Read The Unwanted Wife and Her Secret Twins novel by Artemis Z.Y. Updated 2025 -26 - The Unwanted Wife and Her Secret Twins Chapter 452
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- The Unwanted Wife and Her Secret Twins Chapter 452
The Unwanted Wife and Her Secret Twins Chapter 452
The words came through the phone and landed somewhere inside my skull but
didn’t connect to anything.
“Ms. Porter was found unconscious in her cell during a routine check at approximately 4:17 a.m.”
My eyes were open but I wasn’t seeing the room anymore. I was seeing the back of my own eyelids from the inside, that strange red darkness you get when you close your eyes against bright light. The room was dim. And something was happening to my vision, tunneling inward, the edges going soft and dark.
I blinked. Once. Twice. The room came back.
The gray blanket was still half-covering me, one corner twisted around my left leg. My coffee mug was on the table where I’d left it—I could see a film forming on the surface of the water, that oily shimmer that happens when water sits too long. Kyle was still asleep at the other end of the couch,.
Everything was exactly as it had been thirty seconds ago.
“Medical personnel arrived immediately but were unable to revive her. Time of death was determined to be 4:51 a.m.”
I looked at my phone screen. The call timer was still running. 7:03 a.m. now.
Two hours and twelve minutes ago.
I opened my mouth. My jaw felt strange, like the hinges had been replaced with something that didn’t quite fit.
“What-”
I swallowed. It hurt. When had my throat started hurting?
“What happened?”
Papers shuffled on the other end. That specific sound of institutional documents being handled the soft shush of paper on paper, the slight crackle of a page being turned. I could picture it so clearly. A manila folder. Forms. Observation logs. The bureaucratic machinery of death grinding forward.
The warden’s voice remained steady. Practiced. The tone of someone who’d delivered versions of this news before, who’d learned exactly how much emotion to remove, how to make tragedy sound like paperwork.
“I cannot disclose details while the investigation is ongoing. However, preliminary findings indicate self-inflicted injuries consistent with—”
He stopped.
The silence on the line stretched.
“Consistent with what?” I asked.
My voice sounded normal. Perfectly normal. Like I was asking about the weather.
Like my heart wasn’t trying to punch its way out of my chest.
“Suicide, ma’am.”
The word dropped into the space between us.
Suicide.
Taylor killed herself. Taylor is dead.
I waited for something to rise up inside me. Some feeling. Some reaction.
My body was waiting too. I could feel it-muscles tensed, breath held, every nerve ending on alert, waiting for the signal to cry or scream or laugh or something. Nothing came.
“Was there a note?”
The question came out automatic. That’s what people ask, isn’t it? When someone dies that way? Was there a note. Did they leave an explanation. Did they tell us why.
“No note was recovered from the cell or Ms. Porter’s personal effects.”
“Nothing?” I heard myself ask. “She didn’t say anything to anyone?”
“According to staff reports, Ms. Porter maintained her regular schedule in the seventy-two hours preceding. She attended meals, participated in recreation time, had no disciplinary incidents. There were no indicators of—”
“That doesn’t make sense.”
Kyle shifted on the other end of the couch but didn’t wake. His leg twitched. His hand moved slightly. His breathing changed rhythm for a moment three quick breaths then settled back into that labored pattern.
How many times does a person die? Once in their own body. Once in every person who learns about it. Dying over and over as the news spreads, rippling outward. “I’m sorry, ma’am?”
The warden’s voice pulled me back.
“Taylor,” I said.
Her name felt strange in my mouth. “She wasn’t someone who did things quietly,” I heard myself explaining. “She wasn’t someone who just… decided.”
“Ma’am, I understand this is difficult, but ”
“No.”
I sat up straighter. The blanket slid off my legs, pooling on the floor. I pressed my palm against my forehead. My skin felt strange. Too warm. Or too cold. I couldn’t tell which.
“You don’t understand. Taylor was-”
How did you explain it?
How did you tell a stranger that the woman who just died in his facility was someone who needed an audience? Who performed her own life like it was a stage play? Who couldn’t even self-destruct without making sure everyone was watching?
Who would push me down marble stairs in front of my husband to ensure maximum damage-physical and emotional-witnessed and irreversible.
That Taylor.
“She was dramatic,” I said finally.
“She needed people to know. To see. She would have left something. A letter. A message. She would have made sure I-”
I stopped.
“Ma’am?” The warden’s voice had taken on a different quality. Concerned now. Like maybe I was going into shock and he was trained to recognize the signs. “Are you still there?”
“Yes. I’m here.”