
Husband Kills Mistress for Daughter
Chapter 2
The day we buried my daughter dawned with a cruel perfection. Sunshine filtered through oak trees, casting dappled shadows across the cemetery's manicured grass. Emma would have captured it in her sketchbook—the interplay of light and dark, the stark beauty of gravestones against green. Emma would have seen the poetry in it. But Emma was gone.
I stood at the graveside, numb and hollow, watching the gleaming mahogany casket being lowered into the ground. Beside me, Michael maintained his perfect posture, his black suit impeccably pressed, his expression a carefully constructed mask of appropriate grief. The minister's words washed over me like distant waves—meaningless sounds that couldn't begin to contain the magnitude of what had been lost.
When the ceremony ended and the small crowd began to disperse, I remained rooted in place, my eyes fixed on the casket. Michael placed his hand on my elbow, a gesture that once might have seemed supportive but now felt like an attempt to steer me away, to close this chapter quickly.
"We should go," he murmured. "People are waiting at the house."
I shook off his hand, turning to face him fully. "Why weren't you there?" My voice trembled despite my effort to keep it steady. "She called for you, Michael. Her last word was 'Daddy.'"
His jaw tightened almost imperceptibly. He glanced around, checking if anyone was within earshot. "Sarah, this isn't the time or place."
"When is the time?" I pressed, my voice rising slightly. "When our daughter jumped from that roof, you were celebrating with Jake. While she was dying, you were toasting his future."
"It was a tragic accident," he said, his voice dropping to that lower register I'd heard so many times when he was controlling his anger. "Emma was... troubled. We both know that. But dwelling on it won't bring her back. We need to move on."
Move on. As if our daughter's life could be summarized and dismissed so easily. As if her death was an inconvenient business matter to be resolved and filed away.
"Move on," I echoed, the words tasting like poison. "Is that what you told yourself when you ignored my calls?"
He straightened his tie—that familiar, controlling gesture—and leaned closer. "We will discuss this at home. Not here. Pull yourself together."
Then he was walking away, toward the line of black cars, leaving me alone with my daughter's grave and the fresh realization that I had been married to a stranger for twenty years.
At the house, our living room had been transformed into a reception area. Catered food that no one really wanted to eat. Hushed conversations that fell silent when I entered rooms. I moved through it all like a ghost, accepting condolences with mechanical nods, unable to connect with any of it.
I was pouring myself a glass of water in the kitchen when I felt arms encircle me from behind. I stiffened, recognizing the expensive perfume before I even turned around.
"Oh, Sarah," Rebecca's voice dripped with a sympathy so overwrought it made my stomach churn. "I can't imagine what you're going through. If there's anything—anything at all—I can do..."
She pulled back, holding me at arm's length, her eyes searching mine with what anyone else might mistake for genuine concern. I saw something else there—satisfaction, perhaps. The careful assessment of a rival neutralized.
"Thank you, Rebecca," I managed, the words scraping my throat like broken glass. "It's... kind of you to come."
"Of course," she said, squeezing my arms. "We're practically family."
The audacity of it struck me like a physical blow. This woman, who had been sleeping with my husband, who had positioned her son to supplant my daughter, dared to claim kinship in the aftermath of Emma's death. I extricated myself from her grip, mumbling an excuse about needing to check on something upstairs.
I fled to Emma's room, closing the door behind me and leaning against it, gulping air like I'd been drowning. Her room was exactly as she'd left it—bed neatly made, books arranged on shelves, the faint scent of her lavender lotion lingering in the air. I moved to her desk, running my fingers over the surface where she'd spent so many hours studying, reading, drawing.
Her sketchbook lay there, tossed aside carelessly. I picked it up, my heart aching with the memory of how she'd guard it, never wanting anyone to see her work until it was finished. I opened it, expecting to find her soul poured onto paper—her detailed drawings that captured not just images but feelings.
The pages were blank. Every single one.
I flipped through frantically, searching for any trace of her talent, her passion. Nothing. It was as if her artistic voice had been silenced long before her body hit the ground. I clutched the empty sketchbook to my chest and sank to the floor, a terrible understanding dawning. Emma hadn't just died on Tuesday. She had been dying by inches for years, right before my blind eyes.
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