My Husband Wanted My Sister to Pretend to Be His Wife, Until I Walked Into His Reunion With His Brother.-luna

I stared at Jackson’s name until my phone dimmed in my hand.

Then I tapped the screen awake again.

Jackson was not my friend exactly. He was Damen’s older brother, the kind of man who showed up early and left quietly.

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He had fixed our garbage disposal once without making a speech about it.

He remembered birthdays. He brought his own folding chair to family barbecues. He noticed when people went silent.

Damen hated that about him.

Not openly, of course. Damen never admitted jealousy. He called Jackson boring, stiff, judgmental.

But whenever Jackson entered a room, Damen started performing.

That night, parked outside Nikki’s apartment complex, I understood why.

Jackson knew the difference between confidence and noise.

I typed three different messages and deleted them all.

Finally, I sent one line.

Damen told people he married Nikki. I need to know what you know.

For eleven minutes, nothing happened.

Then my phone rang.

I almost let it go to voicemail because my hands were shaking too badly.

When I answered, Jackson didn’t say hello.

He said, “Where are you?”

I looked through my windshield at the cracked sidewalk, the yellow porch light outside Nikki’s building, the car I had helped her keep insured.

“Outside my sister’s apartment.”

A pause.

“Are you safe?”

That question broke something smaller in me.

Not because it was dramatic.

Because it was the first practical question anyone had asked me all night.

I said yes.

He exhaled slowly. “Come to my house. Don’t go back there tonight.”

I almost said no out of habit.

Good wives go home. Good sisters forgive. Good daughters keep family business private.

But I was tired of being good for people who were cruel in return.

So I drove.

Jackson lived twenty minutes away in a small ranch house with a clean driveway and a porch light already on.

When I pulled in, he was standing outside in jeans and a gray sweatshirt.

No questions shouted across the yard. No performance.

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