First Wife at My Door / Chapter 1: The Party That Shattered Everything
First Wife at My Door

First Wife at My Door

Author: Robert Lee


Chapter 1: The Party That Shattered Everything

Next →

Champagne fizzed in my glass as the Georgetown elite toasted my sixtieth—just before my world detonated at the front door. The air shimmered with peony perfume, and somewhere, the hum of a Sub-Zero fridge kept the caterer’s lemon bars perfectly chilled. This was the Roosevelt name in full display, the legacy my family had built—every marble column, every Secret Service earpiece, a testament to power.

I am the younger sister of the late president, biological aunt to the current one, and the only woman in our family to ever hold a Senate seat. The Roosevelt name means something in every corner of Washington, from the Capitol’s marble halls to K Street’s boardrooms.

On my sixtieth birthday, as caviar and gossip flowed, my husband's supposedly deceased first wife walked through my front door with her teenage daughter in tow. Security had somehow let them through—something I’d be tearing apart later.

"I know I’m nobody here, Senator Hastings. I just want Mia to know her father. That’s all I’m asking. I’ll disappear after, if you want. Just… let them meet." Her voice dripped with that fake humility you hear at church bake sales—sweet, but you know it’s poison underneath.

Only then did the truth hit me: the man I’d trusted for twenty years—the man who’d whispered, "I’ll always be honest with you, El," in the dark—had kept her hidden for forty years. My knees nearly buckled. Twenty years of trust, shattered like crystal. Forty goddamn years of lies.

Robert Hastings and I had married through a family arrangement, blessed by the late president. He was pure Harvard Law—handsome, distinguished, that Kennedy charm that could make you forget your own name. Even as a widower, he turned heads. At thirty-eight, I thought I knew what I was signing up for.

When I met him, his first wife had been dead for two years—supposedly slipped off a cliff near Old Rag in Virginia. The Park Service called off the search after three weeks. Her body was never found.

He mourned her the way a good man should—black armband, grief counseling at St. John’s, the whole show. It made him seem sensitive, like he really understood loss. Women in Washington eat that up.

After our wedding, I moved from my Georgetown estate to the Hastings home in Chevy Chase. I played the dutiful daughter-in-law, handled his parents’ quirks—his mother’s DAR meetings, his father’s endless golf at Congressional. We hosted dinners, went to Kennedy Center galas, summered in Martha’s Vineyard. We were D.C.’s model couple. The Post profiled us: "Love in the Time of Politics."

I never thought, on my sixtieth birthday, with half of D.C. watching, he’d pull the rug out from under me. The caterers were still passing canapés when my world imploded.

The reception hall went silent; you could hear the grandfather clock ticking in the foyer, the distant traffic on Wisconsin Avenue. The air smelled of peonies and imported caviar, the marble floor cold beneath my heels.

Linda Sullivan—she called herself that—stood there, older than me but with a dancer’s frame, black hair too dark to be real, skin pale as porcelain from a lifetime of sunscreen and dermatologists. Not a wrinkle except at the corners of her eyes—Botox, no doubt. Her Chanel dress was last season but still worth five figures.

Her daughter, Mia, looked nothing like her. Seventeen, maybe eighteen, delicate and beautiful as a hothouse orchid. She had Robert’s jawline, Robert’s hazel eyes—the kind that could charm or cut. Private school posture, manicured nails, that effortless confidence of the truly privileged.

I let my Senate hearing face settle in—stone cold, unmoving. Let them squirm. Let everyone see who really held the power.

Someone had already run to fetch Robert—probably that little weasel Thompson from his office. Robert swept in, Italian shoes clicking on marble, and when he saw Linda and Mia, his face went pale. "Eleanor, please forgive me. I never meant to deceive you." His voice cracked, his hands twisting his wedding ring.

Turns out, Linda hadn’t died on that cliff. She’d been rescued by a church hiking group from Harrisonburg, spent three years recovering in hospitals and rehab—paid for how, I wondered. By the time she found Robert again, he was married to me. Senator’s sister. Career kingmaker.

She had nobody but Robert. He couldn’t abandon her, but he couldn’t lose what I brought to the table either. So he bought her a house outside the city—Loudoun County, probably. Discreet, but close enough for visits.

I sneered, letting my voice cut like a filibuster: "And how exactly did you 'keep' her, Robert? Like a sister, or like a mistress?"

His face went crimson, the color rising all the way to his thinning hairline.

Linda tried to sound meek, eyes downcast: "Mrs. Hastings, please, I know my place. I clung to Robert, begged him for a child to keep me company. My body was broken after the fall. Years of treatments… I only had Mia when I was over forty. If you want to blame someone, blame me. Robert’s always loved you."

Robert looked at her with a tenderness I thought was reserved for me. Then—God help me—he actually dropped to his knees on my grandmother’s Persian rug. "Linda fell looking for rare herbs for my mother’s illness—ginseng or something. This is my debt to her. I wronged Linda first, then you, Eleanor. Whatever you decide, I’ll accept."

He was sixty-four and hadn’t knelt for anyone in years, not even in church. His bad knee creaked, and several young staffers averted their eyes. I caught Congressman Bradley’s daughter snapping a photo—this would be all over social media by midnight.

The society women—Junior League, embassy wives, K Street fixers—started making excuses. "So sorry, Eleanor, we really must—" "The babysitter, you understand—" I cut them off: "No need to rush off. Stay. Hear what else Mr. Hastings has to say."

Their eyes sparkled. This was better than any reality show. Tomorrow’s brunch at the Cosmos Club would be electric.

Robert’s jaw was set, courtroom-ready, but now he just looked lost. The great litigator, finally speechless.

