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How I caught my man cheating on me Novel Cover

How I caught my man cheating on me

He was the most devoted husband she'd ever seen. He was also raising a secret son. Claire's husband texted "drive safe" every morning, learned guitar just because she mentioned it once, and ran into a burning building rather than lose her. Then she smelled the wrong cologne. One thread pulled, and everything unraveled — a second home, another woman, a little boy older than their marriage, conceived while Claire sat at her dying mother's bedside. When Daniel finally confessed, he said the most devastating thing she'd ever heard: "I loved you too much to let my darkness touch you. So I kept it somewhere else." She didn't scream. She didn't cry. She made a plan. Because the cruelest betrayals don't come from men who stopped loving you. They come from men who never did it right.
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Chapter 1

I love my husband. And our marriage is more than good.

It's the kind of love that makes your friends roll their eyes. The kind where he still texts me "drive safe" every single morning, three years in. The kind where he rushes home from billion-dollar meetings just to eat dinner with me, even if it means bringing a stack of contracts to finish at midnight.

That's one of his few flaws, actually. He brings work home. Not because he's a workaholic—because he can't stand being away from me.

It's midnight now. He's still in his study, and the light leaking under the door tells me he's deep in some deal that could probably wait until morning. But that's Daniel. He doesn't do "wait until morning."

So I decided to remind him it's bedtime. His favorite way.

I slip into the black lace thing. The one that barely covers anything. The one that makes him forget his own name every single time.

I open his study door.

"Bedtime, baby."

I wrap my arms around his neck from behind, pressing my lips to the spot just below his ear. The spot that always makes him groan.

But something is off.

My nose catches it before my brain does. I lean in closer, breathing him in.

He smells different.

Not bad. Just... not him. Not the warm cedar and bergamot I've memorized over the last decade of loving this man. There's something else there. Something floral. Something sweet. Something that doesn't belong.

He changed his cologne.

And Daniel Ashford never changes his cologne. Not without telling me first. Not when he knows a single wrong ingredient could send me into an allergic spiral.

"Babe?" His hand reaches up to cover mine. "You okay? You're shaking."

Am I?

"I'm fine," I say. "Just cold."

He turns in his chair. His eyes are the same—warm, steady, focused on me like I'm the only thing in the room worth looking at. He pulls me onto his lap and wraps both arms around me, kissing my forehead.

"Let me finish this one page," he murmurs against my hair. "Then I'm all yours."

All mine.

I press my face into his neck and breathe in again.

That smell. That's wrong, wrong smell.

It clings to my throat like smoke.

I'm Claire Ashford.

Virgo. Detail-oriented to a fault. The kind of person who notices when you rearrange three books on a shelf or switch to a different brand of toothpaste.

Back in college, I was the one who could tell which of our classmates were hooking up before they even knew it themselves. A lingering glance in the dining hall. Matching hickeys on a Monday. The way someone's voice goes soft when they say a particular name. I caught it all.

INVOLUNTARILY. Let me be clear about that. I didn't go looking for people's dirty laundry. It just fell into my lap like a cat that won't leave you alone.

My best friend Katy used to make me vet all her celebrity ship predictions. She'd shove her phone in my face—"Are these two actually together or is it PR?"—and I'd study their body language for exactly four seconds before delivering my verdict.

Accuracy rate: one hundred percent. Not bragging. Just stating facts.

So when I tell you something felt wrong that night, you should probably listen.

* * *

The next morning, I Skyped Katy.

She was in her kitchen, hair piled on top of her head, eating cereal straight from the box. The picture of a woman who was absolutely not going to validate my paranoia.

"He changed his cologne, Katy."

She chewed slowly. "And?"

"And that's weird. Daniel doesn't just change his cologne. I have allergies. He knows that. He's known that since we were eighteen."

"Okay, so," she said, ticking off possibilities on her fingers. "One—maybe he's testing a new product from his company. Two—maybe the dry cleaner switched fabric softener. Three—maybe he walked past a Sephora and some sales girl sprayed him. This is not a crisis, Claire."

I was quiet.

She put down the cereal box. Her face shifted from amused to serious.

