Follow
Chapters
Share
Cop's Affair, Friend's Death Novel Cover

Cop's Affair, Friend's Death

The microwave chimed, and I pulled out the takeout containers, arranging the steak dinner on our nicest plates—the ones we never used. Five years with Michael, and this was our routine: me at home, him working. I'd stopped expecting roses or fancy restaurants years ago, but still, a tiny part of me had hoped this Valentine's Day might be different. I glanced at my phone—no new messages since his terse reply three hours ago: *Mandatory night shift. Don't wait up.* With a sigh, I snapped a quick photo of the meal I'd planned and texted it with: *Happy V-Day?* The message delivered, but no immediate response. Not even the typing bubbles that would indicate he'd seen it. I wrapped his portion in foil and tucked it into the fridge, where it would join the other meals he missed. The apartment felt too quiet, too empty—a feeling I'd grown accustomed to but never comfortable with. I curled up on our gray sectional, the one I'd picked out while Michael was working a double homicide last year. He'd barely noticed when it was delivered.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The microwave chimed, and I pulled out the takeout containers, arranging the steak dinner on our nicest plates—the ones we never used. Five years with Michael, and this was our routine: me at home, him working. I'd stopped expecting roses or fancy restaurants years ago, but still, a tiny part of me had hoped this Valentine's Day might be different.

I glanced at my phone—no new messages since his terse reply three hours ago: *Mandatory night shift. Don't wait up.*

With a sigh, I snapped a quick photo of the meal I'd planned and texted it with: *Happy V-Day?*

The message delivered, but no immediate response. Not even the typing bubbles that would indicate he'd seen it. I wrapped his portion in foil and tucked it into the fridge, where it would join the other meals he missed. The apartment felt too quiet, too empty—a feeling I'd grown accustomed to but never comfortable with.

I curled up on our gray sectional, the one I'd picked out while Michael was working a double homicide last year. He'd barely noticed when it was delivered. Pulling the throw blanket Sarah had given me for Christmas over my legs, I opened Instagram, seeking distraction from the hollow ache in my chest.

The algorithm knew me too well—couples' photos dominated my feed. Candlelit dinners, surprise proposals, heart-shaped desserts. I scrolled past them all with practiced indifference until my thumb froze mid-swipe.

Ashley Rivera's post had appeared in my feed—Michael's young partner from the precinct. The photo showed them at Maple & Ash, that upscale steakhouse downtown he'd always said was "overpriced and pretentious" whenever I hinted at wanting to go. Michael's arm was draped casually around Ashley's shoulders, her red dress striking against his dark suit. They were laughing, champagne flutes clinking. The caption read: "My Valentine ❤️ #ChicagoPD #ProtectAndServe #LuckyGirl"

Posted twenty-seven minutes ago.

My hands trembled as I zoomed in on the image. There was no mistaking Michael's face, the slight crinkle around his eyes when he smiled genuinely—a smile I hadn't seen directed at me in months. Behind them, I could make out the restaurant's distinctive chandeliers, the ones I'd admired in photos online when daydreaming about dining there someday.

This wasn't work. This wasn't a mandatory shift.

I hit his number on speed dial, my heart hammering against my ribs. One ring. Two rings. Three. Then voicemail: "This is Detective Thompson. Leave a message."

I called again. Straight to voicemail this time. He'd declined the call.

Swallowing hard against the knot forming in my throat, I opened my DMs and typed a message to Ashley:

*I see you're with Michael tonight. Funny, he told me he was working. Enjoy your Valentine's Day.*

I watched as the message status changed from "Sent" to "Seen" almost immediately. No reply came. Just the mocking knowledge that she'd read my words and chosen to ignore them—probably showing Michael my message while they laughed over more champagne.

The phone slipped from my fingers onto the couch as the full weight of the betrayal crashed over me. Five years. Five years of rearranged schedules, of understanding when he missed holidays, of defending him to Sarah when she pointed out how he took me for granted. Five years of putting my graphic design dreams on hold while supporting his career. Five years of believing we were building something together.

All for this—to be alone on Valentine's Day while he wined and dined his partner, their relationship brazenly displayed for anyone to see.

I curled forward, arms wrapped around my middle as if I could physically hold myself together while everything inside me crumbled. The tears came hot and fast, blurring the room around me. Through the window, Chicago's lights glittered indifferently, and somewhere in that sea of light was Michael—not working, not protecting anyone—just betraying me in plain sight.

My phone buzzed with a notification. For one pathetic moment, hope flared that it might be Michael with an explanation. Instead, it was another Instagram alert—Ashley had posted a new story. My finger hovered over it, my mind screaming not to look while my heart needed to know just how deep this betrayal went.

