From the outside, our marriage looked perfect. People envied us.

Our wedding was small but elegant—hosted at a private estate in the hills of Napa Valley, with lanterns swaying in the breeze and soft jazz playing beneath a sky full of stars. He was gentle, polished, and successful—Ethan was the kind of man every woman dreamed of. And me? I was the quiet girl from Fresno who thought she had struck gold.

But behind the smiles, something was… off.

We had been married for four months—and not once had he touched me. Not even on our wedding night.

At first, I thought maybe he was just taking it slow. “I want to build emotional intimacy before anything physical,” he had whispered to me, brushing the back of his hand against my cheek like something out of a romance movie. I blushed—naive, hopeful.

But weeks turned into months.
And his distance never changed.

No kisses. No spark. No intimacy. Just short conversations, perfectly plated dinners, and cold, untouched sheets.

I began to wonder: Was it me?

Ethan traveled constantly—“executive meetings” in Chicago, “strategy retreats” in Seattle. When he was home, he was polite but distant. Always keeping to himself.

And he always locked the third-floor guest room.

“The floorboards are unstable,” he said once, smiling tightly. “It’s just storage. Dangerous and dusty. You don’t need to go in there.”

But silence breeds curiosity.

And curiosity screams when you’re lonely.

One stormy Saturday, while Ethan was away on another mysterious trip, I found myself spiraling. The wind howled outside our house in San Mateo, and inside, my mind was louder. I was tired of the quiet, of the aching emptiness I’d grown used to. I needed something—a distraction, a sign, a truth.

So, I cleaned the house top to bottom.

And eventually… I stood before the locked room.

My heart pounded.

I remembered once—months ago—he had left the drawer in his study open for just a moment. That’s when I saw it. The key.

I still remembered.

With trembling fingers, I tiptoed upstairs, slid open his drawer, and retrieved the tiny, brass key.

May be an image of 2 people

Click.

The lock turned with a reluctant groan.
Dust puffed into the air as I pushed the door open.

The room was cold. Windowless. Silent.

Boxes. Drapes. A tall antique wardrobe pressed tightly against the back wall.

But something was… wrong.

There was no dust on the wardrobe.

I stepped forward, touched it.

It moved.

There was a draft behind it.

A second door.

My hands were shaking violently now, but I had come too far.

I opened it.

And what I saw nearly stopped my heart.

A room.
A bed.
A woman.

She was alive.

Lying still. Pale. Hooked to an IV bag hanging from a metal stand. A fan buzzed overhead. A monitor blinked softly. The air smelled like a hospital—but wrong. Stale. Secret.

I couldn’t move.

There were clothes. A purse. A journal. A hairbrush on a dresser.

A photo on the wall.

Her and Ethan.

Smiling. Holding hands at what looked like a beach in Santa Cruz.

I blinked.

She looked… like me.

Same build. Same complexion. Same quiet, delicate features.

My knees buckled.

And then—her eyes fluttered open.

She stared at me with haunting clarity.

Then whispered:

“Did he marry you too?”

Chapter 2: The Other Wife’s Whisper

I stumbled backward, my hand flying to my chest. My heart was slamming against my ribs like it wanted out.

“Did he marry you too?” she asked again, her voice a cracked whisper, like it hadn’t been used in days… maybe weeks.

I couldn’t answer.

I was frozen.

My throat dried. My mind raced.

I looked at her—closer this time.

Her hair was longer than mine, but the same dark brown shade. Her face, though thinner, carried the same shape, same freckles, same mole near the left brow. She was wearing a hospital gown—clean but faded. Her eyes blinked slowly, watching me with a mix of confusion and… fear.

“Who are you?” I finally breathed.

She didn’t respond right away. Her gaze shifted toward the door. Her lips trembled. Then:

“I’m… Natalie.”

Natalie.

I swallowed hard. “My name is Harper. Harper Woods. Ethan’s wife.”

She blinked. Once. Then twice.

Her chin quivered.

And then, like a slow, cracking dam, tears spilled from the corners of her eyes.

“Oh God,” she whispered. “He did it again.”


I wanted to run.
I wanted to scream.

But something stronger than fear rooted me to the spot. The need for answers.

“What do you mean, again?” I asked, my voice shaking.

She turned her head to the side, staring blankly at the wall.

Then came the words that would haunt me for the rest of my life.

“He married me three years ago. Right after his mother died.”

I staggered back. “That’s not possible. He told me he’d never been married before.”

She smiled bitterly. “He said the same to me.”


I grabbed the back of a chair to steady myself.

Natalie coughed—weakly—and winced in pain. I stepped closer on instinct, torn between fear and compassion. She looked so fragile. So broken. But alive. And hidden like a secret in my own home.

“I… I don’t understand,” I whispered. “Why are you here? What is this room? Why did he hide you?”

She turned toward me again, slower this time. Her voice was thin but steady.

“Ethan doesn’t love. He… collects.”

The silence in the room felt like ice on my skin.

“Collects?” I repeated, horrified.

“He finds women who are quiet. Soft. Lonely. He gives them the fairy tale. And then—when the world stops looking—he cages them.”

Tears welled in my eyes. My knees buckled. I sat on the edge of a stool beside her bed.

“How long have you been here?” I asked.

She took a shaky breath.

“I don’t know. At least two years. At first, it was just… a place for me to rest, he said. A temporary recovery after I had a breakdown. He said I was ‘too fragile for the world.’ He brought food. Books. Flowers. But then one day… he stopped talking. He just watched.”

Her voice broke.

“And then… the door stopped opening.”


My whole body shook with disbelief. Anger. Fear.

This wasn’t just betrayal. It was something darker. Something twisted.

“I have to get you out of here,” I said, standing up.

Natalie grabbed my wrist, her eyes wide with panic. “No. You don’t understand. If he finds out you were here—”

“I don’t care,” I snapped. “I’m calling the police. He can’t keep doing this.”

“You think the police will believe you?” she said bitterly. “He’s rich. Respected. And you… you’re just wife number two, aren’t you? You have no proof.”

She wasn’t wrong.

There was no marriage certificate in the open. No visitors. No neighbors who’d ever seen us interact normally. He kept me hidden too—just in nicer ways. Trips. Gifts. A penthouse with no guests.

I suddenly felt sick.

I backed out of the room, closing the hidden door behind me, then the wardrobe.

But just as I turned to leave—

I heard the sound of keys downstairs.


To be continued…