"Claire. Daniel comes straight home from work every single day. He doesn't go to bars. He doesn't go to happy hours. He doesn't even go to the gym anymore because he'd rather work out in your home gym so he can be near you. Everyone—and I mean everyone—knows that you are his entire world. If it weren't for you, that man would be a monk. Or a machine. Probably both."

She wasn't wrong. That was the thing. She wasn't wrong.

"And didn't he literally run into a burning building for you?" Katy leaned closer to the camera. "Claire bear. You're not actually suspicious, are you?"

"I just—" I fumbled. "Daniel never tests new products from the company. He specifically avoids it because of my allergies. He's done that for years. It's not something he'd forget."

Right on cue, Daniel's voicemail started playing through the Bluetooth speaker on my nightstand. I'd missed a call from him while I was spiraling.

"Hey babe. I booked you a session with that massage therapist you love—the one on Wilshire. Last night was... you know... I went a little hard, and I figured you'd be sore today. Your appointment's at four. Take a nap first, okay? Love ya, babe."

His voice was warm. Easy. I could picture him saying it—one hand on the steering wheel, smiling that half-smile, sun catching his jaw.

Katy made a dramatic gagging face. "That's the so-called cold-blooded business monster? If you played that voicemail on the internet, people would swear it's AI-generated. Nobody is that sweet."

She had a point. And she said it for a reason.

When Daniel took over my mother's company after we got married, he turned it into a powerhouse. Tripled the revenue in two years. His name started showing up in Forbes, Bloomberg, the Wall Street Journal. They called him things like "the youngest shark in luxury" and "Silicon Beach's coldest closer."

But the thing that really made him famous? The thing that got more clicks than any earnings report?

How much he loved his wife.

We'd been together since high school. Married three years. And he still looked at me like he was seeing me for the first time. Every. Single. Day.

Other CEOs had trophy wives and NDAs and side pieces tucked into penthouses in different zip codes. Daniel had me. Just me. He remembered every little preference I'd ever mentioned. He planned something special for every anniversary—not just the big ones, but the monthly ones too. He even tracked my cycle and put painkillers in my nightstand drawer the day before my period was due.

And I did the same for him. That's how we were. Two people who paid attention to each other. Obsessively, maybe. But it worked.

* * *

There was this one time, early on, when we had a huge fight. He was being overprotective—telling me I couldn't go to some party, tracking my location, the whole thing. I got so mad I stormed out and ended up at a dive bar in Venice, drinking cheap whiskey and talking to the guitarist in the house band.

I told the guy I thought guitar was cool. That was it. Just—"Guitar's cool."

Daniel showed up at three a.m. He'd been driving around looking for me all night. When he found me, he didn't yell. He just pulled me into his arms so tight I could barely breathe, and whispered, "I'm sorry. I'm so sorry."

Three days later, he hired a guitar teacher. Started from scratch—couldn't even hold a pick right. Practiced until his fingers bled.

And when he could finally play one song all the way through, he sat me down in our living room, played "Stand by Me," then got on one knee.

"You said guys who play guitar are cool," he said, grinning like an idiot. "Am I cool now? Do you love me a little more? Because I need you to stand by me. For the rest of our lives. Please."

I said yes before he even finished the sentence.

* * *

And then there was the fire.

Last summer. We took Lucky—our golden retriever, our baby—to our vacation house in Carmel. Lightning hit the roof, and the whole place went up. I happened to be at the neighbor's pool, so I was safe. Lucky was inside.

Daniel didn't know about that. He ran in.

He ran into a burning house to find me.

I was screaming his name from the yard, and when he finally stumbled out—coughing, face black with soot—he heard me and spun around. Relief flooded his face for exactly one second before he realized Lucky was still inside.

He turned around and ran back in.

He came out with Lucky in his arms, both of them shaking, Daniel's arms blistered and bleeding from the flames. The scars healed mostly, but there's still a faint ridge on his left forearm. Every time I see it, my chest tightens with guilt.

"Don't," he always says when he catches me staring at it. "This is my badge of honor. Husband and Lucky's dad. Sacred duty."

* * *

So yeah. I was sure Daniel loved me. I loved him. Lucky loved us both. We were a happy little family.

Then why couldn't I stop thinking about that cologne?

Why did it sit in my chest like a stone I couldn't swallow?

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