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CHAPTER 3: MARRIAGE CRISIS

Author: Berry wine
last update publish date: 2026-06-08 22:10:04

Our marriage contract only had room for two signatures, but this morning, a third coffee cup sat pooling water on my kitchen counter.

It was a tiny, devastating detail that proved I was quickly becoming an intruder in my own home. By the fourth week of Amelia’s residency, the very nature of silence had completely changed its meaning inside the Osborn house.

By the fourth week of Amelia’s residency, the very nature of silence had completely changed its meaning inside the Osborn home. It was no longer a comforting, warm embrace that welcomed Ava back from a long day at work; it had become careful. Measured. Watchful. It was the defensive, suffocating quiet that exists right before a storm breaks over an open field.

Ava Osborn could feel the heavy shift in the smallest, most ordinary things that used to bring her peace. Conversations between her husband and her sister would abruptly pause the exact moment her footsteps echoed into a room, leaving a lingering, awkward stillness in the air. Explanations for entirely simple, routine actions came just a little too quickly from Michael’s lips, as if he were constantly trying to preempt a fight that hadn't even started. Worst of all, Michael’s tone always softened into something fiercely protective, a low and shielding frequency, whenever Amelia’s name was mentioned.

Nothing was openly wrong. There were no shouting matches, no flying dishes, and no slammed doors. That was easily the most dangerous, insidious part of it all. It was a invisible war, fought through micro-expressions and shifted boundaries.

That particular morning, Ava stood in the kitchen entirely alone, staring down at the two ceramic coffee cups she had just poured one for Michael, one for herself. The steam rose lazily in the quiet air. But as she moved to clear a stray napkin off the counter, her eyes caught something else lingering near the dark edge of the marble sink.

There was a third cup sitting there, still damp from being rinsed out. Amelia’s.

Ava’s chest tightened, a familiar knot of anxiety wrapping tightly around her ribs. She didn’t remember pouring that cup, nor had she heard anyone else brewing a fresh pot. She turned around slowly, her gaze sweeping toward the dim hallway, and her heart sank into a cold, hollow space.

There she was. Amelia.

She looked completely calm, leaning her shoulder casually against the white doorframe as if she had lived in this house for years, fully integrated into the property. "Good morning," Amelia said, her identical voice dripping with a thick layer of artificial, performative sweetness.

Ava kept her fingers wrapped firmly around her own mug, using the heat to stop her hands from trembling. "Why is your cup sitting here?"

Amelia smiled, tilting her head to the side like a curious child playing an innocent game. "Michael offered me coffee earlier while you were still asleep, sis. We had a really nice talk."

Ava didn’t respond. She couldn't. The words felt completely trapped in her throat. She was quickly learning a terrifying, visceral truth about her twin sister: Amelia didn’t just enter physical spaces. She rewrote them entirely, changing the history of the room until Ava felt like the guest.

Michael came downstairs a few minutes later, actively adjusting the silver strap of his watch. He walked over to Ava, flashing a quick smile, and kissed her on the cheek out of pure, automated habit. "Morning, honey," he murmured, his eyes already drifting over her shoulder.

Ava watched him closely, tracing every line of his face. His eyes briefly flicked toward Amelia just for a split second, a mere heartbeat but Ava caught the micro-expression. It was a look of shared acknowledgement.

Amelia offered him a warm, deeply sympathetic smile. "You look incredibly tired today, Michael. Are you sleeping well?"

Michael let out a heavy exhale, raising a hand to rub the back of his neck as he leaned against the counter. "Work’s been completely hectic lately. The board is breathing down my neck about the merger."

"I could always help you organize your presentation schedule again," Amelia offered casually, taking a slow step closer into the kitchen triangle. "Like I used to back in college. Remember? I was always good at sorting through your chaotic notes."

Before she could even think, before logic could intervene, the word tore out of Ava’s throat, sharp and unyielding. "No."

The entire room went dead quiet. The hum of the refrigerator felt suddenly deafening. Michael stopped adjusting his watch, looking over at her in utter surprise, a faint flicker of annoyance passing through his features.

Ava quickly forced her rigid muscles to relax, softening her tone in a desperate bid to mask the rising panic in her chest. "I mean.. it's fine, Michael. We can handle our own routines. We don't need the extra help. You're my husband, I can help you if you need it."

Amelia smiled gently, looking entirely unbothered and gracious in the face of the sharp rejection. But her dark eyes told a completely different story. It wasn't anger or embarrassment shining in her gaze; it was a cold sense of progress. She had forced Ava to look reactionary and aggressive in front of Michael.

By the afternoon, the first major crack in the foundation of their marriage widened into a chasm. Michael had spread an important corporate presentation across the entire expanse of the living room coffee table confidential documents, legal case files, and messy handwritten notes. Amelia was sitting right beside him on the carpet, her knees tucked under her skirt, actively helping him sort through the chaotic papers.

Ava walked into the room, her keys clutched in her hand, and froze solid.

Michael looked up quickly, a defensive edge immediately taking over his handsome features, his shoulders tightening. "She’s just helping me organize for the presentation tomorrow, Ava. I was running out of time and drowning in layout adjustments. Don't start."

Ava looked at the scattered papers, then at Amelia's smug, lowered face, and finally at her husband. "I didn’t know we hired a new personal assistant," Ava said, her voice dangerously quiet, trembling with an intense, suppressed hurt.

Amelia let out a soft, airy laugh, shaking her head. "You always make things sound so incredibly serious and dramatic, Ava. I'm just helping out. It's what family does."

