
Husband Kills Mistress in Rage
Chapter 1
The grocery bags felt heavier than usual as I pushed open the front door of our suburban home. I'd cut my shopping trip short, realizing we already had enough food for the week. Steven hated waste, and though he never seemed to notice when Paris helped herself to my things, he'd definitely comment if he saw duplicate purchases.
The house was quiet as I set the bags on the kitchen counter. Too quiet. Steven usually had music playing when he was home early.
"Steven?" I called out, slipping off my shoes. "Are you home?"
No answer.
I padded across the hardwood floors toward our bedroom, intending to put away the few personal items I'd picked up. As I approached the master bathroom, I heard a soft humming coming from inside.
The door was ajar. I pushed it open and froze.
Paris Ryan sat at my vanity, her long legs draped over the edge of the chair. My $400 La Mer face cream—the one I'd been rationing because Steven refused to replace it—was spread across her fingertips as she applied it to her face with exaggerated delicacy.
"Oh!" I said, unable to hide my surprise. "Paris. I didn't know you were here."
She didn't startle or apologize. Instead, she smiled at me in the mirror, continuing to massage the cream into her skin with slow, deliberate circles.
"Hey, Sabrina," she said casually, as if we were old friends sharing a girls' day. "Steven said I could borrow some of your stuff. This face cream is amazing. Where do you get it?"
I felt my chest tighten. "It's a specialty item. Hard to find."
She nodded, picking up my rose quartz roller next—the one Steven had given me for our anniversary last year. The one I'd been saving for special occasions.
"Mind if I try this too?" she asked, already rolling it across her cheekbones. "Steven mentioned you wouldn't mind sharing."
I swallowed hard. "Actually, Paris, that's my personal—"
"Oh, don't be so boring," she interrupted, reaching for my phone that was charging on the counter. "Let me take a few selfies. The lighting in here is perfect."
She angled my phone—the one Steven had reluctantly replaced when mine broke last month—and began taking photos of herself, pouting her lips and batting her eyes.
"Paris," I said, trying to keep my voice steady, "those are my personal items. I'd appreciate it if you'd ask before using them."
She laughed, the sound sharp and dismissive. "God, Sabrina, lighten up. It's just face cream." She turned to face me directly, her eyes challenging. "Steven told me I could use anything in the house whenever I want."
I knew that wasn't true. Steven might be careless with my things, but he knew how much that cream meant to me.
As if reading my thoughts, Paris stood suddenly, her hip bumping against the counter. The jar of face cream toppled over, spilling its precious contents across the pristine marble surface.
"Oh no," she said, not bothering to sound sincere. "How clumsy of me."
She didn't move to clean it up. Instead, she held my gaze in the mirror, a slight smile playing at the corners of her mouth. The message was clear: she could destroy whatever she wanted in this house, and Steven would never hold her accountable.
I grabbed a towel and began cleaning up the mess, trying to salvage what I could of the cream. My hands trembled slightly as I worked.
"Don't worry about it," Paris said, examining her reflection again. "Steven will buy you more."
I bit my tongue and finished cleaning, then left her to her selfies.
Hours later, after Paris had finally gone, I was putting away laundry when I noticed something strange. My grandmother's antique jewelry box—the one that sat on my dresser—looked different somehow.
I set down the stack of folded sweaters and approached it slowly. The lid was slightly ajar, not closed the way I always left it.
My heart began to race as I opened it fully. The velvet lining was still there, plush and deep blue, but the contents were gone. My grandmother's pearl necklace—the one she'd worn on her wedding day. The diamond earrings my grandfather had given her for their fiftieth anniversary. The sapphire bracelet that had been passed down through generations.
All gone.
I frantically searched through the drawers beneath the box, thinking perhaps I'd moved them for safekeeping. But I knew I hadn't. These pieces were my most precious possessions, my connection to a family history of love and sacrifice.
"Sabrina?" Steven called from downstairs. "Are you coming down for dinner?"
I didn't answer. Instead, I began tearing through the bedroom, searching every drawer, every hiding place where someone might have stashed the jewelry.
Nothing.
The emptiness of the box seemed to mock me, just as Paris's smile had earlier. I sank onto the edge of the bed, staring at the vacant jewelry box in my hands.
Where had they gone? And more importantly—who had taken them?
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