The Widow's Gambit
Perfect Timing
I knew my husband, Josh Perkins, had faked his death and taken on his younger twin brother's identity—but I never said a word. Instead, I went straight to the commander of the military district and filed an official report of my husband's death, requesting his name be permanently removed from the service rolls.
In my last life, my brother-in-law died in an accident. Josh gave up his rank as regimental commander, abandoned his own name, and stepped into his brother's shoes—all to spare his fragile sister-in-law from becoming a widow.
Back then, I recognized him immediately. I confronted him and demanded to know why he was pretending to be a dead man. But Josh just looked through me, cold as a winter morning.
"Riley, I know you're grieving Josh. But I'm not him. Don't mistake me for my brother."
He shielded that delicate sister-in-law of his behind him, then shoved me into the icy river and warned me not to harbor delusions.
Later, our five-year-old daughter cried, asking why her daddy didn't want her anymore. For that, she was dragged to the cowshed for "reflection"—left there, starving, for three days and nights.
My mother-in-law called me a curse, a jinx who'd killed her son, and threw my daughter and me out with nothing but the clothes on our backs.
Josh made sure everyone knew I'd "gone mad"—that I was lusting after my brother-in-law before my husband was even cold in the ground. The whole town turned their backs on us.
That last winter, I wandered the streets with my girl, dazed and numb, until the cold finally took us both.
But when I opened my eyes again, I was back. Back to the very day Josh buried his old life and stole his brother's.