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My Husband Couldn't Forget His First Love Novel Cover

My Husband Couldn't Forget His First Love

The crystal chandelier above the Whitman family's dining table cast harsh shadows across the mahogany surface, making the elaborate Sunday dinner feel more like an interrogation than a family meal. I sat rigidly in my designated chair—always the same one, always positioned where I could serve but never quite belong—watching David's mother, Michelle, cut her prime rib with surgical precision. "Ava, dear," Michelle's voice sliced through the air with the same sharpness as her knife, "I was just telling Mrs. Pemberton at the club yesterday about your... background. She found it so quaint that you're from Michigan." The word 'quaint' dripped from her lips like poison honey. I forced my hands to remain steady as I reached for my water glass, the ice clinking against the crystal in the sudden silence. "Michigan has its charms," I managed, my voice barely above a whisper. Michelle's laugh was as cold as the marble floors beneath our feet. "Oh, I'm sure it does. Simple pleasures for simple people. But you understand, don't you, that our family operates on rather different standards?" My chest tightened. Across the table, David's sister Chloe smirked, her fork poised mid-air like she was watching a particularly entertaining show. David himself remained absorbed in his phone, his thumb scrolling endlessly through messages, completely oblivious to the verbal daggers being thrown at his wife. "Mother," I heard myself say, the word feeling foreign and bitter on my tongue, "I've been trying my best to—" "Oh, darling, I know you have." Michelle's interruption was swift and merciless. "But trying and succeeding are two very different things, aren't they? Some people just don't understand our family's standards. It's not your fault, really. You simply weren't raised with the proper... foundation." The room felt like it was shrinking around me.
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Chapter 2

The weeks following that brutal dinner felt like walking through quicksand. Every step I took seemed to sink me deeper into the suffocating world of the Whitman family, yet I couldn't stop trying to prove myself worthy of their acceptance. If I couldn't earn their love through who I was, maybe I could earn it through what I did.

David's father, William, had suffered a mild heart attack six months ago, and his cardiologist had prescribed a strict diet—low sodium, low cholesterol, heart-healthy meals that required careful planning and precise preparation. Michelle had mentioned it in passing, her tone suggesting it was beneath her notice, and David seemed too busy with work to care about the details.

So I made it my mission.

I spent hours in the library, researching cardiac nutrition, printing articles about omega-3 fatty acids and antioxidants. I bought cookbooks specifically designed for heart patients, studying them like medical textbooks. Every morning, I woke early to prepare William's breakfast—steel-cut oats with fresh berries and a drizzle of honey, egg whites scrambled with herbs from the small garden I'd started on the kitchen windowsill.

"This is quite good," William said one morning, his voice gruff but not unkind. He was the only Whitman who'd ever shown me even a hint of respect. "Better than that bland nonsense the nutritionist recommended."

I felt a flutter of hope in my chest. "I'm glad you like it. I found a recipe for herb-crusted salmon that might work for dinner tonight."

He nodded, returning to his newspaper. It wasn't much, but it was something. A crack in the wall of indifference that surrounded me in this house.

For three weeks, I threw myself into this role with desperate intensity. I planned menus, shopped for organic vegetables, learned to prepare meals that were both healthy and flavorful. Michelle made her usual cutting remarks—"How domestic of you, dear"—but I detected something that might have been grudging approval in her tone.

Maybe this was it. Maybe this was how I could finally belong.

But belonging, I was about to learn, was a luxury I would never be afforded in this family.

It was a Tuesday afternoon when my carefully constructed world began to crumble. David had asked me to organize his home office—a task I'd volunteered for, hoping to be helpful. His desk was cluttered with contracts and financial documents, his laptop buried under a stack of papers.

I was moving the laptop to dust beneath it when the screen flickered to life, still logged into his messages. I should have looked away immediately. I should have closed it and pretended I'd seen nothing.

But there, at the top of his message list, was Sabrina's name.

My heart hammered against my ribs as I stared at the preview text visible on the screen: "I miss what we had, David. Things felt so much simpler..."

