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After My Husband Hid His Second Family with My Best Friend Novel Cover

After My Husband Hid His Second Family with My Best Friend

Sunday morning sunlight streamed through the kitchen window, casting a warm glow across my laptop screen. I sipped my coffee, still warm, and scrolled through the annual Spotify Wrapped report that had appeared in our shared family account. Kellen and I had been listening to it together just yesterday, laughing at the algorithm's attempt to summarize our year in music. 'Look at this,' he'd said, pointing to a chart of our most-played artists. 'We really did listen to that indie band a lot, didn't we?' I smiled at the memory, my finger hovering over the trackpad. The playlist was titled simply 'For You.' I clicked on it, expecting another algorithmic compilation. Instead, I found dozens of love songs—soft, intimate tracks that spoke of stolen moments and secret promises. My breath caught. I had never heard these songs before. None of them had ever played in our home, in our car, or through our shared headphones.
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Chapter 2

Kellen set his fork down and leaned back in his chair, the way he always did when he was about to say something he considered important. The dining room smelled like the rosemary chicken I'd made from scratch — his favorite. The candles were lit. The wine was poured. Everything looked exactly the way it always had.

'The Meridian deal is basically done,' he said. 'Signing ceremony is set for the fourteenth. Manhattan. The Whitmore building.' He picked up his glass and swirled it once. 'Press will be there. Investors. The whole thing.'

'That's huge,' I said. I refilled his wine without being asked. 'How many people?'

'Two hundred, maybe more.' He smiled — that particular smile, the one that used to make me feel like I was standing in sunlight. 'This is the one, Jules. This is what we've been building toward.'

What we've been building. I held that phrase in my mouth like a stone and said nothing.

'You must be relieved,' I said instead. 'All those late nights finally paying off.'

He nodded, already somewhere else in his head — already at the podium, already shaking hands, already the man in the room everyone wanted to know. I watched him talk. I asked the right questions at the right intervals. I laughed once, softly, when he made a joke about the caterers. My hands rested in my lap beneath the table, completely still.

I had learned stillness the way you learn a language — slowly, then all at once.

After dinner, he kissed my temple and went to his office to take a call. I cleared the table. I washed the dishes by hand, the water running hot over my knuckles, and I thought about the fourteenth.

Three weeks away.

Perfect.

---

The stock acquisitions began the following Monday.

I had spent the better part of a decade watching Kellen work a room, watching him charm investors and reframe narratives and make people feel like they were the most important person in his orbit. I had learned from him. I had also learned things he never taught me — things I figured out on my own, in the years when I was the one running the numbers at two in the morning while he slept.

I knew this company's bones. I had helped lay them.

The founding documents were in a fireproof box in a storage unit in Queens — a unit registered under my maiden name, a habit I'd kept without ever examining why. IP filings. Early investment agreements. The original equity schedule, handwritten in two columns, both our signatures at the bottom. Kellen had buried these under six years of restructuring and revised histories. He had been very thorough.

Not thorough enough.

I worked through a series of intermediary accounts, each one clean, each one untraceable back to me without a level of scrutiny that no one had any reason to apply. I read every shareholder agreement the way I used to read pitch decks — straight through, no skimming, flagging every clause that mattered. I had always been better at the fine print than Kellen. He found it tedious. I found it clarifying.

The acquisitions were small at first. Incremental. The kind of movement that registers as noise in the market, not signal. I was patient. I had learned patience the hard way — lying in a hospital bed I hadn't reached yet, in a future I was still building toward.

I thought about that sometimes. The version of me that was coming. The one on the other side of all of this.

I kept going.

---

On Wednesday, Poppy and I had lunch at the Italian place on the Upper West Side that she'd always loved. She was already at the table when I arrived, her coat draped over the back of her chair, her hair loose around her shoulders. She stood up and hugged me the way she always did — both arms, her cheek against mine, a small sound of warmth.

'I've missed you,' she said.

'I've missed you too,' I said.

We ordered. She talked about a gallery opening on Friday — a photographer she liked, someone new. 'You have to come,' she said, leaning forward. 'It'll be good for you to get out. Kellen's been working you both to death lately.'

She said his name easily. Naturally. The way you say the name of someone you think about often enough that it stops feeling like a risk.

I watched her hands wrap around her water glass. I watched the small smile that came and went at the corner of her mouth when she mentioned him. I had spent ten years reading Poppy Brooks — her moods, her humor, the particular way her eyes went soft when she was genuinely moved by something. I thought I knew every register of her face.

What I understood now, sitting across from her in the pale afternoon light, was that I had only ever seen what she wanted me to see.

She was good. She was very, very good.

'I'll come,' I said. 'Friday works.'

She smiled — warm, relieved, real-looking. 'Good. We need a girls' day. I feel like I haven't had you to myself in forever.'

I smiled back. I let her pour more water into my glass. I let her tell me about the photographer, about the prints she was thinking of buying, about a restaurant she wanted to try afterward. I listened the way I always had — attentively, with small sounds of interest, my eyes on her face.

Only now I was cataloguing instead of connecting.

The way her gaze dropped a half-second too long when she mentioned Kellen's hours. The way she touched her own collarbone when she laughed. The way she asked, almost as an afterthought, whether Kellen was coming to the gallery — 'or is he still buried in that Meridian thing?' — and then looked out the window before I could answer.

Ten years. I had given her ten years of my trust, my honesty, my private fears. I had called her from the bathroom floor of a hospital when the fertility specialist told me what the damage was. I had cried into the phone while she said all the right things.

I wondered, now, whether she had been smiling.

I paid the check. We hugged goodbye on the sidewalk, and she held on a beat longer than necessary, her hand warm on my back.

'I love you,' she said. 'You know that, right?'

'I know,' I said.

I watched her walk away. The afternoon light caught her hair and made it look almost golden. She didn't look back.

I stood there for a moment, my bag over my shoulder, the city moving around me in every direction.

Then I took out my phone and sent Lakelyn a single message: *Timeline confirmed. The fourteenth.*

Her reply came in under a minute.

*Ready.*

I put the phone away and started walking.

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