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After My Husband Tried to Kill Me for Her Novel Cover

After My Husband Tried to Kill Me for Her

The grandfather clock in the foyer strikes seven, each chime a hammer blow to my chest. Three years. Three years ago today, I stood in a church filled with white roses and believed I'd found forever. I adjust the camera settings one more time, checking the aperture for the hundredth time. The dining room table gleams under candlelight—I spent two hours polishing it until I could see my reflection. The roasted duck sits perfectly plated, its skin crackling and golden. Everything is perfect. Everything has to be perfect. The front door opens. My heart leaps.
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Chapter 1

The grandfather clock in the foyer strikes seven, each chime a hammer blow to my chest. Three years. Three years ago today, I stood in a church filled with white roses and believed I'd found forever.

I adjust the camera settings one more time, checking the aperture for the hundredth time. The dining room table gleams under candlelight—I spent two hours polishing it until I could see my reflection. The roasted duck sits perfectly plated, its skin crackling and golden. Everything is perfect. Everything has to be perfect.

The front door opens. My heart leaps.

"Isaac?" I smooth down my red dress—the one he bought me in Paris—and move toward the foyer. "Dinner's ready, I made your favorite—"

I freeze.

Isaac stands in the doorway, but he's not alone. A woman glides in beside him, all porcelain skin and cascading dark hair, wearing a cream cashmere coat that probably costs more than my entire wardrobe. She carries a child on her hip—a boy, maybe two years old, with Isaac's unmistakable gray eyes.

The room tilts. I grip the doorframe.

"Ivy." Isaac's voice is flat, businesslike. The voice he uses with his attorneys. "This is Angelique Griffin. And this is Ethan."

Angelique's smile doesn't reach her eyes. "How lovely to finally meet you." Her gaze sweeps over me, lingering on my dress, my bare feet, the apron I forgot to remove. Something cold flickers across her face—triumph, maybe. Or contempt.

The child squirms, and she sets him down. He immediately toddles toward the living room, grabbing at the curtains with sticky fingers.

"I don't understand." My voice sounds distant, like it's coming from underwater. "Isaac, what's happening?"

He doesn't look at me. Instead, he carries in two suitcases—expensive leather, monogrammed with initials that aren't mine. "Angelique and Ethan will be staying here. Indefinitely."

"Staying here? In our home?" The words scrape out of my throat.

"I need to be present for my son." He sets the suitcases down with a decisive thud. "We'll be maintaining separate living arrangements. You and I. I need space to co-parent and sort out my feelings."

Separate living arrangements. The phrase detonates in my skull. "It's our anniversary."

Finally, he looks at me. His eyes are stranger's eyes—cold, distant, already gone. "I'm aware of the date, Ivy."

Angelique drifts past me into the dining room. "Oh, how charming. You cooked." She trails one manicured finger across the table, then wrinkles her nose. "Ethan has severe allergies. We'll need to discuss dietary restrictions."

She picks up my grandmother's crystal wine glass—the ones I inherited, the ones I only use for special occasions—and examines it against the light. "These are rather dated, aren't they?"

Something inside me fractures.

The next morning, I wake to the sound of shattering glass.

I stumble downstairs in my nightgown to find Angelique in the kitchen, systematically emptying cabinets. The housekeeper, Maria, stands by the door with her coat on, her face carefully blank.

"What's going on?"

Angelique doesn't turn around. "I've dismissed the staff. All of them. A child needs consistency, not strangers parading through his home."

"You can't just—"

"I can, actually." She finally faces me, her smile sharp as a scalpel. "Isaac agrees it's best. Besides, you'll have plenty to keep you occupied." She gestures at the mountain of dishes in the sink, the flour spilled across the counter, the sticky handprints covering every surface. "Ethan is quite active."

My phone buzzes. A text from Isaac: *Let Angelique handle household decisions. I'm in meetings all day.*

The next week blurs into a nightmare of scrubbing floors and washing endless loads of laundry. My knees ache from kneeling on tile. My hands crack and bleed from bleach. Angelique watches from the sofa, sipping tea, occasionally calling out instructions like I'm hired help.

When I try to buy groceries, my card declines. Then my credit card. Then the emergency card Isaac gave me "just in case."

The cashier's pitying look burns into my retinas.

I call Isaac seventeen times. He answers on the eighteenth.

"My cards aren't working."

"I've consolidated our accounts." His voice is muffled, distracted. "For simplicity. Angelique will manage the household budget."

"You froze my access to our money?"

"It's not like that, Ivy. Don't be dramatic."

The line goes dead.

That night, I'm carrying a vase of fresh flowers—trying to bring some beauty into this hell—when exhaustion makes me stumble. The vase slips. Crashes. Water and glass explode across the marble.

Angelique appears in the doorway, Ethan on her hip. Her face drains of color. She staggers backward, clutching her chest, gasping for air.

"I—I can't breathe—the stress—"

Isaac thunders down the stairs. "What did you do?"

"It was an accident, I just—"

He doesn't let me finish. His hand closes around my upper arm, fingers digging in hard enough to bruise. He drags me up the stairs, down the hallway, past our bedroom—past the room that was ours—to a cramped guest room at the end of the hall.

He throws open the door. The room is barely larger than a closet, with a single bed and a window that overlooks the garbage bins.

"You can't follow simple rules? You want to upset Angelique and put stress on my son?" He starts grabbing my things from our bedroom—my clothes, my books, my camera equipment—and hurling them onto the narrow bed. "Fine. You'll stay here until you learn some respect."

"Isaac, please—"

"This is your fault, Ivy. All of it." He slams the door.

I sink onto the bed, surrounded by the wreckage of my belongings, and stare at the window. Beyond the glass, the night sky is starless and black.

My phone lies on the floor where it fell. The screen shows our wedding photo—Isaac kissing me under an arch of roses, both of us laughing, both of us whole.

I don't remember who that girl was.

I don't remember how to be her anymore.

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