You may also like

After His Mistress Cost Me Our Baby, I Walked Out Novel Cover
9.1
I stood back, surveying the dining room of our Manhattan penthouse with a critical eye. The white roses—Ethan's favorite—formed perfect centerpieces, their petals catching the golden glow from the candles I'd arranged in a constellation across our glass table. Three years of marriage, and I still found myself trying to create the perfect moment, the perfect setting, as if the right ambiance might finally unlock something genuine between us. My fingers smoothed the crisp linen tablecloth, and I inhaled the aroma of my special lemon soufflé baking in the oven. Ethan had always complimented it, one of the few dishes that consistently earned more than his perfunctory nod of approval. Tonight would be different. It had to be. I touched the silver necklace at my throat—my mother's—drawing courage from its familiar weight. Three years ago, I'd walked away from a thriving career, from my name becoming synonymous with innovative jewelry design, all for the promise of what Ethan Sullivan represented: stability, certainty, a different kind of success. The kind my practical father would have finally acknowledged.
Bound by the Mafia Lord's Gilded Chains Novel Cover
7.1
One look was all it took for the Golden Wolf to mark his prey. ​To the glittering elite of Milan, Dante Moretti is a god among men, a billionaire mogul whose Midas touch turns every gold future into an empire. But beneath the bespoke Italian suits and the cold, amber eyes lies a monster. Sworn in as the new Capo of the Moretti Syndicate over his father's open casket, Dante is a man who rules with an iron grip and a heart of stone. He doesn't ask for what he wants. He takes it. ​Then he saw Bianca. ​Bianca Rossi is a creature of light, an innocent art student who finds beauty in the shadows of Milan's back alleys. She lives for her canvas and her dreams, unaware that a chance encounter in a midnight storm has placed her in the sights of the city's most dangerous predator. ​Dante doesn't just want her. He is obsessed. ​Using his billions like a silken web, Dante orchestrates a "gilded cage" for Bianca. From anonymous scholarships to lavish "chance" encounters, he draws her into a world of blood-stained gold and lethal power plays. But Bianca is no porcelain doll. Behind her soft beauty lies a fierce, indomitable spirit that refuses to be bought-or broken. ​As a brutal war with the Ricci family threatens to burn Milan to the ground, Bianca must choose: flee the man who stalks her dreams, or stand beside the Wolf and become his Queen. ​In a world where loyalty is paid in blood and love is a lethal weakness, will Dante's possessiveness be their salvation... or their ultimate destruction?
His Orchestrated Love, My Shattered Life Novel Cover
9.1
After a brutal assault cost me my fiancé, my childhood friend swooped in to save me. He married me, cherished me, and I fell in love with the perfect life he built. I thought I had finally found my happy ending. Then, pregnant with our child, I overheard him confessing to my half-sister. He had orchestrated the entire assault. He married me just to stay close to her. In the hospital, she staged an attack, claiming I tried to kill her and her unborn baby. My husband shoved me against the wall, roaring at me as he rushed to her side. "I'll kill you for this!" As I lay bleeding on the cold floor, losing my own child, not a single person looked back. I was just a necessary casualty in his game. But I had recorded her gloating confession. I faked my death and fled to my billionaire mother. He would find out the truth, and I would be the ghost that haunted him to his grave.
Husband's Mistress Kills Mom Novel Cover
8.5
The shrill ring of my phone pierced through the quiet Tuesday evening like a blade. I was folding laundry in our bedroom, Alexander's shirts crisp and white in my hands, when the sound made my heart skip. "Mrs. George?" The voice was urgent, professional. "This is St. Mary's Hospital. Your mother has been brought in by ambulance. She collapsed at home with severe breathing difficulties." The shirt slipped from my fingers, floating to the floor like a surrendering flag. "What? Is she—" "She's alive, but her condition is critical.
Justice for the Humiliated Novel Cover
7.8
The crystal chandelier cast dancing shadows across Margaret Griffin's opulent dining room as fifty of the city's elite mingled beneath its light. I stood near the mahogany sideboard, watching Harrison hold court by the fireplace, his voice carrying that familiar tone of superiority that had grated against my nerves for ten years. "Cassandra chose this necktie for me tonight," Harrison announced, his fingers plucking at the silk fabric around his throat with theatrical disgust. "Can you believe it? Navy blue with silver stripes to my mother's birthday party." The laughter that rippled through the crowd felt like ice water in my veins. Margaret Griffin, resplendent in her emerald gown and diamond tiara, shook her head with practiced disappointment. "Oh, Harrison," she sighed, loud enough for everyone to hear. "You really must start dressing yourself. Poor dear Cassandra simply doesn't understand these things." My fingers tightened around my champagne flute. The necktie was Hermès, worth more than most people's monthly salary, and it complemented his charcoal suit perfectly.
My Husband Gave Our Penthouse Key to His Ex Novel Cover
8.1
Wren Calloway didn't marry Sterling Crane for love. She married him for a deal — one that would secure the most critical merger in her family's real estate empire. All she needed was twelve months of a clean, uncomplicated marriage. Three days in, Sterling hands his "fragile" ex-girlfriend, Maisie Aldrin, the access code to their penthouse. He expects Wren to be understanding. Patient. Quiet. What Sterling doesn't realize is that Wren isn't the mild-mannered consultant he thinks she is. She's the hidden sole heir to the Calloway Trust — a billion-dollar real estate dynasty that owns the building they live in, the block it sits on, and the firm where Sterling's biggest client leases office space. Now Maisie is leaving lipstick on Wren's wine glasses, rearranging furniture in Wren's guest room, and texting Sterling with "emergencies" every night at midnight. Wren gave Sterling one chance to fix it. He chose Maisie. So Wren will dismantle everything — the penthouse, the marriage, and the career Sterling built — piece by piece. But when she starts pulling threads, she discovers Maisie isn't just a lovesick ex. She's running a con. And Sterling might not be the villain Wren thinks he is. By then, it might be too late to stop what she's already set in motion.