Michael sighed heavily, throwing his silver pen down onto the mahogany table with a loud clatter. "Exactly, Ava. She’s just trying to be genuinely helpful. There’s absolutely no issue here except the one you're creating."

That single, dismissive sentence there's no issue here sent a clear, devastating signal running through the room. Ava felt the psychological weight of it instantly, crushing her validation, and she knew Amelia felt it too. But only one of them smiled afterward, a small, private smirk hidden behind a lock of hair.

That evening, the building tension finally spoke out loud behind closed doors.

Michael closed the heavy bedroom door firmly behind him, leaning his broad back against the wood as if blocking an exit. "Can we talk?"

Ava kept her back turned to him, systematically folding a linen shirt into her dresser, focusing entirely on the task to keep from breaking down. "About what, Michael?"

He exhaled heavily, the sound full of exhaustion and frustration. "About Amelia. About how you're treating her."

Ava finally turned around, crossing her arms tightly over her chest like body armor. "I already know exactly what you’re going to say, Michael. Save your breath."

Michael frowned, his eyes narrowing. "Then let me say it anyway." He took a long step forward, the heavy silence stretching uncomfortably between them in the dim bedroom light before he finally broke it. "You’re being completely, utterly unfair to her, Ava."

The words weren’t shouted or screamed, but they cut clean through her like a scalpel, draining the warmth from her body.

Ava replicated the word, stunned, her voice breathless. "Unfair? I am being unfair in my own house?"

Michael rubbed his forehead, looking thoroughly spent. "She’s your identical twin sister, Ava. She’s actively trying to mend a broken past. She isn’t doing a single thing wrong. She’s been nothing but sweet and helpful since she arrived."

Ava’s voice dropped into a fierce, dangerous whisper. "She’s in our house every single day, Michael. In our kitchen, in your study, in our private life."

"Because she’s completely alone in the world!" Michael replied, his own voice rising slightly, defensive and sharp. "She doesn’t have a support system. She doesn’t have anyone. Not like we do. Where is your compassion?"

Ava stared at him, a cold, numbing sensation washing over her skin. Hearing those fiercely defensive words come out of her husband's mouth about another woman even her sister was entirely new. It felt like a fundamental betrayal of the team they had built. "You’re defending her," she said quietly, the realization cementing in her mind.

Michael paused, correcting his posture quickly, his expression hardening. "I’m not defending her. I’m being reasonable. I'm looking at the facts."

Ava let out a short, bitter laugh that held no humor, only pain. "Oh, so that’s what it is now? Reasonable? And what am I, Michael? Crazy? Paranoid?"

He took another step closer, his expression softening slightly as he tried to reach forward for her trembling hand. "Ava, please. This is turning into something massive that it really doesn’t need to be. We are a team."

She shook her head violently, backing away from his touch until her spine hit the dresser. "No. It already is something, Michael. You just refuse to open your eyes and see it."

For the first time since the day they had met, Michael didn’t have a quick, comforting response to soothe her fears. He just looked at her with a heavy, detached disappointment. And that sudden, deep silence hurt far more than any screaming argument ever could.

The next morning, Ava woke up much earlier than usual, her chest tight with a lingering anxiety. The space beside her in the king-sized bed was already cold and empty. Michael was already up and gone from the room.

She got out of bed quietly, wrapping a robe around her shoulders, and slipped through the darkened, silent hallway. But as she approached the bright threshold of the kitchen, she heard quiet voices.

Amelia was standing by the counter, but she wasn’t alone. Michael was there right next to her, his posture completely relaxed, laughing softly at something her twin had just murmured in a low voice.

Ava stood completely frozen in the dark shadows of the hallway, watching them frame by frame. She didn’t interrupt. She didn't make a sound. She just observed the easy, natural intimacy radiating between them.

Amelia was the first one to notice her standing there in the gloom. A slow, terrifying smile spread across her identical face. But this time, it wasn't a sweet, sisterly expression meant to fool an audience. It was subtle. Blatant. Triumphant."

Good morning," Amelia said gently, her voice perfectly cutting the silence and drawing Michael's immediate attention away from the counter.

Michael turned around quickly, his smile faltering slightly as he caught sight of his wife. "Oh, Ava you’re up early.

Ava looked at the two of them standing side by side, their silhouettes matching perfectly. Amelia had slowly, calculatedly built a wedge of comfort between them, and Michael was showing a level of emotional ease around her that he didn't even realize he had developed over the weeks. She thought of the widening, icy silence forming between what used to be only two people.

Ava forced a calm, steady breath into her aching lungs, refusing to let them see her break. Then, she turned around and walked away back down the hall without saying a single word.

Behind her, she heard Michael call out her name, his voice tinged with a brief note of panic, but she didn’t stop walking. For the very first time in her life, she wasn’t sure if she was overreacting to ghosts, or if she was seeing the terrifying truth entirely too late to save her own marriage.

Late that night, long after the house had gone completely dark and Michael had drifted off to sleep, Amelia sent out another communication. But this time, it wasn't delivered to Ava's phone.

It popped up silently on Michael's glowing screen on the nightstand. A simple, private text from her new number:“

You don’t have to feel guilty for understanding me, Michael. Goodnight.”

Michael stared down at the glowing words in the dark room, his thumb hovering over the screen much longer than he ever should have, before finally locking the phone.

And somewhere else in the dark house, Ava stood behind a heavy, clo

sed door, completely unaware that her marriage wasn’t breaking loudly with a crash. It was cracking quietly, line by line.

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