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After My Husband Held Her Newborn, I Planned My Escape Novel Cover

After My Husband Held Her Newborn, I Planned My Escape

The evenings used to be ours. That's what I kept thinking as we walked the path along the east side of the community, the one that loops past the fountain and back through the oak trees. Ryan's hand wasn't in mine — it hadn't been for a while — but he was there, walking beside me, and for a few minutes it felt almost normal. Almost like two years ago, before everything. I was seven months along. My back ached constantly and my ankles swelled by afternoon, but I still looked forward to these walks. They were the one thing left in our marriage that felt uncomplicated. Then his phone rang. I didn't have to see the screen. I knew from the way his whole body changed — shoulders pulling back, jaw tightening, that particular stillness that came over him whenever it was her.
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Chapter 4

I called my mother from the bathroom with the shower running.

I sat on the edge of the tub and kept my voice low and even, the way you talk when you're trying not to let the sound of yourself crying get into your words. The steam filled the room. I watched it fog the mirror until my reflection disappeared.

"Things are difficult," I said. "I might need to come home soon."

There was a pause on the other end. Not the pause of someone deciding what to say. The pause of someone who had been waiting for this call for a long time and was being careful not to say too much at once.

"Your room is ready," my mother said. "It has always been ready."

I pressed my free hand flat against my stomach. The baby shifted.

"Okay," I said.

"Sydney." Her voice dropped, the way it did when she meant something completely. "You come when you're ready. We'll be here."

I said goodbye and hung up and sat there on the edge of the tub for ten minutes. The shower ran. The mirror stayed fogged. I breathed in and out and let the steam do what it was going to do.

Then I stood up, turned off the shower, and went back out into the house.

---

It happened on a Thursday evening.

I had been on the couch for over an hour. I know that because I'd checked the time when I sat down — 5:48 — and I checked it again when I heard Demi's voice rise from somewhere near the back of the house. 6:53. I had not moved. I had a book open in my lap, one I'd been reading the same paragraph of for the past twenty minutes, and my feet were up on the ottoman because my ankles had been bad all day.

I heard her before I saw her.

The sound came first — that particular kind of crying, the soft, broken kind that carries. Then she appeared in the doorway of the living room with her son pressed against her chest, her face wet, her eyes finding Ryan the moment he stepped through the front door.

The timing was perfect. It always was.

"She threw it in the pool," Demi said. Her voice cracked on the last word. "The bracelet you gave him. His christening bangle. She threw it in the pool."

Ryan went still in the doorway. I watched his face do the thing it did — the controlled stillness that meant he was already deciding.

"I was sitting right here," I said.

Neither of them looked at me yet.

Demi pressed her face into her son's hair. Her shoulders shook. "I saw her. I saw her go out there. I didn't — I didn't want to say anything, I never want to cause problems, but it was his bracelet, Ryan, it was the one you—"

"I was sitting right here," I said again. "For the past hour. I haven't moved."

Ryan turned to look at me then. He was standing over me before I'd fully registered that he'd crossed the room. His face was controlled and furious — that particular combination I knew well, the one where the fury was already decided and the control was just the shape it wore in public.

"Where is it?" he said.

"I don't know. I didn't touch it."

"She says she saw you."

"Then she's lying." I kept my voice level. I kept my hands still. "I have been on this couch since before six. You can check the security footage. There are cameras on the back door."

Something moved across his face. For one second — one — I thought he was going to do it. Turn around, pull up the app on his phone, look at the footage the way any reasonable person would look at the footage when one person's word was against another's.

He looked at Demi instead.

She was still crying. Her son was awake now, making small sounds against her chest, and she was rocking him with that automatic, exhausted motion of a new mother, her eyes red, her expression the particular kind of devastated that asked nothing and implied everything.

Then he looked back at me.

I was sitting on the couch with a book in my lap and my feet on the ottoman and my hands folded and my face composed, because I had learned a long time ago that composure was the only thing I had that she couldn't perform better than me.

He chose.

I watched him do it. I watched the exact moment he decided which version of events he was going to live in.

"Get in the pool," he said. "Find it."

I stared at him.

"Ryan."

"It's in there because of you. You find it."

"I'm eight months pregnant."

"Then you should have thought about that." His voice was flat. Decided. "Get in the pool, Sydney. Don't come back inside until you find it."

Demi had gone quiet. The crying had stopped with a precision that I registered somewhere in the back of my mind, the part that was still taking notes even now. She stood in the doorway with her son and watched me with that small, patient expression — not triumphant, not cruel. Just waiting. The expression of a woman who had already won and was simply watching the last piece fall.

I looked at Ryan for a long moment.

I thought about the notebook in my nightstand. The photographs with the date and time stamps. The papers already filed. Claire's number saved in my phone. My mother's voice: *Your room is ready. It has always been ready.*

I thought about all of it.

Then I set my book down on the couch, very carefully, spine up so I wouldn't lose my page.

I pressed my palm flat against my stomach.

And I stood up.

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