Amelia POV
I thought I had it all.
The perfect apartment.
The perfect husband.
The perfect life.
Love is supposed to make you happy, right? Turns out love also turns you into a detective. A very tired detective. One with no badge, no authority, and no evidence—just vibes, gut feelings, and anxiety that refuses to mind its business. You start noticing things. Tiny things. Things you used to ignore.
You watch.
You listen.
You hide behind doors.
You tell yourself you’re crazy.
I wasn’t crazy.
I wasn’t wrong.
Ethan was charming. Too charming. The kind of charming that should come with a warning label. The kind of smile that could melt ice and common sense at the same time. The kind of laugh that made you feel chosen, special—like you were the only woman in the world.
I loved that smile.
I loved that laugh.
I loved him.
My friends warned me.
You’re too young.
You’re moving too fast.
You’re too naïve.
I didn’t listen. I never listen when I’m in love. I had Ethan. I had everything.
Or so I thought.
Thursday morning smelled like coffee and cinnamon rolls. The expensive kind we bought because Ethan said, “Babe, we deserve nice things.” The kind of morning i********: couples post with matching mugs and captions like #Blessed and #CoupleGoals.
Ethan stood in the kitchen, humming off-key, flipping pancakes like a man who had never ruined a woman’s life before. Grey sweatpants. Bare feet. Domestic bliss.
I paused in the doorway, pretending to admire his “skills.”
He looked normal.
Too normal.
Perfectly, annoyingly normal.
That should have been my first warning.
I reached for my work bag when I heard it.
His voice.
Low.
Warm.
Familiar.
Wrong.
“Baby.”
My stomach dropped straight to my toes like it was running away from the truth. I froze. My feet refused to cooperate. My pulse turned into a drumline. My brain screamed run, but my body said, Nah, let’s suffer.
I crept closer, heart banging like it wanted out of my chest, just enough to see him leaning against the counter, phone pressed tight to his ear.
Then I heard the name.
“Clara.”
My sister.
Ah.
That was it. That was how my life ended. Quietly. In my kitchen. On a Thursday morning. With pancakes on the stove.
I pressed myself against the wall, fighting the urge to scream, cry, or throw a frying pan. What do normal people do when they discover their husband is cheating with their sister? Is there a manual? A support group? A hotline?
Because I needed all three.
“I love you,” he murmured. “I can’t wait to see you tonight.”
My knees almost gave out. The pancakes burned. The cinnamon rolls were probably charcoal by now. My perfect morning didn’t just break—it exploded. Like someone threw a grenade into my marriage and walked away whistling.
I stepped into the doorway.
“Ethan.”
He turned.
Smile in place.
Calm.
Polished.
The same smile that once made my heart race.
Not anymore.
“Morning, babe,” he said easily. “I was just—”
“No.” My voice came out steady, even though my insides were in free fall. “Who are you talking to?”
His eyes flickered. Not guilt. Not shame.
Annoyance.
“It’s just Clara,” he said smoothly. “We were talking.”
I laughed. Short. Sharp. Bitter. The kind of laugh you make when reality slaps you twice.
“Clara? My sister?” I said. “That’s who you call baby now?”
His smirk widened, like I was the problem here. “Stop being dramatic. You’re embarrassing yourself.”
Embarrassing.
My hands shook. “You’re whispering love to my sister.”
“You’re overreacting,” he said calmly. Coldly. Like we were arguing about burnt pancakes, not betrayal.
I stared at him. “That’s cheating, Ethan.”
He leaned back against the counter, arms crossed, completely relaxed. “It’s complicated.”
“Complicated?” My voice cracked. “You’re sleeping with my sister.”
“I love you,” he said quickly. “I love both of you.”
I staggered back. My lungs burned. “I… I need air. I can’t breathe—”
He stepped closer.
I flinched.
“Don’t touch me.”
“Amelia, wait.”
“No.” My voice broke. “Do not touch me.”
Then he said it.
The words that didn’t just break my heart—they crushed it.
“We can be polygamous,” he said casually, like he was suggesting a new restaurant. “A lot of my family is. You could be the first wife.”
I blinked.
Stared.
Blinked again.
My brain short-circuited.
In the twenty-first century, my husband had just suggested I share him with my sister.
What the hell?
I wanted to scream. I wanted to laugh. I wanted to call the police and ask if emotional homicide was a thing.
“Are you insane?” I whispered.
His expression hardened. Sharp. Dangerous. “Do not call me insane. You’re not even that special. Clara is willing. Why can’t you be?”
Tears burned my eyes. “Choose,” I begged. “Choose me or her. Just choose me. I can forgive everything—everything—if you choose me.”
He laughed.
Cruel.
Low.
Ugly.
The kind of laugh that stays with you forever.
“Why would I choose you?” he said. “You’re boring. You’re weak. Clara is experienced. She satisfies me. You?” He looked me up and down. “You’re a little girl pretending to be a woman.”
Something cracked inside my chest.
“I… I thought you loved me.”
“Love you?” He scoffed. “I tolerate you. You’re convenient. A placeholder until I want something better.”
My chest felt hollow. My lungs refused to work.
“You think this is love?” he continued. “This is life. And life isn’t fair, Amelia.”
“I’m sorry,” I whispered without thinking. “I didn’t mean—”
“Sorry?” he snapped. “Stop apologizing. You’re pathetic. Always apologizing for existing. Grow up. Face reality. You are nothing without me. And if you can’t share me, you’re useless.”
I stumbled back. My heels clicked against the floor like tiny gavel strikes, sentencing me to heartbreak.
I didn’t cry.
Not yet.
Crying would mean accepting it.
And I wasn’t ready to accept anything.
Thinking would have killed me.
So I drove.
I drove like the road owed me answers. Like if I stopped, I would scream until my lungs tore apart. Red lights blurred past. Horns screamed. A woman laughed from the car beside me like the world hadn’t just ended.
I hated her for that.
My chest felt tight, like someone had wrapped a rope around my ribs and kept pulling.
Ethan’s voice echoed in my head.
Baby.
I love you.
Clara.
Clara.
My sister.
The girl I grew up with. My blood. The one my parents always seemed to notice first. Clara with the better grades. Clara with the louder laughter. Clara who always got first pick—clothes, rooms, attention, love.
Mom praised her first.
Dad smiled at her first.
And still—I loved her. I defended her. I trusted her. Even when she borrowed my dresses and ruined them. Even when she took my things like they were hers.
She was family.
She was blood.
She was …..my sister.
And none of that mattered now.
None of it mattered at all.