
Daughter's Death, Husband's Betrayal
Chapter 3
I stared at the cheap ballet costume crumpled on the floor, my mind strangely clear despite the fog of grief. Robert had disappeared into our bedroom after my lie about speaking to the police. His first concern hadn't been our daughter's death—it had been self-preservation.
In that moment, something shifted inside me. The Michelle who had believed in her husband for twenty years died alongside Nicole.
I waited until Robert fell into a restless sleep before slipping out of bed. His snores, once familiar and comforting, now sounded like the growls of a stranger. I moved silently to his desk in the corner of our cramped living room, the same desk where he'd claimed to work late into the night on his struggling business.
The top drawer was locked—it had always been locked. For years, I'd respected his privacy. Tonight, I took a bobby pin from my hair and worked it into the cheap lock until I heard a click.
Inside were stacks of papers, neatly organized. Not business documents, but bank statements. Credit card bills. And one—tucked beneath the others—from a bank I'd never heard of. The charges were all from Manhattan restaurants with names I couldn't pronounce, boutiques I'd never set foot in.
I took a photo of the statement with my phone, then carefully replaced everything exactly as I'd found it. My hands didn't shake. My breath remained steady. I felt nothing but a cold, calculating focus.
The next morning, I waited until Robert left for what he called a "business meeting" before making the call. I sat at our kitchen table, Nicole's urn within arm's reach.
"Hello, I'm calling about my husband's account," I said, adopting a breezy, confident tone I'd never used before. "This is Amanda Walsh."
The name of the woman I'd seen with Robert at the hotel. The name I'd found on those statements.
"Of course, Mrs. Walsh. What can I help you with today?"
"I need copies of our statements for the past year. Tax purposes, you know how it is." I laughed lightly. "My husband handles the finances, but our accountant needs everything."
"No problem. I can email those to the address on file."
"Actually, could you send them to my personal email? Robert gets so overwhelmed with work emails." I gave them my address, holding my breath.
"Certainly, Mrs. Walsh. Is there anything else?"
Within an hour, my inbox filled with evidence of a life I hadn't known existed. Charges from Michelin-starred restaurants. Weekend stays at luxury hotels. First-class flights to tropical destinations. Designer clothing stores. All while Nicole and I worked multiple jobs, skipped meals, and lived in our run-down apartment with its perpetually leaking ceiling.
I printed everything at the library down the street. Back home, I spread the papers across our kitchen table, arranging them in chronological order. Twenty years of deception laid bare under the flickering fluorescent light.
But it wasn't just statements. There were photos too—attached to email confirmations for hotel stays and restaurant reservations. Robert and Amanda dining at a rooftop restaurant overlooking Central Park. Robert and Amanda on a beach, cocktails in hand. Robert and Amanda and a teenage boy—Leo—all smiling, all wearing clothes that cost more than our monthly rent.
I sat there for hours, methodically copying everything, creating a digital record of every betrayal. Then I began searching online for Amanda Walsh. Her social media accounts were public—why hide when your secret family doesn't know you exist?
There she was, posting photos of designer handbags with captions like "Another gift from my love." Pictures of Leo in front of expensive cars. Vacation snapshots from places I'd only seen in magazines.
All paid for with money that should have fed our daughter. Money that might have kept Nicole in ballet school instead of that club. Money that might have saved her life.
I touched the cold surface of Nicole's urn, my fingers tracing the simple engraving of her name.
"I see it all now, baby," I whispered. "Every lie. Every theft."
The front door rattled—Robert returning. I quickly gathered the papers, shoving them into a folder that I slipped beneath the couch cushion. As his key turned in the lock, I realized something that should have terrified me but instead filled me with an icy resolve.
I was living with the man who had killed our daughter just as surely as if he'd wielded the weapon himself.
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