My marriage wasn’t perfect, but I thought I knew the man I had built a life with. That illusion shattered the moment I rushed to the hospital after my husband’s accident, only to find another woman there, claiming to be his wife too. I never thought I’d be one of those women; the kind who discovers her entire marriage was a lie in the most ridiculous, soap opera-worthy way possible.
You know the type. The ones you read about online, the ones whose husbands lead secret lives with second families across town. I used to shake my head at their stories, thinking, How do you not know?
How blind do you have to be? But there I was, standing in the hospital lobby, frozen in shock. Because the woman at the reception desk?
The one frantically asking about my husband? She was calling him her husband too. And in that moment, I knew; Brian was about to regret every single lie he ever told.
It started with a phone call. I was at the sink, scrubbing away at a stubborn stain on a wine glass. The house was quiet, except for the low hum of the dishwasher.
Brian had been away on one of his so-called “business trips” all week, and I was preparing for another night of mindless TV and leftover lasagna. Then, my phone rang. Unknown Number.
I almost ignored it. Probably spam. But something, some instinct I couldn’t explain, made me dry my hands and answer.
“Hello?”
A tight, professional voice responded, “Is this Ms. Donna?”
My stomach dropped. “Yes?”
“This is St.
Mary’s Hospital. Your husband, Brian, has been in a serious car accident. You need to come immediately.”
The world around me tilted.
I gripped the counter. “Is he—” My throat closed up. “He’s alive,” the nurse reassured me.
“But in critical condition. Please come quickly.”
My keys. My shoes.
I barely remember grabbing them. My body moved on autopilot as I ran out the door, my mind racing with fear. Brian.
My husband. Lying in a hospital bed, fighting for his life. I didn’t know that the real disaster was waiting for me at the hospital.
The hospital smelled like antiseptic and despair. I practically sprinted to the front desk, my pulse pounding in my ears. “My husband, Brian,” I gasped.
“He was in an accident. Where is he?”
The receptionist, a middle-aged woman with tired eyes, glanced at her screen. “Room 314.
But—”
She stopped mid-sentence, looking over my shoulder. I turned and that’s when I saw her. A woman.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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