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He Apologized to the Woman Who Burned Me Novel Cover

He Apologized to the Woman Who Burned Me

Lena waits three years for the heirloom sapphire her billionaire husband Adrian commissioned for their anniversary. The morning they go to collect it, a woman in red nails throws scalding coffee across her chest and Adrian apologizes to the stranger first. By nightfall Lena learns the sapphire was never hers. By the end of the week she learns the woman has been living in their guest penthouse for two years, that the prenup Lena signed has a clause she never read, and that her own ICU nurse credentials have been quietly deactivated at the hospital Adrian's family funds. Lena stops crying. She starts copying files. The husband who chose a stranger over a coffee burn is about to learn what his wife was before she became his wife — and what she kept in a safety deposit box he never knew existed.
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Chapter 2

The overhead lights flickered on.

I stood in the center of Daniel's home office. For twelve years, I had viewed this room as a sanctuary. A place of serious legal work.

Now, the mahogany walls looked like a theater set.

"What else did you hide, Danny?" I asked the empty room.

My eyes tracked across the space. The bottom-right desk drawer featured a heavy brass lock. A shadow pooled behind the tall steel file cabinet, hiding a narrow gap against the baseboard.

Then I looked at the wall.

The "Family Law Attorney of the Year" plaque hung slightly crooked. The bottom left corner dipped a quarter-inch lower than the right. Daniel hated asymmetry. He routinely adjusted the picture frames in our hallway if a guest bumped them.

He would never leave this plaque crooked unless he touched it frequently.

I walked over and slid my fingers behind the wooden frame.

Cold plastic met my skin.

I pulled it out. A cheap, black candy-bar phone.

"You buy a prepaid burner phone," I said out loud, repeating his exact words from the livestream. "Keep it in your golf bag in the garage. Or behind your favorite award."

I pressed the power button. The screen glowed white.

Enter passcode.

I almost laughed. Of course there was a passcode. Daniel was many things, but he wasn't sloppy with the things he intended to keep.

I stared at the four empty boxes.

His mother's birthday. The one date he made me memorize before I met her, because she would test me. The one date he never wrote down anywhere because grief had carved it into him.

Zero, three, one, nine.

The screen unlocked.

I tapped the messaging icon. Four threads populated the screen.

Chloe.

Sasha.

Elena.

Rachel.

I selected the thread labeled Chloe and scrolled all the way to the top. The date stamped on the very first message read August 14th.

Three months before I put on a white dress and walked down the aisle.

"Twelve years," I whispered.

My hand trembled, just once. I pressed it flat against the desk until it stopped.

I didn't open any of the messages. I didn't need to know what he had said to her. I held the power and volume buttons simultaneously.

Snap.

The screen flashed. I captured the inbox list. I moved to Sasha. Area code 305. Miami.

Snap.

Elena. Area code 212. New York.

Snap.

Rachel. Area code 702. Las Vegas.

Snap.

I locked the screen, slid the phone back behind the plaque, and adjusted the wooden frame until it hung perfectly level.

"Where do you actually go?" I asked the heavy oak desk.

I gripped the handle of the top drawer. It slid open without resistance.

Inside, a thick stack of paper receipts sat bound by a rubber band. I slipped the band off and fanned them out across the leather blotter.

"The Grand Hotel," I read the faded ink. "The Plaza Suites. The Crown Inn."

Every single slip showed a cash transaction.

Every single address belonged to a building on 4th Street or Elm Avenue.

"Two blocks away," I said. "You don't even leave the neighborhood."

I checked the dates. October 12th. March 4th. July 18th.

"Boston jury selection," I recited, remembering his endless excuses. "Chicago depositions. Dallas client meetings."

They matched every weekend he packed his leather duffel bag over the past decade.

I stacked the receipts, wrapped the rubber band around them, and placed them exactly where I had found them.

I crouched down and gripped the handle of the bottom-right drawer. The brass lock held firm.

"Client confidentiality," I mocked his old warning. "A federal offense if I see the wrong document."

I pulled a second small brass key from my pocket, inserted it, and turned.

The drawer glided open.

A single manila file envelope rested at the bottom. The flap was glued shut. A thick patch of red wax sealed the edge. Daniel's private notary embosser stamped a rigid crest into the center of the wax.

"You really don't want me seeing this."

If I ripped the paper, he would know.

A weird sensation bubbled up in my chest. My lips stretched upward. A genuine, bright smile broke across my face.

I wasn't crying. I wasn't screaming.

"I'm going to ruin you," I told the envelope.

I pressed my thumbnail into the far right edge of the red wax. I dragged the sharp edge of my nail down, carving a microscopic scratch into the surface. Invisible to a casual glance. Unmistakable to me.

I placed the envelope back in the drawer. I turned the key, locking it tight.

A sharp buzzing sound echoed down the hallway.

I left the office. I pulled the heavy oak door shut and locked the deadbolt.

I walked back into the living room. My iPhone vibrated against the glass coffee table, dancing across the surface.

I picked it up.

Incoming Call: Daniel.

Behind the flashing caller ID, the paused video of his yacht stream sat frozen in my photo gallery. The young girl's hand rested on his chest. His aviator sunglasses reflected the ocean.

I stared at his name. I let the phone vibrate until the screen went dark.

A tiny icon appeared at the top. New Voicemail.

I tapped the screen and hit the speaker button.

"Maggie, pick up if you're there," Daniel's voice filled the living room.

"I'm here, Danny," I replied to the empty house.

"Guess you're asleep," the recording continued, his tone shifting into a convincing imitation of exhaustion. "Or getting your pill bottles lined up."

"Not yet."

"Listen, I just got back to the hotel. Boston is freezing right now."

I swiped down and pressed play on the yacht video.

"You're so bad, Danny," the girl's voice chimed in from the video.

I paused the video.

"It's sleeting outside," Daniel's voicemail continued. "The wind chill is brutal."

I spoke out loud. "Did you bring a jacket?"

"We spent nine hours in the courthouse. Judge Gallagher is busting my balls on this corporate merger case. I haven't sat down all day."

"Gallagher," I repeated. "Good to know."

I pressed play on the video again.

"Just put the champagne on the Visa ending in 4092," Daniel's recorded voice said to the yacht crew.

I paused it again.

"I'm heading down to the Marriott lobby to grab a drink with co-counsel, then passing out," the voicemail finished. "I'll call you tomorrow. Love you."

The line clicked and went silent.

"No, you don't," I told the phone.

I tapped the details of the audio file. I deleted the default text that read Voicemail_1.

I typed a new name: Wednesday_October14_Boston_Claimed.

I created a new master folder in my cloud storage. I named it Evidence. I dropped the recorded livestream, the burner phone screenshots, and the voicemail into it.

He had just started my file with his own voice.

I set the phone down. The screen lit up again.

A text message popped onto the lock screen from a number I didn't recognize.

He's lying to you, Margaret. Look at the livestream video again. Look at the girl's neck.

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