Chapter 3
I had never been afraid of Cliff—until that moment. The way he looked at me sent a chill down my spine. It was the first time his eyes made me feel truly scared.
The atmosphere in the ward dropped to freezing point, heavy and still, like the calm before a violent storm.
Just as Cliff was about to speak, Ginger cut in, her voice smug and calculated.
“Vivian, Cliff and I are together now. You’re not uncomfortable with that, are you?”
She touched her belly gently, a triumphant gleam in her eyes.
“I’m pregnant with Cliff’s child, and we’re getting married soon. It’s such an important occasion—how could we not have you there? I’ll ask Cliff to come and pick you up himself.”
I hadn’t known about Cliff’s affair until after I was hospitalized. It was only in the mental hospital that I was finally able to contact my family. The phone, when it was handed to me, delivered more than verbal abuse—it brought headlines and gossip. Paparazzi photos of Cliff kissing a mysterious woman had flooded the internet.
He had once forced me to seduce my own cousin. I did it. And then he posted the photos online. I became the subject of public scorn, a target of cyberbullying. I was called every vile name imaginable. I said nothing. I had to grit my teeth and endure it.
But when I saw those pictures—Cliff tenderly kissing that woman—I shattered.
My hands trembled uncontrollably. My mind collapsed. I couldn’t breathe. My fingers, clutching my thighs, clawed so tightly that blood began to seep from the scratches.
I tried to come to terms with it. I tried to be rational. But after I was discharged, I learned the truth. The mysterious woman in those photos—was my cousin, Ginger.
And now, she stood in front of me, basking in Cliff’s affection, flaunting her victory like a crown.
I stared blankly, eyes dulled with disbelief, trying to mute her voice. But her next words were like a dull knife, slowly carving into my heart.
“Even if you get out, don’t think Cliff will ever love you again. I’m the mistress of this family now,” she said with venomous delight.
“Cliff and I grew up together. If it weren’t for you, we would’ve been together long ago. Did you really think he married you out of love? Seven years of marriage, and you still had to use IVF to get pregnant…”
She rubbed her belly, smirking.
My eyes locked onto Cliff. “Is this true?” I asked, voice cold, almost detached.
He didn’t answer. Instead, he gently helped Ginger to sit down, his gaze tender as he looked at her—completely ignoring me.
No words were needed. I understood. The seven years I spent with him were nothing but a delusion. A one-sided love.
I had endured two years of grueling IVF treatments. I gave birth to Lindsey through sheer perseverance. Yet Ginger became pregnant so easily. My so-called love was just a long, drawn-out mistake.
My heart tore apart, not for Cliff—but for the youth I wasted chasing a lie.
Then Ginger dealt the final blow.
“Oh, and your daughter—Lindsey. No, I mean my daughter now.” She smiled like she had won a prize.
My blood boiled. “That’s my daughter!” I snapped, my voice sharp and raw.
But she remained calm, almost too calm. She described with theatrical sweetness how she tucked Lindsey in, played with her, and “gently corrected” the little girl’s understanding of who her real mother was.
“She kept asking about you,” Ginger said, “but Cliff stayed silent. And then I came into her life. I told her I’d be her new mom. I told her everything you did.”
Children can’t discern truth from manipulation. Lindsey believed her. Ginger’s lies turned my daughter against me.
I should have been the one holding her at night, braiding her hair, hearing her laughter. Instead, Ginger took my place.
I snapped.
My body shook uncontrollably. I laughed, wild and broken, as tears streamed down my cheeks. I lunged at Ginger, screaming, demanding to know what poison she fed my child.
Startled, Cliff stepped in and shoved me away with such force that I collapsed. His glare was sharp, cold—cutting through me like a blade.
Ginger, now emboldened, clung to him and laughed, pointing at me.
“See, husband? She really is insane.”
I had only ever pretended to be crazy. But now, with my daughter stolen and my suffering mocked, I was spiraling.
My back hit the corner of the bed hard, and pain rippled through my body. I curled on the floor, writhing silently.
Ginger, draped in Cliff’s arms, said sweetly, “Husband, look how frail Vivian looks. Shouldn’t you be taking better care of her?”
“What are you saying, wife?” he replied. “You come first now, always.”
She touched her face dramatically and sighed.
“I’m not as radiant as Vivian once was. She’s been quite… busy in the hospital. I hear she had plenty of men to keep her company. So full of life. Unlike me—who only has you.”
Her grip on Cliff tightened. She was twisting the knife.
She knew about the mental hospital. She said it to provoke me—and it worked. I saw it in Cliff’s face: disgust, revulsion. He looked at me like I was nothing more than filth.
She came closer and grabbed my hand. I struggled, but her grip was iron.
“If you’ve been with other men, maybe you didn’t love Cliff that much after all,” she whispered.
“Touch our child. Maybe you’ll get some good luck.”
She forced my hand to her belly. I yanked it away, heart pounding.
Just then, Ian returned, and Ginger lost interest. She turned cold.
“Ian, from now on, don’t bring Lindsey to the hospital. I’m afraid she’ll be tainted by… misfortune.”
Her words left deeper wounds than any physical blow.
That day marked the 28th day of the plan. They humiliated me beyond comprehension—and my thirst for revenge became a fire that would never be extinguished.
Ian looked at me, sorrowful. He promised to bring Lindsey to see me when possible. I clung to his hand, thanking him with all my heart.
I also asked him to look into Cliff’s company. It had grown too fast—unnaturally fast. There had to be a secret.
Just then, a phone rang outside the ward. Ginger glanced at the screen, then silenced it, annoyed.
“Him again?” Cliff asked, taking her phone.
“Yes. He keeps pestering me. I already filed for divorce, but he won’t let go.”
The call was from my cousin—Austin.
After I was institutionalized, Ginger divorced Austin and moved in with Cliff. Now, she found Austin’s concern for me a nuisance.
“Don’t worry, wife. I’ll handle it,” Cliff said darkly. They whispered together, perfectly in sync.
I remembered how Cliff had used my daughter to threaten me. How he forced me to seduce Austin. I went along with it, even staged it with my cousin’s help. I didn’t expect Cliff to photograph us secretly and leak it online. He wanted to destroy Austin’s reputation.
I always blamed myself. If it weren’t for me, Austin wouldn’t have been dragged down.
After I recovered, I vowed to visit him—to apologize, and maybe learn the truth behind Cliff’s schemes.
But the “accident” came earlier than expected.
Two days after my discharge, I went to find Austin.
I called him—his number was no longer in service. He must have changed it. As a CEO of a top Cleveland textile firm, that wasn’t unusual.
But when I arrived at his estate, my heart dropped. The garden was overgrown, the air lifeless. The gate bore a government notice:
“Sealed by law.”
I pushed it open. Inside, I heard someone crying.
“Mr. Qin! Mr. Qin!” It was April, the family’s housekeeper.
I stumbled forward—then froze.
Bloodstains. Torn fabric. A body swaying gently.
Austin had hanged himself.
April told me everything. Over the past six months, Austin’s wealth had crumbled. The mansion had long been mortgaged. Harassed by debtors, he finally broke.
I didn’t want to believe it. This was the man who once gifted Lindsey something worth seven figures for her birthday.
I asked April for the mortgage contract. I read every line, my hands trembling.
And then, at the very end—I saw the signatures.
I stared. I blinked. I read it again.
It was Cliff.
