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I Sold My Husband’s Secrets to His Mistress Novel Cover

I Sold My Husband’s Secrets to His Mistress

Nola Lawson held my hand the entire elevator ride up. She had picked me up herself that morning — not sent a car, not texted directions — shown up at our apartment door in a cream blazer with a thermos of coffee she'd made at home, like she was dropping her kid off at kindergarten. Which, I suppose, was exactly what she thought she was doing. "This is going to be so good for you two," she said, squeezing my fingers as the elevator climbed. "Shared purpose. That's what every marriage needs. I told HR to put you in the office right next to his." "That's so thoughtful," I said. And I meant it. Nola was genuinely thoughtful. That was the thing about her — she wasn't performing warmth, she just had it in abundance, aimed in entirely the wrong direction.
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Chapter 1

Nola Lawson held my hand the entire elevator ride up.

She had picked me up herself that morning — not sent a car, not texted directions — shown up at our apartment door in a cream blazer with a thermos of coffee she'd made at home, like she was dropping her kid off at kindergarten. Which, I suppose, was exactly what she thought she was doing.

"This is going to be so good for you two," she said, squeezing my fingers as the elevator climbed. "Shared purpose. That's what every marriage needs. I told HR to put you in the office right next to his."

"That's so thoughtful," I said.

And I meant it. Nola was genuinely thoughtful. That was the thing about her — she wasn't performing warmth, she just had it in abundance, aimed in entirely the wrong direction. She loved me the way you love a houseplant you've decided is thriving. She watered me constantly and never once thought to check the soil.

The elevator opened on the fourteenth floor. Nola walked me to the reception desk like she owned the building, which technically, through a series of trusts and family arrangements, she partially did. She introduced me to the receptionist, to the office manager, to a man named Derek who seemed confused about why he was being introduced to anyone. Then she cupped my face in both hands.

"You look beautiful," she said. "He's going to remember why he married you."

I smiled. "Thank you, Nola."

She left. I watched the elevator doors close behind her cream blazer, and then I turned and walked down the hall toward my new office.

I passed Tristan's door on the way.

I wasn't planning to stop. I didn't stop. But I slowed — just for a second, just long enough — because the door was open and the sound of laughter came through it, easy and unguarded, the kind of laugh a person doesn't perform.

She was standing at the corner of his desk.

Polished. Dark hair, silk blouse, the particular posture of a woman who has decided she belongs somewhere and dared the room to disagree. She was pointing at something on his screen, and he was leaning in, and she was laughing, and he was almost smiling, and the whole tableau had the comfortable, worn-in quality of a habit.

I stood in the doorway for exactly two seconds.

Long enough to clock the dynamic. Long enough to understand that this woman — whoever she was — had not been placed at that desk by accident, and that the ease between them was not new.

Then I continued to my office.

I sat down, opened my laptop, pulled up a blank spreadsheet, and typed the title in cell A1.

*Asset Inventory.*

I found out her name by lunch. Daphne Cook, executive assistant, three years in the role. I found her LinkedIn in four minutes and her college graduation year in six. The math was simple after that. She and Tristan had overlapped for two years at Georgetown. There was a photo buried in a 2015 alumni newsletter — the two of them at some fundraiser, his hand at the small of her back, her face turned up toward his like a sunflower.

I saved the photo to a folder I labeled "Reference."

Then I went back to my spreadsheet and started building.

I spent the next two weeks being very pleasant and very invisible. I brought coffee to the break room. I remembered people's names. I asked Derek about his daughter's soccer tournament and actually listened to the answer. I was, by all observable metrics, a woman settling warmly into a new environment.

What I was actually doing was mapping.

Tristan's schedule was easy — his assistant kept a shared calendar, and I had spousal access to his work account, a detail no one had thought to revoke. His emotional patterns took slightly longer but were not complicated: he was most irritable before the 9 a.m. call with his CFO, most receptive to persuasion between 2 and 4 p.m., and constitutionally incapable of saying no to anyone who framed a request as a challenge to his judgment. His pressure points were his pride, his punctuality, and his pathological need to be the smartest person in any given room.

By the end of week two, I had a document that was, functionally, a user manual.

I caught Daphne alone in the elevator on a Thursday afternoon. She was carrying a leather portfolio and looking at her phone, and she glanced up when I stepped in with the particular wariness of a woman who has decided she has nothing to worry about.

"Daphne," I said pleasantly. "I'm Kyla. Tristan's wife."

Something moved behind her eyes. Careful. Recalibrating.

"Of course," she said. "It's nice to finally meet you."

"Likewise." I pressed the lobby button even though I was going to the fourth floor. "I'll be honest with you. I think we can help each other."

The elevator hummed.

"I have access to Tristan's full weekly calendar," I said. "His known triggers. The specific phrases that make him feel understood versus managed. The difference between those two things, in my experience, is worth a great deal." I paused. "I'm thinking five hundred a week. Flat rate. Venmo or wire, your preference."

The silence lasted about four seconds.

Then Daphne Cook, who was smarter than she was careful, said: "Wire."

"Perfect," I said. The elevator opened on four. I stepped out. "I'll send you the account details this evening."

The deposit cleared by nine o'clock.

I noted it in the spreadsheet under *Revenue: Week 1* and closed the laptop.

The following Sunday, Nola arrived at our apartment with a Dutch oven full of braised short ribs, a handwritten note about the healing power of shared meals, and a business card for a couples' therapist named Dr. Elliot Marsh, which she pressed into my hand with the gravity of someone delivering evidence.

"He requested it himself," she told me, with a meaningful look at Tristan, who was standing in the kitchen doorway with the expression of a man who had absolutely not requested anything.

Tristan said nothing. He was good at that.

"Thank you, Nola," I said, and I held the card like it meant something.

Later, after she left and Tristan had retreated to his office, I looked up Dr. Elliot Marsh's cancellation policy. Forty-eight hours notice, no charge.

I set the card on my nightstand where Nola would see it next time she visited.

I did not book an appointment.

Instead, I opened the spreadsheet, added a new tab, and titled it *Timeline.*

I had a feeling I was going to need it.

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