The room was packed with young staffers, law firm juniors, my son’s prep school friends from Yale and Princeton. Even Robert, thick-skinned as he was, squirmed. Good. Let him stew in it.

I turned to Linda, my voice like ice: "How did you get in?"

Next →

You may also like

The Doormat Wife Inherits Everything
The Doormat Wife Inherits Everything
4.8
Everyone at Maple Heights Country Club called me a doormat—an orphan, barren, forced to kneel for my cheating husband and his mistress. But when Derek Lawson died the night I almost lost my life, the family who scorned me suddenly needed my signature for their fortune. Now, the weakest wife holds all the power—and this time, I’m not giving it back.
His Wife Was Meant for Another
His Wife Was Meant for Another
4.7
I married Chicago’s most coveted bachelor in my sister’s place, only to become a ghost in my own marriage—unwanted, untouched, and tormented by suspicion. Every night, Jake shuts me out, his body close but his heart locked away, leaving me desperate and humiliated. But when I discover his secret online confessions—and the twisted truth behind his distance—I realize our cold war is just the beginning of a forbidden, addictive game neither of us knows how to win.
My Neighbor’s Wife, My Secret Sin
My Neighbor’s Wife, My Secret Sin
4.8
Through a peephole in my shabby apartment, I watched the beautiful Natalie play the perfect wife by night—and sell her love by day. When I stole her hidden cash to buy my own bride, I set off a chain of betrayal, violence, and murder just a wall away. Years later, with a family of my own, I come face-to-face with the woman whose secrets—and body—were once closer to me than anyone ever knew.
My Wife Waited While I Betrayed Her
My Wife Waited While I Betrayed Her
4.8
I was the husband everyone envied—until my secret affair with the girl I once worshipped shattered everything. While my wife braved the snow for my health and waited up with a birthday feast, I was tangled in another woman's arms, convincing myself guilt was love. Now, in the freezing silence, my wife stares through the glass, and I know the truth is about to destroy the only warmth I have left.
I Was Her Stand-In Husband
I Was Her Stand-In Husband
4.8
She came home on our anniversary with another man’s mark—and I didn’t even ask why. For three years, I played the perfect husband, a stand-in for the man she truly loved. Now, with only seven days left until my assignment ends and I can finally leave this world, every lie, every bitter silence, and every leftover gift is one step closer to my freedom. But when Rachel tries to pull me back with guilt and old routines, I realize I’m done being her lapdog. If she wants Lucas, why not go to him? The clock is ticking, the portal is opening, and our marriage is about to shatter. But will walking away finally set me free—or will the truth I’ve hidden destroy us both?
His Wife, Not His Choice
His Wife, Not His Choice
4.7
For ten years, Annie was traded from one cold home to another, finally forced into a loveless marriage with Jason Carter—the wealthy heir who never wanted her. She gave him loyalty, care, and her body, but he saved his love for another woman and called Annie dirty in her own house. When she finally asks for a divorce, Jason refuses—not out of love, but because he can't bear to lose his caretaker, leaving Annie to choose: stay invisible, or walk away and reclaim her life.
His Wife After Her
His Wife After Her
4.6
Lillian was always the stand-in—married to Derek but haunted by the ghost of his first love, Natalie. When Natalie returns and the whole town roots for their reunion, Lillian is left to watch her own marriage unravel in the harsh glare of small-town gossip. But when Lillian finally moves on, Derek can't let her go—and his jealousy might be the only real emotion he's ever shown her.
My Best Friend’s Wife Moved In
My Best Friend’s Wife Moved In
4.6
When Marcus is arrested for embezzlement, his stunning new wife Rachel turns to me for help—and in one desperate night, ends up stranded in my apartment. I’m supposed to save their marriage, but every secret she shares and every stolen glance pushes us closer to a line we can’t uncross. If Marcus finds out what happened between us, it’ll destroy everything—but can I really let her go?
My Wife Met My Mistress
My Wife Met My Mistress
5.0
Derek thought he’d buried his past—until a chance encounter with his ex ignites a wildfire of old passion and betrayal. Torn between a loyal wife and the woman who once shattered him, Derek risks everything for a taste of forbidden love. Now, one mistake threatens to blow up the perfect life he’s built, and someone’s about to get burned.
My Wife Gave Our Home Away
My Wife Gave Our Home Away
4.9
Ryan has spent a decade sacrificing for his wife’s freeloading family, only to be betrayed when they demand his parents’ house for her brother’s wedding. Pushed to the edge, he finds himself drawn to Aubrey—the woman who sees him for who he is. As Ryan’s marriage crumbles and secrets explode, he must decide: will he reclaim his life, or let his family take everything?
I Woke Up as His Wife—and Mom
I Woke Up as His Wife—and Mom
4.9
Waking up ten years in the future, I found a little boy calling me 'Mom'—and a wedding photo with a man I never loved. My memories stop at college, but in this world, I’m married to the golden boy next door, and everyone says I’m not the mother my son deserves. My best friend barely speaks to me, my husband is a stranger, and my life is a puzzle I can’t solve. Each answer only raises more questions: whose child is Louie, and why did Julian Carter, the boy I once envied, marry me? I’m trapped in a life that feels both perfect and painfully wrong, desperate to uncover the truth. Can I rewrite my future—or am I doomed to repeat the mistakes of a woman I barely recognize?
Traded for His Freedom, Never His Heart
Traded for His Freedom, Never His Heart
4.7
To save his disgraced family, Caleb Lin marries me—a nobody with nothing but callused hands and a borrowed name. For three years, I played the loyal wife while he pined for his childhood sweetheart, Grace. Now that his father's name is cleared, all that's left is a divorce agreement and a heart that never truly belonged to me.