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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 2

The Snyder Corp building was all glass and cold light. Fifty-two floors of it, right in the middle of Midtown, where the city made sure you knew who had won.

I had been here a hundred times. I knew the lobby security by name. I knew which elevator ran slow and which one didn't. I knew the forty-third floor smelled like leather and recycled air and the particular silence of serious money.

I sat down across the conference table from my husband and folded my hands in my lap.

Tate was already seated. No jacket—just a white shirt, sleeves rolled once. Rhys stood near the window with a folder, facing away, watching the city the way he always did when he needed to be present without being seen. Two legal aides flanked the far end of the table, neither of them looking at me.

Tate slid a document across the glass surface. Clean. Bound. The Snyder Corp letterhead was embossed at the top.

'It's a consolidation,' he said. His voice had that administrative quality—the one he used for deals, not conversations. 'The media climate around Miriam's launch is generating noise. Independent labels with adjacent aesthetics are getting caught in the coverage. This protects you.'

I picked up the document. I read the first page, then the second. My studio—its name, its lease, its operating accounts, its intellectual property archive—absorbed, in full, into the Snyder Corp fashion division. Effective upon signature.

'It protects the collection,' I said. 'My collection. Which would now belong to Snyder Corp.'

'It protects your work from being buried in the noise.'

'By making it Snyder Corp's work.'

He looked at me. Not unkindly. That was almost worse—the patience of a man explaining something obvious to someone being deliberately slow.

'Scout.'

'No,' I said.

Not loud. Not shaking. I set the document down and looked at him across the glass table and said it again.

'No. I won't sign this.'

For a moment no one moved. One of the legal aides shifted his pen. Rhys, at the window, went very still.

Tate held my gaze for a beat. Then he reached into the folder Rhys had set beside him and drew out a second document. He placed it on top of the first.

I looked at the letterhead. Oxford University, International Exchange Program Office.

I picked it up.

The language was formal and dry. Institutional review. Eligibility assessment pending. Kennedi Cooper, candidate. The exchange placement currently on hold pending resolution of outstanding enrollment criteria.

I read it twice. Every word the same both times.

'The review is procedural,' Tate said. 'It can be resolved quickly. A word in the right direction.' He paused. 'The moment the acquisition is finalized, I make the call.'

I put the letter down. I put both hands flat on the table.

Kennedi had been working toward that program for two years. I had sat on the floor of her apartment and helped her draft her personal statement. I had stayed on the phone with her at midnight while she practiced her faculty interview. She had called me the morning her acceptance came through and I had cried, which I didn't tell her because she would have been embarrassed for me.

She was twenty-two years old. She had earned that spot. She had earned every part of it.

I looked at Tate's face.

I looked for something—anything. A flicker of discomfort. A muscle along his jaw. Some small signal that he understood what he was holding over me.

His face was even. Composed. His eyes were clear and steady and direct, the same eyes I had kissed into light seven years ago on a night when I would have given him anything. I had given him everything.

He looked back at me with those eyes and did not flinch.

I picked up the pen.

I signed.

I set the pen down on the table and stood up without looking at him again. The legal aides were already gathering pages. Rhys had turned from the window. When I walked past him toward the door, he held it open. I didn't thank him. I didn't trust my voice to carry a single extra word without something coming loose beneath it.

In the elevator going down, I pressed the pad of my thumb across my fingertips. One. Then the next. Then the next.

Forty-three floors of descent with the city blurring past the glass wall.

Four days later, Miriam Vargas unveiled her debut collection at a press event in Chelsea. The coverage started that evening. By midnight it was everywhere—glossy editorial photographs, breathless write-ups, the particular fever of fashion media when it decides something matters.

I was at the studio. My studio, technically, still—the sign on the door still read Cooper Studio, the lease transfer hadn't processed yet. I had my laptop open on the worktable, the mood board for my spring collection still pinned to the wall behind me. Shadow and light. Clean asymmetric lines. The interplay of what is seen and what is deliberately withheld.

I pulled up Miriam's collection images and set them beside my own.

I sat with that for a long time.

The construction technique on the draped shoulder piece. The way the hemline broke at an angle to cast its own shadow. The underlying logic of the silhouette—not inspired by mine. Not adjacent to mine. Mine. The same foundational grammar, dressed in different fabric, shown under different lights, with her name on the label.

I thought about the measuring wheel rolling along my wall.

I thought about the Oxford letterhead.

I thought about Tate's voice through the study door—flat, immediate, not a question. I'll handle it.

This was the handling.

I didn't move for a long time. My hand rested on the trackpad, completely still. The side-by-side images sat there on the screen, patient and damning.

At some point I became aware that I was not angry. That was the thing I kept returning to, sitting in the quiet of that studio at two in the morning. I should have been shaking. I should have felt the heat of it, the disbelief, the grief.

Instead I felt something settle. Deep and cold and very, very clear.

I reached up and unpinned the spring collection mood board from the wall. I rolled it carefully and slid it into a tube and set it on the shelf behind me, out of sight.

Then I closed the laptop, turned off the light, and walked out.

I was still paying attention.

I was simply done being surprised by what I saw.

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