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After Wife Uncovers Husband's Secret Affair Novel Cover

After Wife Uncovers Husband's Secret Affair

I dragged myself through the front door of our suburban home, my body aching from a fourteen-hour shift at the hospital. The antiseptic smell still clung to my scrubs as I dropped my bag by the entryway table. All I wanted was a hot shower and my bed—maybe a glass of wine if I could manage to stay awake long enough to pour it. The garage light was still on. Strange. Bradley usually turned it off after his morning commute. "Bradley?" I called out, receiving no answer. He must be upstairs in his study again, lost in his academic papers. I headed toward the garage, intending to turn off the light and check on my mountain bike. I'd been planning a weekend ride to clear my head after the stress of losing a patient earlier that week.
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Chapter 1

I dragged myself through the front door of our suburban home, my body aching from a fourteen-hour shift at the hospital. The antiseptic smell still clung to my scrubs as I dropped my bag by the entryway table. All I wanted was a hot shower and my bed—maybe a glass of wine if I could manage to stay awake long enough to pour it.

The garage light was still on. Strange. Bradley usually turned it off after his morning commute.

"Bradley?" I called out, receiving no answer. He must be upstairs in his study again, lost in his academic papers.

I headed toward the garage, intending to turn off the light and check on my mountain bike. I'd been planning a weekend ride to clear my head after the stress of losing a patient earlier that week. Cycling had always been my escape—the wind in my hair, the burn in my legs, the freedom of the open trail.

But when I pushed open the door connecting to the garage, I froze.

"My bike," I whispered, staring at the empty space where my sleek black mountain bike should have been.

I moved quickly to the spot, as if my eyes were playing tricks on me. But the dust pattern on the concrete floor confirmed it—my bike was gone. The bike I'd saved for months to buy after my residency. The bike that had carried me through countless miles of therapy after losing our baby.

"Looking for something?" Bradley's voice came from behind me.

I turned to see him standing in the doorway, his tall frame silhouetted against the light from the kitchen. His arms were crossed over his chest, his expression unreadable.

"My bike is missing," I said, my voice tight. "Did you move it?"

Bradley shrugged, stepping into the garage and flipping the light switch off as if nothing was wrong. "Oh, that. I let Evie borrow it."

"Evie?" The name hit me like a physical blow. "Your graduate student?"

"Yeah." He brushed past me toward the house. "She needed transportation to get to her data collection site. It was last minute."

I followed him into the kitchen, my mind racing. "And you didn't think to ask me first? That's my personal bike, Bradley."

He sighed dramatically, as if I were being unreasonable. "Isabella, it was an emergency. Her car broke down, and she was going to miss her deadline. What was I supposed to do?"

"You were supposed to ask me," I said, my voice rising slightly. "That bike is important to me. You know what it means to me."

Bradley rolled his eyes, reaching for an apple from the fruit bowl. "It's just a bike, Isabella. Don't be so dramatic."

I bit my tongue, but inside I was seething. Just a bike? That bike had been my salvation during the darkest period of my life—after losing our baby and learning I could never have children again. The bike he'd watched me ride countless miles on when I couldn't bear to be in our childless home.

"I'll get it back tomorrow," he added dismissively, crunching into his apple. "She promised to return it clean."

I noticed something then—a smudge of dirt on the floor leading from the garage to where he stood. I moved closer, examining it.

"The seat was adjusted," I said quietly, more to myself than to him. "And there are different tire tracks in the driveway."

Bradley's expression flickered—just for a second—before returning to its neutral state. "She's shorter than you. Of course she adjusted the seat."

I nodded slowly, but something felt wrong. The casual way he'd mentioned Evie's name, the dismissal of my concerns, the dirt he'd tracked in...

"I'm going to take a shower," I said finally, turning away from him.

In our bedroom, I stood under the hot water, letting it wash over me as my mind worked through what had happened. My bike. My personal space. Violated.

After drying off, I moved silently through our darkened house. Bradley had already gone to bed. I slipped into the garage and found my bike had been returned—propped against the wall, seat adjusted to a height that confirmed my suspicions about who had ridden it.

I ran my fingers over the leather seat, feeling the indentation of someone else's body where mine should be the only one.

With surgical precision, I reached for my medical bag hanging in the garage and extracted several thin needles. The kind used for minor procedures. The kind that could cause significant discomfort if positioned correctly.

I inserted them carefully into the seat cushion—not deep enough to cause serious injury, but enough to ensure that whoever sat on it next would feel a sharp reminder that some things weren't meant to be shared.

As I finished, I heard a noise from the house. Footsteps approaching.

Quickly, I slipped the needles back into my bag and moved away from the bike, my heart pounding with a strange mixture of guilt and satisfaction.

What was I doing? And why did it feel so right?

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