there shortly. Stay put."

The line went dead. Chloe slid down the side of her drafting table until she hit the cold floor. She pressed her knee against her wounded hand, applying pressure, watching the red seep through the gaps in her fingers. The silence of the studio felt heavier now.

Exactly ten minutes later, the studio door pushed open. Alex Vance stood there in his tailored black overcoat, expression blank. "Mrs. Morrow. Let's go."

The ride to NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital was a blur of red lights and rain-streaked windows. Alex didn't speak. He just drove, the partition raised between them. When they arrived, he escorted her past the triage line, the Morrow name opening doors that would have stayed shut for anyone else.

Eleanor Sutton, a nurse with brisk hands and kind eyes, met them in a private exam room.

"Let me see," Eleanor said, gently unwrapping the makeshift bandage. She winced sympathetically. "Deep, but clean. You're lucky. A millimeter to the right and you'd be looking at nerve damage."

Chloe watched as the needle pierced her skin, the local anesthetic doing little to quell the sickening feeling in her stomach. Five stitches. Five knots tying her skin back together.

"You're an architect, right?" Eleanor asked, snapping off her gloves. "I see a lot of you guys in here. Carpal tunnel, slice wounds. You need this hand. Keep it dry, and no heavy lifting for two weeks."

Two weeks. Chloe stared at the white gauze wrapped around her palm. Two weeks without drawing. Two weeks without modeling. It felt like a death sentence.

"Thank you," Chloe murmured, sliding off the table. "I need to get my prescription."

"Pharmacy is on the ground floor," Eleanor said, already turning to the computer. "Take it easy, Mrs. Morrow."

Chloe walked out into the corridor. The hospital was quiet at this hour, the fluorescent lights buzzing overhead. She followed the signs toward the pharmacy, her footsteps echoing. As she turned the corner toward the elevator bank, she noticed a shift in the atmosphere. The VIP wing usually had security like a fortress, but tonight, the guards were clustered near the entrance, talking in hushed tones.

She slowed down. The hallway here was dimmer, the lights turned low for the patients. As she passed the room at the very end of the hall, the door was slightly ajar, a sliver of warm light spilling out onto the polished floor.

"Shh, it's okay. I'm here."

The voice stopped Chloe dead in her tracks. Her heart slammed against her ribs. That cadence. That low, soothing rumble. It was the exact same voice that had been on the phone thirty minutes ago.

She stepped closer, her breath catching in her throat. Through the gap in the door, she saw a tall man standing with his back to her. He was wearing a charcoal suit-she recognized the cut, she had picked it out. He was leaning over a hospital bed, his hand gently brushing hair away from the forehead of the woman lying there.

The woman turned her head slightly. Chloe's vision tunneled. The face was pale, framed by dark hair, the features delicate and fragile. It was her face. Or rather, a version of her face that hadn't been hardened by sleepless nights and disappointment. A softer, more breakable version.

Bentley leaned down and pressed a kiss to the woman's knuckles. The look on his face-raw, agonizing, desperate-was something Chloe had never seen directed at her. Not once in three years.

A wave of nausea rolled through her. She stepped back, her shoulder hitting the fire alarm box on the wall. The metal clanged loudly against the plaster.

Bentley's head snapped up. His eyes, sharp and alert, shot toward the door.

Panic seized Chloe. She scrambled sideways, pushing open the door to the supply closet next to her and slipping inside. She pulled the door shut, leaving just a crack to see through. The closet smelled of bleach and stale linens. She pressed her back against the shelving, her chest heaving, her left hand throbbing violently as the blood began to seep through the bandage again.

She watched through the crack. Bentley stepped out into the hallway, his posture rigid. He looked left, then right, his jaw clenched. After a moment, he pulled his phone from his pocket.

A second later, Chloe's phone vibrated in her hand. The screen lit up. Bentley.

She stared at it, her thumb hovering over the green button. She had to answer. If she didn't, he would know something was wrong. She pressed accept and brought the phone to her ear.

"Chloe?" His voice was in her ear, but she could also hear it echoing faintly from the hallway outside. "Are you home yet?"

She watched him through the crack. He was standing ten feet away, his phone pressed to his ear, his eyes still scanning the corridor.

"Y-Yes," she managed, her voice barely a whisper. "I just got back."

"Good," he said. He ran a hand through his hair, his posture relaxing slightly. "The dinner ran late. I'm just heading back to the hotel now. The traffic is terrible."

Liar. The word screamed in her head. He was standing right there. In New York. In a hospital. Lying.

"Okay," she said. Her throat felt like sandpaper. "I'm tired. I'm going to sleep."

"Get some rest," he said softly. "I love you."

The words hit her like a physical blow. She watched him say them, watched his lips move, but the warmth in his voice was a performance. He was looking back into the room, at the woman in the bed, as he said it.

"I know," she said, and hung up.

She watched Bentley pocket his phone and walk back into the hospital room, closing the door behind him. The click of the latch sounded like a gunshot.

Chloe slid down the shelving unit until she was sitting on the floor. She pressed her good hand over her mouth, stifling the sob that tore through her chest. The pain in her hand was nothing compared to the crushing weight on her lungs. She sat there, in the dark, surrounded by cleaning supplies, bleeding onto the linoleum, realizing that her entire marriage had been a lie.

She didn't know how long she sat there. Long enough for the hallway to go quiet again. Long enough for the tears to dry into sticky tracks on her cheeks. When she finally pushed herself up, her legs were stiff and her hand was on fire.

She walked out of the hospital without getting her prescription. The rain was coming down in sheets when she stepped outside, washing over the city. She didn't hail a cab. She just walked, the cold water soaking through her clothes, feeling nothing at all.

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The Substitute Wife's Spectacular Comeback The Substitute Wife's Spectacular Comeback HONEY MULLINS Billionaires
“When Chloe accidentally sliced her hand open, she immediately called her husband of three years for comfort. Bentley claimed he was stuck in Chicago on a business trip. But when Chloe went to the hospital for stitches, she saw him in a VIP room, tenderly kissing the hand of a fragile woman who looked exactly like her. Breaking into his locked study, Chloe found his hidden journal. She realized she was just a cheap substitute. He had only married her because she was a dead ringer for his fiancé, Blair, who had been in a coma. Now that Blair was awake, Bentley brought her to Chloe's private dress fitting. "Give her the dress. You're being selfish," Bentley demanded coldly. He forced Chloe to strip off her custom-made Met Gala gown to please Blair. He even secretly laced Chloe's daily tea with pills to ensure she never got pregnant. For three years, Chloe had built her life around him, only to realize her entire marriage was a cruel joke. How could he hold her tightly in their bed, whisper another woman's name in his sleep, and expect her to just accept it? When Bentley ripped up the divorce papers and threatened to destroy her architectural career, Chloe didn't shed a single tear. She packed up her blueprints, secured a billion-dollar island project with a mysterious tycoon, and walked out the door. This time, the substitute was resigning.”
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Chapter 1

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Chapter 2

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Chapter 3

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Chapter 4

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Chapter 5

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Chapter 6

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Chapter 7

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Chapter 8

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Chapter 9

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Chapter 10

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