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He Locked Our Sick Daughter Away for His Mistress Novel Cover

He Locked Our Sick Daughter Away for His Mistress

The Seattle winter had never felt so bitter. Outside our bedroom window, frost patterns crept like skeletal fingers across the glass while Emma's fever raged higher with each passing hour. Her small body trembled beneath three blankets on our living room sofa, her face flushed an angry red against the white pillowcase. "Daniel, please," I begged, staring at my husband's cold face on the video call. "She's burning up. The medicine isn't working. We need to take her to the hospital now." His eyes barely flickered toward me before returning to something on his desk. "Victoria, you're overreacting. It's just a cold. I'm in the middle of something important." "Important?" My voice cracked.
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Chapter 2

The sound of the Mercedes pulling into the driveway cut through me like shattered glass. I stood motionless in Emma's room, her small, lifeless body still cradled in my arms, her skin unnaturally cool against mine. My tears had dried, leaving behind a strange, crystalline clarity that had replaced the chaos of grief with something colder, more focused.

The front door opened. Keys clattered on the marble countertop.

"Victoria!" Daniel's voice rang through the house, impatient and demanding. "I'm back. Is dinner started?"

I didn't answer. Couldn't answer. My throat had closed around words that would never be adequate again.

Heavy footsteps bounded up the stairs. "Victoria! Did you hear me? Sarah and Lily are coming over in an hour. I need you to make that pasta thing Sarah likes."

He appeared in the doorway, a small gold-wrapped box of chocolates in his hand – not for his daughter, never for his daughter – but for the woman he'd chosen over us. The woman whose desires had become more important than our child's life.

His expression shifted from annoyance to confusion as he took in the scene – me, standing utterly still in our daughter's bedroom, holding her motionless body.

"What are you doing?" he asked, his tone suggesting I was engaging in some peculiar, inconvenient behavior. "Why is Emma sleeping at this hour? She'll be up all night."

"She won't be up again, Daniel." My voice sounded foreign to my own ears – flat, hollowed out. "She's gone."

He frowned, as if I'd told him something trivial, like we were out of coffee. "What do you mean, 'gone'? Put her to bed properly and come downstairs. Sarah's bringing Lily, and I told her you'd make dinner."

"Daniel," I said, each word precise and deliberate. "Emma is dead."

He stared at me blankly, then laughed – actually laughed – a short, dismissive sound. "Don't be ridiculous. She just has a fever."

"The fever you locked her in with." I looked down at our daughter's face, peaceful now, beyond suffering. "While you were out buying chocolates for your mistress, she died. Alone. Scared. Calling for her daddy."

The color drained from his face. "You're lying. This isn't funny, Victoria."

"No," I agreed. "It isn't."

He stepped forward, his movements suddenly jerky, uncoordinated. He reached out, his hand hovering inches from Emma's cheek but not quite touching her. Even now, he couldn't bring himself to connect with her.

"This can't be happening," he whispered. "We have dinner plans. Sarah's bringing Lily over. I promised them..."

"Get out," I said quietly.

"What?"

"Get out of this room. Get out of my sight. Call your girlfriend and tell her dinner is canceled because your daughter is dead."

He stumbled back as if struck. "I need to call an ambulance—"

"It's too late for that. It's been too late for hours while you were shopping for another woman."

His face contorted, not with grief, but with anger. "This is your fault! You should have called me!"

I looked at him with a detachment that frightened even me. The man I had once loved enough to give up everything for now seemed like a stranger – small, pathetic, incapable of accepting responsibility even for this.

"I tried. Seventeen times. You didn't answer."

His phone was already in his hand, not to verify my claim but to dial Sarah. "Sarah? Something's happened. You can't come over tonight." A pause. "No, it's Emma. She's... there's been an accident."

An accident. As if our daughter's death were a spilled glass of milk, an unfortunate mishap rather than the direct result of his neglect.

"I'll call you back," he said, ending the call. Then he turned to me, his expression suddenly hard, calculating. "We need to be careful about how we handle this. People will ask questions."

I stared at him, this shell of a man concerned only with appearances, with how Emma's death might reflect on him rather than the devastating reality of her loss.

"I want a divorce," I said.

The words hung in the air between us, an inevitable conclusion to a marriage that had died long before our daughter.

"Fine," he spat, surprisingly quick to agree. "But I'll fight you for custody. You're not taking my daughter."

A hysterical laugh bubbled up in my throat but died before it reached my lips. Even now, he didn't understand. Couldn't comprehend the magnitude of what had happened.

"You don't have a daughter anymore, Daniel," I whispered. "She's gone."

I turned away from him, back to Emma, gently laying her on her bed one last time, tucking her favorite bear beside her. Behind me, I heard Daniel's footsteps retreating, not toward comfort or solace, but toward his office – toward work, toward distraction, toward anything but the truth he couldn't face.

Two days later, I stood alone in the funeral home. The room was dim, the air heavy with the cloying scent of lilies. Emma's small casket, closed now, sat before me, surrounded by flowers that she would never see, never touch.

The funeral director had offered to stay, but I'd asked for privacy. These last moments with what remained of my daughter were sacred, not to be witnessed by strangers.

"Emma," I whispered, my hand resting on the polished wood. "My sweet girl."

Words failed me then, crumbling under the weight of everything left unsaid. In the silence of that room, with only the soft hum of the ventilation system as company, I made another vow – not just of vengeance, but of justice. Emma deserved that much.

The funeral director returned, dimming the lights further as a gentle signal that my time was ending. I nodded, acknowledging his presence without turning.

"Goodbye, sweetheart," I murmured, pressing my lips to the cool surface of the casket. "Mommy loves you."

Back at the house that no longer felt like home, I wandered into Emma's nursery. Everything remained exactly as it had been – her toys neatly arranged, books stacked on shelves, the rocking chair where I'd spent countless nights soothing her to sleep.

On her bed lay her favorite stuffed bear, worn from years of hugs and tears and adventures. Beside it sat the thermos I'd filled with soup the day she died, still sealed, forever untouched. A testament to opportunities lost, care denied.

I picked up the bear, pressing it to my face, inhaling the lingering scent of my daughter – baby shampoo and that indefinable sweetness that was uniquely Emma. Tears came then, silent and relentless, soaking into the bear's soft fur.

But as I cried, something hardened within me. Daniel had done this. His cruelty, his selfishness, his affair – they had all contributed to the perfect storm that took my daughter. And he would answer for it.

I straightened, still clutching the bear, and looked around the room one last time. This chapter of my life was ending. But another – colder, more calculated – was about to begin.

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