My hands trembled as I clicked on the conversation, knowing I was crossing a line but unable to stop myself. The messages scrolled back weeks—casual conversations that had grown increasingly intimate.

Sabrina: "I keep thinking about that night at the Met Gala. Do you remember what you said to me?"

David: "I remember everything about that night."

Sabrina: "I miss what we had, David. Things felt so much simpler when it was just us."

David: "Things are complicated right now, but I think about you too. More than I should."

Sabrina: "Complicated doesn't have to mean impossible."

David: "I know. I just need time to figure things out."

The laptop screen blurred as tears filled my eyes. Each message was a knife twisting deeper into my chest. While I'd been desperately trying to earn my place in his family, David had been emotionally cheating with the woman who represented everything I could never be.

I sat there in his leather chair, surrounded by the mahogany and gold that had never felt like home, reading evidence of my husband's betrayal. The woman who'd haunted our marriage from the beginning was still there, still pulling him away from me with invisible threads.

The sound of the front door slamming shut made me jump. David's voice echoed through the house as he called out to Maria about dinner. I quickly closed the laptop, my pulse racing as I tried to compose myself.

By the time he appeared in the doorway of his office, I was standing by the bookshelf, a dust cloth in my shaking hands.

"How's the organizing going?" he asked, loosening his tie.

"David," I said, my voice barely steady. "We need to talk."

Something in my tone made him look at me more carefully. "About what?"

"About Sabrina."

His face went carefully blank. "What about her?"

"I saw the messages, David. On your laptop."

For a moment, silence stretched between us like a chasm. Then his expression hardened, shifting from surprise to irritation.

"You went through my private messages?"

"I wasn't snooping. The laptop was open, and I saw—"

"You saw what, exactly?" His voice was cold now, defensive. "A conversation between old friends?"

"Friends?" The word came out strangled. "David, she said she missed what you had. You told her you think about her."

He ran a hand through his hair, his jaw tight. "Ava, you're being paranoid. Sabrina and I have known each other since we were kids. We're allowed to have conversations."

"Those weren't just conversations, and you know it." My voice was rising despite my efforts to stay calm. "She's still in love with you, and you're encouraging it."

"This is ridiculous." David's tone was dismissive, the same tone his mother used when she wanted to end a discussion. "Sabrina is just a friend. If you can't handle that, maybe the problem is your own insecurity."

The words hit me like a physical blow. After five years of being told I wasn't good enough, smart enough, sophisticated enough, now I was also too insecure, too paranoid, too small-minded to understand the complexities of his friendships.

"My insecurity?" I whispered. "David, I've spent five years watching your family compare me to her. Five years being told I don't measure up. And now I find out you've been having intimate conversations with her behind my back, and it's my fault for being insecure?"

He grabbed his jacket from the back of his chair, his movements sharp and angry. "I can't do this right now, Ava. I'm going out."

"Where?"

"To meet some friends for drinks. Maybe when I get back, you'll have gotten some perspective."

He was already walking away, leaving me standing in his office surrounded by the evidence of his emotional betrayal. The front door slammed again, and I was alone with the deafening silence of the Whitman mansion.

I sank into his chair, my body shaking with a mixture of rage and despair. Outside, the city hummed with life, but inside these walls, I felt more isolated than ever. The careful meals I'd prepared, the hours I'd spent trying to prove my worth—none of it mattered. I was still the outsider, still the woman who wasn't enough.

But as I sat there in the gathering darkness, something else began to stir inside me. A nausea that had nothing to do with emotional pain. A queasiness that had been plaguing me for weeks, dismissed as stress from the constant tension in this house.

My hand moved instinctively to my stomach as realization dawned. The missed period I'd attributed to anxiety. The morning sickness I'd blamed on the rich food at family dinners. The exhaustion that never seemed to lift.

I might be pregnant.

The thought sent a jolt of terror and hope through me in equal measure. A baby. David's baby. The one thing that might finally, truly make me part of this family—or the one thing that would trap me here forever.

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