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After His Affair with Her, I Planned My Revenge Novel Cover

After His Affair with Her, I Planned My Revenge

The earring rolled somewhere I couldn't see. It was a pearl drop my mother had given me before she died. I was on my hands and knees in our bedroom on a Tuesday afternoon, still in the cream silk blouse I'd worn to pitch a skincare brand in Tribeca. My phone said 2:47. The client meeting had ended early. I'd come home humming. I swept my hand under the dresser. My fingers found something cold and rectangular. Not the earring. A voice recorder.
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Chapter 2

The radiologist's name was Marisol, and she had done special-effects medical props for three seasons of a hospital drama Paige once worked on. We met her in a coffee shop on Ludlow that smelled like burnt sugar and rain. She wore a navy turtleneck and did not ask why.

"I need a seven-week intrauterine," I said. "Single gestation. Crown-rump length consistent with a last menstrual period of—" I slid a Post-it across the table. "This date."

Marisol glanced at it. Tucked it into her sleeve.

"Patient name?"

"Mine." I passed her a folded printout of my last physical. Blood type, OB-GYN, the practice letterhead I'd lifted clean off a mammogram report. "Match the formatting. Same font. Same margin. The tech's initials in the bottom right are J.R.—she's been there nine years."

Marisol's mouth twitched. Not a smile. Recognition.

"Two days," she said.

"Cash."

"Cash."

She stood, dropped a five on the table for a coffee she hadn't touched, and walked out into the drizzle.

Paige watched her go, then looked at me over the rim of her cup.

"You okay?"

"I'm working."

"That's not what I asked."

I met her eyes. "I know."

She let it go. She always does, exactly when I need her to.

***

Paige brought the envelope to my office on Thursday at six-fifteen. Plain manila. No markings.

I locked my door. Slit the seam with a letter opener and slid the page out by its corners.

The grayscale was perfect. The grainy bean of it, suspended in its small black sea. The measurements in the right margin, the timestamp, the practice's logo bleeding faintly into the header the way a real fax does. J.R. in the bottom right, in handwriting that leaned just slightly forward.

I held it up to the desk lamp. The watermark caught the light and disappeared at the right angle.

"It's good," Paige said quietly.

"It's perfect."

I slid it into a fresh manila envelope, pressed the metal clasp flat, and locked it in the bottom drawer of my desk. Next to the recorder. Next to the BISCUIT drive.

I texted Damian.

Dinner at home Friday? Just us. I miss you.

Three dots. Then: Already counting the hours, beautiful.

I set the phone face down.

"Friday," I said.

Paige nodded once and let herself out.

***

I lit the candles at six-fifty. Two tapers in the silver holders his mother gave us. The Burgundy, decanted ninety minutes. Roasted duck because it was his favorite, and because I wanted my hands occupied for the four hours leading up to the moment I would slide a piece of paper across the table.

He came in at seven-oh-four with a bouquet of white peonies. Of course he did.

"Look at you." He kissed my cheek, then my mouth. He tasted like the gum he chewed in cabs. "What's the occasion?"

"Does there have to be one?"

"With you? Always."

I laughed. The laugh came out exactly the way it used to, and I marveled at the muscle memory of it. Six years of laughing at this man's lines. The body remembers what it would rather not.

We ate. He told a story about a focus group in Greenwich. I asked the right questions in the right places. I watched his hands on the wineglass—the same hands, the wedding band catching candlelight—and felt nothing. That was new. Three weeks ago, the nothing would have terrified me. Tonight it felt like a tool I had finally learned to hold.

I cleared the plates myself. Brought out the pot de crème. Sat back down.

Between his second and third spoonful, I reached into my jacket pocket.

"Damian."

He looked up.

I slid the envelope across the table. Slow. Centered. Stopped it just shy of his wineglass.

"What's this?"

"Open it."

His fingers worked the clasp. He pulled the page out. He looked at it.

I watched.

The first thing through his face was shock—a real flinch, the eyebrows lifting before he caught them. The second was something I had never seen on him in six years and I will never forget: a flash, gone in less than a second, of pure animal calculation. His eyes moved to the date in the top corner. He was doing math. He was placing October 14th. He was running through every text he had sent from the bathroom.

The third thing was the performance.

It arrived like a curtain dropping. His mouth opened. His eyes filled—actually filled, the man could cry on command, I had forgotten that—and he stood up so fast his chair scraped the floor.

"Gabby." His voice cracked on the second syllable. "Gabby, oh my God."

He came around the table. He pulled me up out of my chair. He cupped my face in both hands, the way he had on our wedding day, the way he had the night he proposed on his parents' terrace—no, that was someone else's life, that was a story I'd read once.

"We're going to be incredible parents," he whispered.

His thumbs stroked my cheekbones. His eyes searched mine, wet and shining and absolutely empty.

I smiled up at him. I let one tear slip, because I am not an amateur.

"I know," I whispered back.

He pulled me into his chest. He pressed his palm to my stomach, flat, reverent, and I felt his heartbeat through his shirt. Steady. Already recalculating.

Three more moves, I thought, with my face against his collar.

Three more moves.

***

The two weeks after were a masterpiece, if you knew what you were watching.

Monday: tulips on the kitchen counter. Tuesday: he came home at six-thirty with takeout from the Thai place I liked when I was nauseous in college, a detail he had remembered from a conversation in 2017. Wednesday: a prenatal vitamin regimen printed from a website, laid on my nightstand with a Post-it. Take with food. Love you both. He had drawn a tiny heart.

I took the vitamins. I kissed him goodbye at the door. I photographed the Post-it before I threw it away.

Friday night was the Hauser & Wirth opening in Chelsea. He kept his hand on the small of my back the entire two hours. When Lila Hammond asked how I was feeling, Damian answered for me—"She's glowing, isn't she?"—and his palm pressed warm and possessive through the silk of my dress. I let Mira from Vogue snap the photo. I made sure she got our hands.

In the cab home he laced his fingers through mine and said, "I've been thinking about names."

"Already?"

"Eleanor. After your mom."

I turned my face to the window so he wouldn't see what crossed it.

"That's beautiful," I said to the glass.

At one-forty that night, the mattress shifted. I kept my breathing even. The bathroom door clicked shut. Through the wall I could hear the soft tap of a thumb on a screen. A pause. Another tap.

I opened my eyes in the dark.

Biscuit was at the foot of the bed, awake, watching the bathroom door. His tail did not move.

"I know, buddy," I breathed. "I know."

The toilet flushed for cover. The faucet ran. Damian slid back into bed and curled his body around mine and pressed his hand, gently, to my stomach.

"Sleep, mama," he murmured into my hair.

I closed my eyes and counted his breaths until they evened out.

Then I counted mine.

I was already three moves ahead.

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