
Husband's Affair & Son's Death
Chapter 2
I stared at the document before me, my fingers trembling slightly as I pushed it back across the kitchen island toward Dominick.
"I can't sign this," I said quietly, my voice steadier than I expected. "I won't help the woman who killed our son avoid consequences."
Dominick's expression shifted, the practiced concern in his eyes hardening into something colder. He adjusted his Rolex—a nervous tic I'd never noticed before—and leaned forward.
"Brianna," he said, his voice dropping to that soothing tone he used with difficult patients, "you're not thinking clearly. Grief does that to people."
"I'm thinking more clearly than I have in years," I replied, meeting his gaze directly.
The lawyer beside him shifted uncomfortably, but Dominick's smile remained fixed, though it didn't reach his eyes.
"You need to understand something," he said, his tone changing abruptly. "The cremation documents require both our signatures. Legally, I'm the primary signer."
My stomach clenched. "What are you saying?"
"I'm saying that if you don't support the plea deal by Friday, I'll ensure you never receive Dash's ashes." His voice was clinical now, detached. "No funeral. No burial. Nothing."
The room seemed to tilt around me. This was the man who had held me when Dash was born, who had wept with joy when our son took his first steps.
"You would do that?" I whispered.
"I'm trying to protect what's left of our family," he replied smoothly. "Don't make this harder than it needs to be."
---
That night, I couldn't sleep. The thought of Dash's ashes—of his physical remains being held hostage—kept replaying in my mind. I needed something to calm me down.
Dominick kept a supply of sedatives in his home office. With shaking hands, I opened the cabinet where he stored his medications, searching for anything that might help me through this nightmare.
As I rummaged through bottles, a folded piece of paper fluttered to the floor. I picked it up, unfolding it carelessly at first, then froze as I realized what I was looking at.
A receipt from Hermès. For a limited-edition Birkin bag in deep burgundy—the exact one I'd admired months ago at the boutique on Madison Avenue.
"You've got to be kidding me," I'd said to Dominick when we passed the display window. "Fifty thousand dollars for a handbag?"
He'd laughed, pulling me close. "Not even for you, darling. Some things just aren't worth it."
Later, when I mentioned it again, he'd told me they were sold out anyway.
I checked the date on the receipt: two days before Dash's surgery.
My hands trembled as I held the paper. Had Dominick bought me the bag after all? Was this some bizarre attempt at a grief gift?
But why would he hide it? And why would he lie about it being sold out?
I sank into his leather chair, the receipt clutched in my hand, and tried to make sense of it.
---
The next morning, I was sitting at our kitchen island nursing a cup of tea when my phone buzzed with a notification. I glanced down to see an alert from Anderson Platinum Club—a credit card account I hadn't used in years.
"Unusual activity detected," the message read. "Review recent transactions."
I tapped on the notification, frowning. The account had been dormant since I'd married Dominick. He'd insisted I use his cards instead.
The app loaded, displaying a single transaction: $3,200 at the St. Regis Hotel yesterday evening.
My heart pounded as I stared at the screen. The Platinum Club card was exclusive to Anderson family members and their authorized users. I'd authorized only one person: Dominick.
He'd told me he was working late at the hospital yesterday.
I scrolled through the transaction details, my fingers moving mechanically. The charge was for a luxury suite—not a standard room, but their most exclusive accommodation.
"Looking for something?"
I startled at Dominick's voice behind me. He stood in the doorway, freshly showered and dressed in a crisp white shirt and tailored pants.
"Just checking my phone," I said, quickly closing the app.
His eyes flickered to my screen, then back to my face. "You look tired," he said, his tone solicitous again. "Did you sleep?"
"Not well," I admitted.
He crossed the kitchen and poured himself coffee, his movements casual. "I added you to my hospital credit card account yesterday," he said offhandedly. "For emergencies."
I nodded, saying nothing about the notification. Something cold and hard was forming in my chest—a suspicion I couldn't yet name but couldn't ignore either.
As Dominick stirred sugar into his coffee, I watched his hands—the hands that should have saved our son but instead had handed the scalpel to someone unqualified.
"By the way," he said casually, "I need the Platinum Club card back. There's been some unusual activity on it."
I looked up at him, searching his face for any hint of the man I thought I'd married.
"Unusual activity?" I repeated softly. "Like a charge at the St. Regis?"
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