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After My Husband Faked My Funeral to Steal Our Child Novel Cover

After My Husband Faked My Funeral to Steal Our Child

The rain in Seattle doesn’t wash things clean. It just slicks them over, sealing the grime under a layer of deceptive shine. Through the tinted, bulletproof glass of the SUV, the Grand Hyatt’s entrance blurred into streaks of gold light and gray pavement. My heart hammered against my ribs—a frantic bird throwing itself against a cage. My palms were damp, not from the humidity, but from the memory of a basement floor, cold concrete, and the suffocating dark. "Genevieve." The voice was low, a rumble of thunder that promised shelter rather than a storm. A large, warm hand covered my trembling fingers, squeezing once. Firmly. "Breathe." I turned to look at Rhodes. In his dress blues, medals gleaming under the passing streetlights, he looked like a fortress made of flesh and bone.
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Chapter 1

The rain in Seattle doesn’t wash things clean. It just slicks them over, sealing the grime under a layer of deceptive shine. Through the tinted, bulletproof glass of the SUV, the Grand Hyatt’s entrance blurred into streaks of gold light and gray pavement. My heart hammered against my ribs—a frantic bird throwing itself against a cage. My palms were damp, not from the humidity, but from the memory of a basement floor, cold concrete, and the suffocating dark.

"Genevieve." The voice was low, a rumble of thunder that promised shelter rather than a storm. A large, warm hand covered my trembling fingers, squeezing once. Firmly. "Breathe."

I turned to look at Rhodes. In his dress blues, medals gleaming under the passing streetlights, he looked like a fortress made of flesh and bone. His jaw was set, the muscles feathering near his ear, but his eyes—crinkled at the corners, the color of storm-tossed seas—held only patience. He wasn't looking at the hotel; he was watching me, gauging my structural integrity.

"I can do this," I whispered, though the words felt like glass shards in my throat.

"You don't have to," Rhodes said, his thumb brushing the gold band on my ring finger. My anchor. "We can turn the convoy around. Let the lawyers handle the paperwork. You never have to see his face again."

"No." The refusal was instant. Sharp. "He thinks I'm ash in an urn, Rhodes. He thinks he won. If I don't walk through those doors, part of me stays in that basement forever."

In the backseat, Iris shifted in her car seat. "Mama? Are we at the party?"

I twisted around, forcing a smile that didn't quite reach my eyes. My daughter, three years old and already braver than I ever was, clutched her stuffed rabbit. Her dark curls were a chaotic halo, a stark contrast to the rigid order of the military convoy surrounding us. "Yes, baby. Just a quick stop. Then we go home."

"To the beach?" she asked, hopeful.

"To the beach," Rhodes answered for me, his voice softening into that special cadence he reserved only for her.

The car stopped. The heavy door swung open, admitting the damp chill of the evening. Flashbulbs erupted immediately—a blinding staccato of white light. The paparazzi were here for the "Vow Renewal and Business Gala" of Seattle’s golden couple, Clayton O'Brien and Charli Chapman. They weren’t expecting a ghost.

I stepped onto the pavement. The emerald silk of my gown whispered against my legs, a stark cry from the rags I’d worn three years ago. I felt the air rush into my lungs—real air, not the stale, moldy drafts of my prison. Rhodes was beside me instantly, offering his arm. It was solid rock. I looped my hand through the crook of his elbow, feeling the hard line of his bicep.

"Head up, Mrs. George," he murmured, his breath ghosting my ear. "Let them see you."

We moved toward the entrance. The doormen, expecting polished socialites, faltered at the sight of Rhodes’s stars and the grim-faced security detail flanking us. They pulled the heavy brass doors open, and the sound of the ballroom spilled out—clinking crystal, forced laughter, the hum of expensive lies.

Inside, the ballroom was a nauseating display of excess. Crystal chandeliers dripped light onto tables laden with towering floral arrangements. And there, at the center of the room, stood Clayton.

He looked exactly the same. The same expensive Italian suit, the same perfectly coiffed hair, the same predator’s smile plastered on his face as he held a champagne flute aloft. Beside him, Charli preened in white lace, her hand resting possessively on his chest. She was laughing, her head thrown back, exposing the long line of her throat. I saw the diamond choker around her neck—my mother’s diamonds. The heat in my chest flared, burning away the fear.

"...to three years of building an empire together," Clayton was saying, his voice amplified by the microphone. "And to moving forward, leaving the tragedies of the past where they belong."

The announcer near the door saw us first. He choked, the name on his lips dying before it could be spoken. The silence started there, at the entrance, and spread like a contagion, ripple by ripple, until it reached the stage.

Clayton frowned at the sudden quiet. He followed the gaze of the room. He looked at Rhodes, confusion knitting his brow. Then his eyes slid to me.

The glass slipped from his fingers.

It shattered on the marble floor with a sound like a gunshot. Champagne foamed over his polished shoes, but he didn't move. He couldn't. His face drained of blood, turning the color of old parchment. His mouth opened, then closed, a fish gasping for water.

Charli followed his gaze, her smile freezing into a grotesque rictus of horror. She gripped his arm, her nails digging into the fabric of his suit, as if to anchor herself against a hallucination.

I didn't stop. I walked forward, the heels of my shoes clicking a steady rhythm of judgment against the floor. Every step was a reclamation. One for the hunger. One for the cold. One for the child he stole from me.

The crowd parted. Whispers ignited like dry tinder. *Who is that? Is that...? It can't be.*

We stopped ten feet from the stage. Rhodes stood tall, his presence dominating the room, a silent threat wrapped in military discipline. I squeezed his arm, drawing strength, then released him to stand on my own.

Clayton’s eyes were wide, terrified, darting between my face and the urn that sat on a pedestal behind him—a prop for his sympathy narrative.

"Hello, Clayton," I said. My voice wasn't loud, but in the dead silence of the ballroom, it carried like a verdict. "You look like you've seen a ghost."

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