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After My Husband Forgot Me for My Stepsister Novel Cover

After My Husband Forgot Me for My Stepsister

The lilies gave him away. I was standing at Andres's bedside when Madison walked through the door. White lilies, wrapped in brown paper, held against her chest like she'd rehearsed the pose. I watched his eyes find her over my shoulder. Something moved across his face — relief, warmth, a softness I hadn't seen in months — and then he looked at me. Really looked at me. Like I was a stranger. "Who are you?" Two words. Quiet, almost gentle. The kind of voice you use when you don't want to embarrass someone.
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Chapter 2

The restaurant was called Maison Bleu. Soft lighting, white tablecloths, the kind of place where the wine list was longer than the menu and everyone spoke in careful, modulated tones.

Andres had chosen it.

He sat propped against two pillows they'd brought from home — the hospital had cleared him for short outings, supervised, nothing strenuous — and Madison sat beside him, cutting his steak into small pieces with the focused tenderness of a woman who wanted to be watched doing it.

I sat across the table.

No one had asked me to come. No one had asked me not to.

"A little more," Andres said, and Madison lifted the fork to his mouth. He chewed slowly, eyes half-closed, like a man savoring something. Then he looked at me.

Not the way a husband looks at his wife. The way a man looks at someone sitting at the wrong table.

"Are you not eating?" he asked.

Polite. Genuinely curious. The voice of a man making conversation with a stranger.

"I'm fine," I said.

Madison didn't look up from the plate. The corner of her mouth moved — not quite a smile, just a small, private adjustment, the kind you make when something is going exactly the way you planned.

I watched her cut another piece of steak.

I watched Andres open his mouth for it.

I picked up my water glass and held it and thought about the wire transfers. Fourteen months. Twelve transactions. A Cayman address and a holding entity with a name that meant nothing.

I set the glass down.

"Excuse me," I said, and stood up, and left.

---

The bar was called The Anchor. It was three blocks from the restaurant, down a side street that smelled like rain and exhaust, and it had the particular quality of a place that had never tried to be anything other than what it was. Dark wood, low music, a bartender who didn't ask questions.

I ordered a gin and tonic and drank half of it and then just sat with it, letting the ice melt.

I didn't need to drink. I needed air that didn't smell like betrayal. I needed forty-five minutes in a room where no one was performing anything for my benefit.

At ten-fifteen, I stepped outside and opened the rideshare app.

The car that pulled up two minutes later was a Honda Civic with a dent above the rear wheel well and a UCLA parking sticker half-peeled off the bumper. The driver leaned across the passenger seat and looked up at me through the open window.

"Evelyn?"

"That's me."

"Eliel." Easy grin. No agenda behind it. "You want the heat on or off?"

I got in. "Off is fine."

He pulled into traffic. The city slid past the windows — streetlights, storefronts, a couple arguing outside a taco truck, a man walking a very small dog with enormous dignity.

"Long night?" he asked.

"Dinner."

"Bad food or bad company?"

I looked at the side of his face. He was watching the road, relaxed, like the question was just something to do with his mouth while he drove.

"Both," I said.

He nodded like that was a complete answer. "There's a place on Sixth that does late-night bao if you're still hungry. Best pork belly in the city. I'm not saying that lightly."

"You say it like you've done a survey."

"I drive people around for a living. I've done a survey."

Something in my chest loosened, just slightly. Not much. Just enough to breathe differently.

"I'm not hungry," I said.

"Noted." He changed lanes smoothly. "You want music or quiet?"

"Quiet."

"Also noted."

We drove in silence for a minute. It was not an uncomfortable silence. It was the kind that didn't need to be filled.

"You go to UCLA?" I asked, looking at the sticker.

"Third year. Business and finance, which sounds more impressive than it is."

"Why?"

"Because half of what they teach you is how to make bad decisions sound like strategy." He glanced at me in the rearview mirror. "I'm learning to tell the difference."

I looked at him for a moment. "That's a useful skill."

"I think so." The grin again, brief and unguarded. "What do you do?"

"Right now? I'm figuring that out."

He didn't push. He just nodded and turned onto my street and pulled up in front of my building with the quiet competence of someone who had already looked at the address and knew exactly where he was going.

I sat there for a second longer than I needed to.

"The bao place," I said. "What's it called?"

"Lucky Eight. Tell them Eliel sent you. They'll still charge you full price, but they'll be friendlier about it."

I got out. I leaned down to the window. "Thanks for the quiet."

"Anytime."

I went inside. I stood in the elevator and looked at my phone and, before I could think about it too carefully, typed my number into the app's message field and sent it with a single line: *In case the survey needs more data points.*

His reply came before the elevator reached my floor.

*I'll add you to the spreadsheet.*

---

The texts started the next day.

He sent a meme at midnight — something absurd involving a golden retriever and a spreadsheet — with no explanation. I stared at it for a moment in the dark of my bedroom, Andres's side of the bed empty and undisturbed, and typed back: *This is not data. This is noise.*

*All the best data starts as noise,* he replied.

I put my phone down. I was smiling. I hadn't noticed until I stopped.

The week moved in two registers. In the daytime, I sat across from Diana in her Century City office and worked through the wire transfer records, the Pinnacle Ventures filings, the buried clause in my mother's divorce settlement that Madison had apparently never thought to look for. Diana wrote things down in her precise, unhurried hand and asked questions that cut straight to the bone.

At night, Eliel picked me up.

Not always to go anywhere specific. Sometimes I'd text him after a late session at Diana's office and he'd pull up in the Civic and I'd get in and just talk — not to him, exactly, more like thinking out loud in a moving car, the city scrolling past the windows while I worked through the legal architecture of what I was building. He listened without interrupting. He asked one or two questions, sharp ones, the kind that made me reconsider a premise rather than just confirm it.

One night I caught myself mid-sentence and said, "You're not just nodding."

"No," he agreed.

"Most people just nod."

"Most people are waiting for their turn to talk." He glanced at me. "I'm actually listening."

I looked at him for a moment. The streetlights moved across his face in slow intervals.

"Why?"

He thought about it. "Because you're interesting. And because whatever you're working on, it matters to you. That's not nothing."

I turned back to the window.

Neither of us named what was building between us. We didn't need to. It was there in the way he always had the heat at exactly the right temperature before I got in. In the way I started timing my exits from Diana's office around his available hours without admitting that's what I was doing.

It was careful and unspoken and, for now, that was exactly right.

I had enough things in my life that were about to explode.

This one, I wanted to keep quiet a little longer.

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