
Husband Chooses Mistress Over Daughter
Chapter 2
The key felt unnaturally heavy in my hand as I unlocked the door to our penthouse. Our home. No—just a place now. A beautiful, hollow shell that had witnessed six years of my silent suffering and now would bear witness to the aftermath of my shattered world.
The silence hit me first. That peculiar, suffocating silence that only exists in spaces where a child once filled every corner with life and laughter. I stood in the foyer, my body still moving through the mechanical motions of living—hanging up my coat, setting down my purse—while my mind remained trapped in that sterile hospital room, cradling my daughter's cooling body.
My footsteps echoed against the marble floors as I moved through the living room. Everything looked exactly as it had yesterday morning—Lily's coloring books still scattered on the coffee table, her small pink cup with traces of juice still on the kitchen counter. The world had ended, yet nothing had changed.
I found myself at her bedroom door before I realized where my feet were taking me. My hand trembled on the doorknob, and for a moment, I couldn't breathe. Opening this door meant facing the reality that she would never again sleep in her bed, never again ask for one more bedtime story, never again wrap her small arms around my neck.
The door swung open. Her room was bathed in the soft glow of the nightlight she insisted on keeping on even during the day—"to keep the monsters away, Mommy." Her bed was still unmade from our rushed departure to the hospital, the covers thrown back in her excitement to "help Daddy's friend's little boy."
Mr. Hoppy, her favorite stuffed rabbit, sat propped against her pillow where I'd placed him before we left. "Keep my spot warm, Mr. Hoppy," she'd instructed solemnly. "I'll be back soon."
A sound escaped me then—something between a sob and a scream that I muffled with my fist. I crossed the room and sank onto her bed, reaching for the rabbit. It still smelled like her strawberry shampoo and that indefinable scent that was uniquely Lily. I clutched it to my chest, rocking back and forth as the tears came again.
"She's gone," I whispered to the empty room. "She's gone, and he wasn't even there."
James hadn't answered any of my calls. He had no idea that our daughter was dead, that she had died calling for him. That her last coherent question had been whether her sacrifice would finally make her father love her.
The rage that surged through me then was unlike anything I'd ever felt—white-hot and all-consuming. Six years of emotional neglect, of watching him flaunt his affair, of making excuses for his absence to our daughter. And now this final, unforgivable betrayal.
With trembling fingers, I reached for my phone and called the one person I knew would answer.
"Eleanor," I said when my mother-in-law picked up, my voice breaking. "Lily's gone. She died from an infection after the surgery. James wasn't there. He's still with... with them."
The silence on the other end lasted only a moment before Eleanor's voice, usually so composed, cracked with emotion. "Oh, Elena. My darling girl. Stay right there. I'm coming to you now."
I heard rustling, the sound of keys being gathered. "Did you call James?" she asked, her voice hardening slightly.
"He won't answer," I whispered, stroking Mr. Hoppy's worn ear the way Lily always did when she was nervous. "He doesn't know she's gone."
"I'll be there in twenty minutes," Eleanor said firmly. "Don't move. Don't do anything. Just wait for me."
As I ended the call, I looked around the room at all the evidence of my daughter's brief, beautiful life—the drawings taped to the walls, the bookshelf overflowing with stories we'd read together, the ballerina music box James had given her on her fourth birthday, one of the rare moments he'd seemed to remember he was a father.
I clutched Mr. Hoppy tighter, burying my face in his soft fur as the realization crystallized in my mind: I couldn't stay here. Not in this mausoleum of memories. Not with him. The man who had sacrificed our daughter for his mistress's son would never see me again.
I just had to figure out how to disappear.
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