
My Husband Covered Up His Mistress Killing My Mother
Chapter 3
The printer in my basement groaned, spitting out the final page of the unredacted toxicology report. I didn't wait for the ink to dry. I took the stairs two at a time, the warm paper burning against my palm, and shoved open the heavy oak doors to Jared’s study.
He sat behind his mahogany desk, bathed in the amber glow of a banker’s lamp, reviewing a deposition. He didn't even look up as I slammed the file down over his open binder.
"Oxycodone, Jared." My voice was a serrated blade. "Forty-five miles an hour and high on painkillers. I have the raw data. I have the math."
Slowly, Jared capped his Montblanc pen. He picked up the pages. His eyes, cool and analytical, scanned the damning evidence of his mistress's guilt and his own corruption. I waited for the panic. I waited for the polished facade to crack.
Instead, he sighed. A soft, pitying sound.
He reached to his right, flipping the switch on the industrial paper shredder beneath his desk.
"What are you doing?" I lunged forward, but he smoothly fed the documents into the steel teeth. The machine snarled, turning the truth into ribbons.
"Destroying the delusions of a grieving woman," Jared said, his voice dropping into the soothing, patronizing cadence he used for hostile witnesses. "You’re unwell, Grace. The trauma of seeing your mother’s accident has triggered a psychotic break. You’re fabricating evidence to cope."
"I printed the server logs!" I shouted, my nails biting into my palms. "I will take this to the board!"
Jared adjusted his cuffs, his gold links catching the light. He didn't blink. His pulse, visible at the base of his throat, remained infuriatingly steady. "I already spoke to the board. I warned them you were experiencing paranoid delusions. I told them you were obsessing over a closed case, insisting on a conspiracy. Who do you think they’ll believe? The grieving daughter having a meltdown, or the objective expert witness trying to get his wife the psychiatric help she desperately needs?"
The air vanished from the room. He hadn't just buried the evidence; he had weaponized my grief to bury my sanity.
I stumbled out of the study, the walls of my own home suddenly feeling like a tightening vice. I needed air. I needed my son. Nolan had been there; he had seen the car tear through the intersection. He was my only remaining anchor to the truth.
I pushed through the fire door into the garage. The heavy scent of carnauba wax and exhaust fumes hit the back of my throat.
Nolan stood in the center of the concrete floor, a microfiber rag in hand. He was buffing the hood of a pristine, cherry-red 1967 Mustang. The chrome bumper gleamed like a weapon under the fluorescent lights.
"Nolan," I breathed, my steps faltering. "Where did this come from?"
He didn't look at me. His jaw tightened, mimicking his father's stubborn profile. "Emely got it for me. An early sixteenth birthday present."
A cold numbness washed over my skin, pooling in my stomach. "Emely? The woman who killed your grandmother?"
"She didn't kill her!" Nolan threw the rag onto the hood, whirling around. His eyes were defensive, hard. "It was an accident. Dad said so. Emely said so. Grandma wasn't looking where she was going!"
"She pushed you out of the way!" My voice cracked, the raw agony bleeding through. "Nolan, she was speeding. I have the proof."
"You have nothing!" he yelled, his hands balling into fists. "You're just jealous! You’re bitter because Dad loves Emely and not you. She actually listens to me. She understands me. You just want to ruin everything!"
He turned his back on me, picking up the rag to resume his manic polishing. The rhythmic squeak of the cloth against the metal sounded like the tearing of a ligament. My son. My own flesh and blood, bought with a vintage engine and a fabricated narrative. I stood there, shivering in the damp garage, utterly alone.
The next morning, the Seattle rain had turned into a suffocating mist. I drove to the Medical Examiner's office, my jaw set, my mind calculating the exact protocol required to force an external audit. I didn't need Jared's permission. I was the Chief.
I marched up the concrete steps, pulling my ID lanyard from my pocket. I swiped the plastic card against the magnetic reader by the glass double doors.
*Beep. Red light.*
I frowned, wiping the card on my coat, and swiped again.
*Red light.*
"Chief Hunt."
I turned. Stan, the head of building security, stood in the lobby. He wouldn't meet my eyes. He pushed open the heavy glass door just enough to hand me a thick, manila envelope bearing the city seal.
"I'm sorry, Grace," Stan muttered, his gaze fixed on the pavement. "My orders are to escort you off the premises."
I tore open the envelope. The words swam in front of me, printed in sterile, bureaucratic ink. *Indefinite administrative leave... pending mandatory psychiatric evaluation... effective immediately.*
At the bottom, CC'd on the directive, was the Chairman of the City Council. A man whose campaigns were entirely funded by Senator William Peterson.
"Stan," I whispered, my fingers trembling as they tightened around the paper. "My mother is in there."
"I know," he said softly, stepping into the doorway to block my path. "But you're not allowed inside."
The heavy glass doors clicked shut, the electronic lock engaging with a final, hollow thud. I stood on the wet concrete, stripped of my title, my family, and my voice, staring at the fortress I had built, now locked against me.
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