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After My Wife Uncovered Her Husband's Lies Novel Cover

After My Wife Uncovered Her Husband's Lies

The Hermès bag felt heavier than usual as I climbed the stairs to our bedroom, my heart racing with anticipation. Inside were Davis's anniversary gifts—a vintage Rolex he'd admired for months and tickets to Paris I'd booked as a surprise. Three days in Seattle had felt like an eternity, and I'd cut my business trip short just to see his face light up when I walked through the door. The house was unusually quiet. Davis's car sat in the driveway, but no music drifted from his home office where he usually took calls. Maybe he was napping—he'd been working late recently, or so he'd told me during our brief phone conversations. I paused at the bedroom door, my hand on the brass handle my grandmother had insisted we install. Something felt different. The air carried an unfamiliar sweetness, a perfume that wasn't mine. My pulse quickened, but I pushed the thought away.
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Chapter 1

The Hermès bag felt heavier than usual as I climbed the stairs to our bedroom, my heart racing with anticipation. Inside were Davis's anniversary gifts—a vintage Rolex he'd admired for months and tickets to Paris I'd booked as a surprise. Three days in Seattle had felt like an eternity, and I'd cut my business trip short just to see his face light up when I walked through the door.

The house was unusually quiet. Davis's car sat in the driveway, but no music drifted from his home office where he usually took calls. Maybe he was napping—he'd been working late recently, or so he'd told me during our brief phone conversations.

I paused at the bedroom door, my hand on the brass handle my grandmother had insisted we install. Something felt different. The air carried an unfamiliar sweetness, a perfume that wasn't mine. My pulse quickened, but I pushed the thought away. Davis probably had a client meeting here earlier. He sometimes brought work home.

I turned the handle slowly, planning to surprise him if he was sleeping.

The world tilted.

Davis was there, but he wasn't alone. A woman with long auburn hair straddled him, her back arched in pleasure as she moved against my husband in our bed—the bed where I'd served him breakfast every Sunday morning, where I'd nursed him through the flu last winter, where I'd whispered my dreams of starting a family.

Time fractured. The Hermès bag slipped from my numb fingers, hitting the hardwood floor with a soft thud that might as well have been a gunshot. Neither of them heard it. They were too lost in each other, too consumed by their passion to notice the wife standing frozen in the doorway.

The woman—young, beautiful, everything I suddenly felt I wasn't—threw her head back and moaned Davis's name like a prayer. He gripped her hips with the same hands that had held mine during our wedding vows, the same hands that had promised to forsake all others.

I couldn't breathe. Couldn't think. Couldn't move.

Somehow, my legs carried me backward, away from the scene that would replay in my mind forever. I moved like a ghost through my own house, past the kitchen where I'd prepared countless meals for him, past the living room where we'd planned our future, past the photos of our wedding day that now felt like elaborate lies.

The front door closed behind me with a whisper. I found myself in my car, hands shaking so violently I could barely grip the steering wheel. My phone felt foreign in my trembling fingers as I scrolled through my contacts, past Davis's number—how could I ever call him again?—until I found the one name that had never failed me.

Taylor answered on the second ring. "Samara? I thought you weren't back until tomorrow."

His voice, warm and familiar, broke something inside me. The sob that escaped sounded like it came from someone else, someone whose world hadn't just imploded.

"Taylor," I whispered, my voice cracking. "I need... I can't... He was with someone else. In our bed."

Silence stretched between us, heavy with understanding. Then: "Where are you?"

"In my car. Outside the house. I don't know what to do."

"Don't go back inside. Meet me at Café Luna on Fifth Street. Can you drive?"

I nodded, then realized he couldn't see me. "Yes. I think so."

"I'm leaving now. Ten minutes, okay? Just breathe, Samara. Just breathe."

The drive passed in a blur of traffic lights and tears. I parked crookedly at the café, not caring about the lines or the other cars. Taylor was already there, standing beside his truck with worry etched across his face. When he saw me, his expression shifted to something fierce and protective.

I fell into his arms without thinking, and he held me as I shattered completely. His shirt absorbed my tears, his steady heartbeat anchoring me to reality when everything else felt like it was spinning away.

"I saw them," I whispered against his chest. "I saw them together, and they didn't even know I was there. How long has this been happening? How could I have been so blind?"

Taylor's arms tightened around me. "This isn't your fault. None of this is your fault."

But it felt like it was. Every expensive gift I'd bought Davis, every business trip I'd taken to build our future, every time I'd trusted his explanations for working late—it all felt like complicity in my own betrayal.

As Taylor guided me to a corner booth inside the café, ordering coffee I wouldn't drink and speaking in low, soothing tones, one thought crystallized through my grief: Davis would be coming home soon, expecting his devoted wife to greet him with dinner and questions about his day.

And I would be there, smiling and pretending, because I needed time to think. Time to plan. Time to decide what came next.

The woman who had walked into that bedroom an hour ago—trusting, generous, blindly devoted—was gone forever. Someone else was taking her place, someone harder and infinitely more dangerous.

Davis had no idea what he'd awakened.

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