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After My Husband’s Niece Murdered Our Daughter, He Protected Her Novel Cover

After My Husband’s Niece Murdered Our Daughter, He Protected Her

The nursery door was already open when I reached it. That should have been my first warning—Hugo always insisted on keeping it closed to preserve the temperature for Daisy's delicate skin. But my mind was on the bottle I'd just warmed downstairs, the one now clutched in my trembling hand as I stepped into the room. Quinn stood at the balcony doors. The French windows were thrown wide despite the February chill, and she held my daughter—my one-month-old baby—suspended over the railing like a rag doll. "Quinn." My voice came out strangled. The bottle slipped from my fingers, formula splashing across the hardwood. "Quinn, please." She turned. Her eyes were glassy, unfocused, her mouth twisted into something that might have been a smile or a grimace. "She won't stop crying, Aunt Violet.
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Chapter 3

The hospital room smelled like bleach and something sweeter—decay masked by disinfectant. I surfaced from anesthesia in fragments: the bite of IV tubing in my arm, the deep ache in my abdomen where they'd carved out a piece of me, the mechanical beep of monitors counting down what felt like the last moments of my sanity.

My mouth was cotton. My thoughts moved like sludge. I tried to sit up and immediately regretted it—pain ripped through my torso, white-hot and nauseating. The incision pulled against the staples holding me together.

"Easy." A nurse's hand pressed my shoulder back against the pillow. Her face was professionally blank. "You need to rest, Mrs. McDonald. The surgery went well."

Surgery. The word triggered a cascade of memory: Quinn collapsing at breakfast three days ago, clutching her side. The ambulance. Hugo's face, granite-hard, as Dr. Reeves—his personal physician, the one who signed whatever Hugo needed signed—delivered the diagnosis. Acute liver failure. Medication toxicity. She needed a transplant.

And I was the only match.

I'd tried to refuse. My body was still recovering from Daisy's birth six weeks ago, still healing from the night Hugo left me in the rain until my knee swelled to twice its size. But Hugo had looked at me with those cold gray eyes and said, "This is how you prove you've forgiven her, Violet. This is how we move forward."

Move forward. As if I could move anywhere with a body he kept breaking.

The nurse left. I stared at the acoustic tiles on the ceiling, counting the perforations, trying to breathe through the pain. My hand drifted to my stomach, feeling the thick bandage, the alien wrongness of what they'd taken.

That's when I heard it—the wet crunch of teeth breaking through fruit.

Quinn sat in the chair by the window, backlit by watery Seattle sunlight. She looked radiant. Her skin glowed, her hair fell in glossy waves over her shoulders, and she was eating a bowl of strawberries with the appetite of someone who hadn't just had major surgery twelve hours ago.

She caught me staring and smiled. "They're really good. Want one?"

My throat closed. "You look... recovered."

"Oh, I feel amazing." She popped another berry into her mouth, juice staining her lips crimson. "Dr. Reeves said I'm healing faster than expected. Isn't that great?"

I wanted to scream. Instead, I reached for the call button.

Quinn's hand shot out, lightning-fast, and yanked the cord from my reach. The movement was too smooth, too strong for someone who'd supposedly been dying yesterday.

"Let's talk first," she said. Her voice dropped, losing the breathy fragility she performed for Hugo. "Just us girls."

The air in the room changed—thickened with something predatory.

"I'm not bipolar, Violet." She leaned forward, elbows on her knees, studying me like a specimen. "I never was. That whole manic episode thing? Total bullshit. I just really, really hated that baby."

The words hit like a physical blow. My vision tunneled.

"She cried all the time," Quinn continued, her tone conversational. "And Hugo wouldn't shut up about her. 'Daisy this, Daisy that.' It was pathetic. He used to look at me like I mattered, and then she came along and suddenly I was just... furniture."

My hand found my phone on the bedside table. My fingers were clumsy, shaking, but I managed to unlock it, to open the voice recorder app, to press the red button. The phone was angled away from her, hidden by the blanket.

"So I fixed it," Quinn said. She ate another strawberry, savoring it. "And the best part? He blamed you for not catching me fast enough. He'll always blame you, Violet. Because you're weak, and I'm the victim."

She stood, brushing crumbs from her lap. "Thanks for the liver, by the way. Though between you and me, I think Dr. Reeves exaggerated how bad it was. Hugo pays him enough to say whatever he wants."

She left, taking the strawberries with her.

I lay there, trembling, my finger hovering over the stop button. Evidence. Finally, I had evidence.

Two days later, I was discharged. Hugo brought me home in the Bentley, his hand resting on my thigh like a brand. My abdomen throbbed with every bump in the road, but I didn't complain. I was too focused on the phone in my purse, the recording that would end this nightmare.

I hid it that night in the library—inside a hollowed-out copy of *Wuthering Heights*, a book Hugo had never touched. I slid it onto the shelf between legal thrillers and business manifestos, my insurance policy tucked among the spines.

Three days later, Quinn found it.

I was in the kitchen, forcing down toast I couldn't taste, when Hugo stormed in. His face was a thundercloud. He slammed his laptop onto the counter, and Quinn's voice poured out of the speakers.

"—going to kill her in her sleep. I swear to God, Hugo, she's planning it. Listen—"

My own voice, distorted and spliced: "I just really, really hated that baby... I'm going to fix it... she's the victim..."

The audio cut off. Hugo stared at me, and for the first time since Daisy died, I saw fear in his eyes. Not fear for me. Fear of me.

"Violet," he said slowly, "what the hell is this?"

Quinn stood in the doorway, her face a mask of terror, her hand clutching her phone. "I found it in the library. She's been recording me, Hugo. She's obsessed. I think... I think she's having a breakdown."

I opened my mouth to explain, to scream the truth, but the words wouldn't come. Because I was looking at Quinn's screen, at the audio editing software still open, at the waveforms she'd cut and rearranged like a jigsaw puzzle.

And I realized: she'd won again.

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