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Accidentally Adopting My Husband's Secret Daughter Novel Cover

Accidentally Adopting My Husband's Secret Daughter

"Your daughter's Punnett square project is quite unique, Mrs. Vance," the science teacher slides the wrinkled worksheet across the steel desk. For five years, I played the devoted mother to Maya, the orphaned girl my husband Mark brought home after his supposed best friend died in a car crash. I wiped her tears, baked her cupcakes, and loved her as my own flesh. Now, staring at the dominant alleles circling Maya’s blood type on the paper, the math fails. The dead best friend was O-negative. Mark is AB-positive. Maya is AB-positive. He didn't adopt an orphan; he smuggled his dead subordinate’s illegitimate child into our home under the guise of grief. He expects me to keep playing the saint. Instead, I’m calling my lawyer to draft an irrevocable family trust. The front door clicks open downstairs. Mark's heavy footsteps echo in the hall, calling out for his "two favorite girls."
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Chapter 2

I pushed the front door open. The heavy wood shut behind me, sealing me inside the house.

The sweet smell of vanilla and baked sugar hung thick in the hallway.

"Mommy!" Maya's voice echoed from the kitchen.

Small footsteps slapped against the hardwood. She slammed into my knees, wrapping her arms around my legs.

"Hey, sweetie," I said. I forced my facial muscles upward, faking a smile.

"Daddy bought the pink cake! It has strawberries on top!"

"I see that," I replied. I patted her shoulder.

Mark stood at the kitchen island. He held a large silver knife over a white bakery box.

"You missed the candles," he said. He didn't look up from the cake.

"I got held up at the school," I said. I walked toward the island, keeping the granite counter between us.

"Harrison again?" Mark dragged the blade through the sponge cake. "Did he complain about her talking during nap time?"

"He wanted to discuss her biology assignment," I said.

Mark paused. His wrist froze in mid-air. "Biology? She's five, Elena."

"It's a gifted module. They did a blood typing test."

"Sounds like a waste of funding," he scoffed. He scooped a thick slice onto a paper plate. "What did she get?"

"AB," I stated.

Mark slid the plate across the island. "Good for her. Grab a fork."

"David was Type O," I said.

"Was he?" Mark licked a smear of frosting off his thumb. "I don't remember."

"You told her he was. You brought his dog tags to show-and-tell last month."

"Yeah, well, military records get messed up."

"And Sarah?" I asked. I gripped the edge of the counter. "You said she was a universal donor. That's Type O."

Mark finally looked up. His eyes narrowed. "Where is this going, El?"

"Two Type O parents cannot physically have an AB child. It is genetically impossible."

"It's a kindergarten toy!" Mark raised his voice. "Those plastic kits are garbage. Why are you interrogating me over a faulty science project?"

"Because Harrison ran the test twice," I said.

"Then Harrison is an idiot who doesn't know how to read a manual." Mark grabbed a napkin and wiped his hands roughly. "I'll call the principal tomorrow. I want him disciplined for upsetting my daughter."

"She wasn't upset," I said. "I am."

"David died a hero," I said, my voice trembling. "That's what you told the entire town."

"He did," Mark snapped. "He died overseas. Why are we talking about my dead brother right now?"

"Because his daughter doesn't share his blood."

"She is his daughter," Mark insisted. "You're letting some rookie teacher get into your head."

"Harrison isn't a rookie. He's been teaching for twenty years."

"I don't care if he invented the microscope, Elena! He's wrong."

"Then why are you getting so defensive?"

"I'm not defensive. I'm annoyed. I bought a cake to celebrate my daughter's good behavior this week, and you walk in here acting like I committed a crime."

"Did you?"

Mark slammed the knife down. The metal banged loudly against the stone counter. "Excuse me?"

"Did you commit a crime, Mark? Is there something about Maya's adoption you left out?"

"Watch your mouth," he warned. His tone dropped, turning ice-cold. "We filed the paperwork. We went through the courts. Everything was legal."

"Legal doesn't mean truthful."

"Stop talking," he commanded. He pointed a finger at the doorway. "Maya is in the next room."

"Here you go, monkey," Mark said, his voice instantly shifting to a cheerful pitch as Maya trotted back into the kitchen. "Take this to the dining table."

Maya grabbed the plate and skipped away.

"I'm not hungry," I said.

"Suit yourself," Mark muttered. He picked up his own fork.

"I have a headache. I need to wash up," I told him.

"Take some aspirin," he replied, already chewing. "I'll keep the kid entertained."

I turned my back on him and climbed the stairs.

My legs felt entirely hollow.

I walked straight past our bedroom and pushed into Maya's bathroom.

The bright pink wall tiles assaulted my vision. The smiling mermaid on the shower curtain mocked me. This was the room I decorated for a little girl I swore to protect. The scent of her strawberry shampoo lingered in the air, a sickening reminder of the cake downstairs.

I opened the cabinet beneath the sink. The metal hinges squeaked. I froze, listening for footsteps on the stairs.

Nothing.

I grabbed a pair of disposable cleaning gloves. The latex stuck to my sweaty palms as I pulled them on, snapping sharply against my wrists.

I reached for her pink glitter hairbrush resting by the soap dispenser.

Fine, light brown hairs tangled in the plastic bristles.

I plucked three strands. I squinted under the harsh vanity light. Tiny white bulbs clung to the ends. Follicles. Perfect.

I pulled a small plastic ziplock bag from my jeans pocket.

I dropped the strands inside and sealed the zipper tight.

One down.

I left the bathroom and marched down the hall into the master bedroom.

Mark's gray suit jacket hung over the back of the reading chair. The fabric smelled like his expensive cologne. Wood and spice. A scent I used to bury my face in. Now it made my stomach turn.

I approached the chair.

I slipped my gloved hand into the left breast pocket. Empty.

I checked the right side. My fingers brushed against smooth, polished wood.

I extracted his sandalwood comb.

Thick, dark hairs wove through the narrow wooden teeth.

I pinched two strands, ensuring the root remained intact.

I deposited them into a second plastic bag.

I retreated into the master bathroom and shut the heavy door behind me.

I placed the two clear bags side by side on the cold marble counter.

I stared at them.

One bag held the DNA of the child I raised.

One bag held the DNA of the husband I trusted.

My chest tightened. My lungs refused to expand. I forced air in through my nose, making my breathing slow down.

Mark's hair was dark. Maya's was lighter, but the texture was identical.

How many times had he laughed off the physical similarities?

"Genetics are weird," he used to say whenever a neighbor pointed out their matching noses.

Now I knew why he never wanted to do those mail-in DNA ancestry kits. I bought him one for Christmas two years ago. He threw it in the trash, claiming the government stole data.

It wasn't the government he was hiding from. It was me.

Downstairs, a loud cheer erupted.

"Yay! Daddy, do it again!" Maya squealed.

"Only if you finish your strawberries!" Mark shouted back.

His deep laughter boomed through the floorboards.

I used to love that sound. I used to stand at the top of the stairs and listen to them play. I believed I had built a perfect, whole family from the ashes of a tragic accident.

Now, that laughter acted like a series of sharp needles.

The sound stabbed directly into my eardrums.

It forced me completely awake.

He lied to my face in the kitchen. He brought his own child into my home five years ago and called her an orphan.

He made me mourn a woman named Sarah who probably never existed.

The brass door handle suddenly jerked downward.

The metal latch clicked loudly in the quiet bathroom.

"Elena?" Mark's muffled voice filtered through the wood. "What are you looking for in there?"

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