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After My Husband Froze My Accounts for His Mistress Novel Cover

After My Husband Froze My Accounts for His Mistress

I came home early because I was happy. That was the simple, stupid truth of it. I had spent the afternoon roughing out sketches for the spring collection—clean lines, asymmetrical draping, a whole series built on the interplay of shadow and light—and they were good. I knew they were good the way you know sometimes, deep in your hands before your brain catches up. I wanted to show Tate. I wanted to see his face. I still wanted that then. The Snyder penthouse was quiet when I stepped off the elevator. The entry hall smelled like cedar and cool air, the way it always did in October. I set my bag down and slipped off my shoes out of habit, the marble cold through my socks.
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Chapter 1

I came home early because I was happy.

That was the simple, stupid truth of it. I had spent the afternoon roughing out sketches for the spring collection—clean lines, asymmetrical draping, a whole series built on the interplay of shadow and light—and they were good. I knew they were good the way you know sometimes, deep in your hands before your brain catches up. I wanted to show Tate. I wanted to see his face.

I still wanted that then.

The Snyder penthouse was quiet when I stepped off the elevator. The entry hall smelled like cedar and cool air, the way it always did in October. I set my bag down and slipped off my shoes out of habit, the marble cold through my socks. The sketches were tucked under my arm in a flat portfolio case, the edges a little bent from where I'd gripped it too hard on the cab ride uptown.

Then I heard her laugh.

It came from the far end of the hall, from Tate's private study—a room I knocked on before entering because he had asked me to, years ago, and I had simply never stopped. The laugh was low and bright, the kind that assumes it owns the room it fills. I knew it. I had heard it at charity dinners and gallery openings and the long, polished table of his family's Thanksgiving gatherings. Miriam Vargas.

I stopped walking. My hand found the wall.

I wasn't trying to listen. That's what I told myself standing there in my socks on the cold floor. I just—stopped.

Through the half-open door, her voice came through clean and easy, like she was describing something mildly amusing.

'She built her whole identity around it, Tate. The sacrifice. The gift.' A pause, and I could picture the expression on her face—that soft, practiced curve of the mouth that always looked like sympathy from across a room. 'It was a trap. You understand that, right? She needed you to need her. That's all it ever was.'

Silence.

I pressed my palm flat against the wall and waited for him to answer.

He laughed. It was quiet, almost gentle—the laugh of a man confirming something he has privately believed for a long time.

'She always needed to feel necessary,' he said.

My portfolio slid from under my arm. The corner hit the floor and the case popped open, three sheets skidding out across the hallway tile—those clean lines, that careful light and shadow, all of it face-up on the floor.

I crouched down and gathered them. Slowly. Without making a sound.

Miriam's voice again, the warmth curdling just slightly at the edges now. She was listing things. Press mentions. A feature in a trade publication. A quote from a buyer who had called my spring preview 'the most original work to come out of a new independent label this season.' Each item delivered like a small, precise complaint.

'She is everywhere lately,' Miriam said. 'And every time they write about her, they find a way to make it about what I'm not doing. I worked for years, Tate. Years. And she—'

'I'll handle it.' Flat. Immediate. No hesitation.

I had all three sheets back in the portfolio by then. I held the case against my chest and walked back down the hallway on silent feet, into the kitchen, and sat down at the dark table without turning on the lights.

I sat there for an hour.

I know it was an hour because the clock on the microwave read 7:14 when I sat down and 8:09 when I heard his study door open. I got up, turned on the light, and started plating dinner from the containers in the fridge—the meal I had asked our housekeeper to prep that morning. Tate appeared in the kitchen doorway, jacket off, collar open, looking the way he always looked at the end of a long day: composed and slightly elsewhere.

'You're home,' he said. Not a question, not surprise. Just a statement.

'Just got in,' I said. I set his plate on the table without looking at him.

We ate. He talked about a deal that was closing. I said the right things at the right intervals. When he kissed my temple before going to shower, his lips were warm and automatic, the same as always.

That night I lay beside him and stared at the ceiling and finally let myself think the thing I had been carefully not thinking for a very long time.

His eyes. When had I last watched him talk to me—actually talk, not perform—and had his eyes find my face?

I ran through scenes like flipping cards. Dinner parties. Morning coffee. The night last spring when I told him the studio had turned its first real profit and he had nodded and said 'good' and gone back to his phone. His eyes in all of them: present, intelligent, landing everywhere around me.

Never quite on me.

I had been explaining it away for years. He was distracted. He was tired. He was thinking about work. The explanations had been so ready, so automatic, that I had never once stopped to notice I was the one supplying all of them.

In the morning he kissed my forehead with the same practiced warmth and left before seven. I sat on the edge of the bed in the gray light and pressed the pad of my thumb slowly across my fingertips, one by one. A habit I had never explained to anyone.

I made myself a decision. Quiet. No drama. No confrontation I wasn't ready for.

I was going to start paying attention.

I went to the studio the next afternoon. It was a third-floor walk-up in the West Village—not glamorous, but it was mine. I had signed the lease myself, furnished it myself, painted the back wall myself one Saturday while Virginia sat on the floor eating takeout and telling me it looked uneven. It looked perfect.

Two men were standing in the middle of the main room with a measuring wheel.

I stopped in the doorway.

One of them looked up. He had a lanyard around his neck with a corporate ID that I clocked before he had a chance to angle it away: Snyder Corp Real Estate Division.

'Mrs. Snyder.' He didn't look surprised to see me, which meant someone had decided I wasn't expected. 'Routine inspection. Shouldn't take long.'

I looked at the second man, who was writing something on a clipboard. Then I looked at the measuring wheel. Then I looked at my back wall, the uneven paint Virginia had teased me about, the framed sketches, the mood board for the spring collection.

I took out my phone and called Tate's office.

It rang twice. Then: 'Snyder Group, Rhys Henry speaking.'

Rhys had been Tate's assistant for four years. He was quiet and precise and had exactly one expression in professional settings, which was professionally neutral. I had always liked him, in the distant, peripheral way you like someone who exists reliably at the edge of your life.

'Rhys, it's Scout. I need to speak with Tate.'

A pause.

One beat. Maybe two.

Not the pause of someone checking a calendar. The pause of someone deciding.

'He's unavailable at the moment, Mrs. Snyder. Can I take a message?'

'Sure,' I said. 'Tell him I'm at the studio.'

I hung up and stood very still in my doorway while the man with the measuring wheel rolled it along the far wall and called out a number to his colleague, who wrote it down.

I thought about last night. About Tate's voice in the study—flat, immediate, no hesitation. I'll handle it.

I put my phone in my pocket and breathed in slowly through my nose.

I was paying attention now.

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