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When My Husband’s Mistress Planted Diamonds in My Mother’s Bag Novel Cover

When My Husband’s Mistress Planted Diamonds in My Mother’s Bag

The private elevator hummed a flawless, barely audible G-note as it climbed seventy floors above Manhattan. I stood in the mirrored cab, smoothing the damp front of my trench coat, trying to shake off the chill of the October rain. In my pocket, my fingers traced the sharp edges of a velvet box. Inside rested a vintage 1960s Patek Philippe. It was a deliberate echo. A decade ago, I had worked back-to-back diner shifts in Seattle, ignoring the blisters bleeding into my cheap shoes, to buy Diego a five-hundred-dollar watch when he closed his first, desperate seed-round deal. We had celebrated in a freezing studio apartment, sharing a single bowl of instant ramen. He had held me that night as if I were the only solid thing in a collapsing world. Tonight was our third wedding anniversary. Diego Ford was now a billionaire CEO, and the man waiting for me in the penthouse felt like a stranger.
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Chapter 1

The private elevator hummed a flawless, barely audible G-note as it climbed seventy floors above Manhattan. I stood in the mirrored cab, smoothing the damp front of my trench coat, trying to shake off the chill of the October rain. In my pocket, my fingers traced the sharp edges of a velvet box. Inside rested a vintage 1960s Patek Philippe.

It was a deliberate echo. A decade ago, I had worked back-to-back diner shifts in Seattle, ignoring the blisters bleeding into my cheap shoes, to buy Diego a five-hundred-dollar watch when he closed his first, desperate seed-round deal. We had celebrated in a freezing studio apartment, sharing a single bowl of instant ramen. He had held me that night as if I were the only solid thing in a collapsing world.

Tonight was our third wedding anniversary. Diego Ford was now a billionaire CEO, and the man waiting for me in the penthouse felt like a stranger. I told myself the watch would bridge the chasm that had opened between us. I told myself the distance was just the stress of his new empire.

The elevator doors parted with a soft chime.

The penthouse was dim, illuminated mostly by the sprawling, indifferent grid of city lights bleeding through the floor-to-ceiling glass. I slipped my heels off at the door, the cold marble biting through my stockings.

Then, I heard the murmur.

It was a soft, breathless sound floating from the sunken living room. I stepped forward, the velvet box heavy in my palm. The scent hit me before the visual did—peony and crushed vanilla. It wasn’t my perfume. It was Blair Watson’s.

I rounded the corner of the hallway and stopped. The air in my lungs simply vanished.

Diego stood silhouetted against the glittering skyline. Blair was pressed against him. Her blonde hair rested in the crook of his neck, her face buried in the lapel of his tailored suit. But it wasn’t her clinging that paralyzed me. It was his response. Diego’s large hand—the same hand I used to grip on the subway when he was too anxious to speak—was slowly, rhythmically tracing the curve of Blair’s silk-clad back. There was a profound, unmistakable familiarity in the gesture. A practiced intimacy.

The velvet box bit into the meat of my palm until my knuckles went white. A sharp, physical ringing started in my ears.

Diego shifted, his dark eyes catching my reflection in the glass.

He didn’t flinch. He didn’t push her away. He merely let his hand drop from her spine, his jaw setting as his expression hardened into the weary irritation of a man interrupted by a subordinate.

"You’re home early," he said. His voice was perfectly level, devoid of a single tremor of guilt.

"It's our anniversary," I said. My voice sounded hollow, stripped of the warmth I had carried up those seventy floors.

Blair turned. Her eyes widened, her lips parting in a masterclass of manufactured distress. "Oh, Kamila. Please don't misunderstand. I received some terrible news about my family’s estate, and Diego was only comforting me." She took a half-step back, her manicured fingers brushing Diego’s sleeve as if she were reluctant to sever the connection.

"Comforting," I repeated, my gaze locked entirely on my husband.

Diego’s shoulders squared. "Don't do this, Kamila. Don't ruin tonight with one of your crude overreactions. Blair is going through a crisis. Not everything revolves around your insecurities."

*Crude.*

The word was a precision strike. It was his favorite weapon lately, a subtle, cutting reminder of my working-class roots. A reminder of the food truck I grew up in, of the lack of elite pedigree that separated me from women like Blair.

"My crude overreactions," I echoed softly.

The fiery indignation that usually rushed to my defense when he belittled me didn't come. Instead, an absolute, freezing clarity washed over my skin. I looked at the man standing before me. The bespoke suit, the arrogant tilt of his chin, the protective way he angled his body to shield his childhood sweetheart from his own wife.

The boy who had once held me in a snowstorm, swearing I was his entire world, wasn't just lost. He was dead.

"Diego, I should go," Blair whispered, her voice trembling perfectly. "I don't want to cause trouble for you."

"You're not causing trouble, Blair," Diego said, his tone softening in a way it hadn't for me in over a year. He shot me a warning glare. "Kamila is just going to take a breath and act like an adult."

I didn't scream. I didn't demand an apology. The death of a decade-long love doesn't happen with an explosion; it happens with a quiet, irreversible click.

I walked slowly to the glass coffee table. The silence in the room was absolute, save for the rain now lashing violently against the windows. I pulled the velvet box from my pocket and set it down on the glass. The heavy *thud* echoed in the cavernous space.

"What is that?" Diego asked, a flicker of unease finally piercing his polished armor.

"A souvenir," I said.

I turned my back on them. I didn't look over my shoulder as I walked back to the elevator. I didn't wait to see if he would follow. As the doors slid shut, cutting off the sight of my husband and his mistress, I pulled out my phone and booked a room at a hotel downtown.

The devoted wife who had sacrificed her youth to build a billionaire was gone. The woman who remained had a quiet, brutal amount of work to do.

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