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My Husband Covered Up His Mistress Killing My Mother Novel Cover

My Husband Covered Up His Mistress Killing My Mother

The sharp trill of the autopsy suite's phone cut through the steady hum of the ventilation system. I was mid-incision, the familiar scent of formaldehyde and copper heavy in the air, when my assistant held the receiver to my ear. *“Chief Hunt. There’s been an accident outside your son’s school.”* Seattle rain doesn't wash away sins; it only dilutes the blood. The torrential downpour soaked through my trench coat the second I ducked under the yellow police tape outside Nolan’s private academy. Red and blue strobes fractured across the wet asphalt, illuminating the nightmare I had been summoned to witness. At the center of the intersection sat a crumpled silver convertible. And ten yards away, paramedics were pulling a heavy white tarp over a body. My mother. My chest hollowed out, the breath violently expelled from my lungs.
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Chapter 4

The blue light of the laptop screen cast a sickly pallor over my hands. I sat in my idling car, the heater fighting a losing battle against the Seattle chill, tethered to a public Wi-Fi network outside a closed library.

On the screen, a progress bar crawled. *Uploading: Unredacted_Tox_Peterson.pdf to State_Prosecutor_Secure_Drop.*

Eighty-two percent.

Eighty-five.

The progress bar froze. The cooling fan beneath my palms revved to a high-pitched whine. Suddenly, a black command terminal snapped open, lines of code executing faster than my eyes could track.

I slammed my finger onto the power button, desperate to sever the connection. Too late. The screen went dead black. The hard drive clicked once—a hollow, fatal sound. A remote wipe. Jared’s corporate security firm had found my digital footprint.

Before I could process the loss, my cell phone vibrated against the center console. The caller ID read *UNKNOWN*.

"Hello?" I answered, my voice tight.

"Grace." Jude’s voice was a ragged rasp, overlaid with the hollow echo of a street payphone and the hiss of passing tires. "They gutted my place."

The metallic taste of adrenaline flooded my mouth. "Are you hurt? Where are you?"

"I’m fine. But I’m out. They fired me an hour ago. Mishandling of evidence." His breathing rattled against the receiver, sharp and shallow. "The board didn't even hold a hearing. Grace, they tossed my apartment looking for the master drives. Jared knows you have the physical backups. He’s coming for them next."

"Stay out of sight, Jude. I'll handle the drives."

"Be careful," he whispered, and the line went dead.

I threw the car into drive. If Jared knew about the physical drives, the house wasn't safe. I needed to move them immediately. But as I swung into my driveway, the headlights washed over a sleek black courier van idling by my mailbox. A man in a rain-slicked uniform stepped out, blocking my path.

I rolled down the window, the rain instantly soaking my sleeve.

"Grace Hunt?" he asked, extending a thick manila envelope sealed with the King County Superior Court insignia. "Served."

He didn't wait for a signature, just dropped it onto my lap and walked away.

My fingers were numb as I tore through the heavy paper. The dome light illuminated the stark, legal typography.

*Emergency Petition Granted. Petitioner: Jared Hunt. Subject: Martha Evans. Disposition: Immediate Cremation. Rationale: Public health and family closure.*

Scheduled for 6:00 AM. Tomorrow.

My lungs seized, the oxygen trapped in my throat. Cremation. The ultimate sanitizer. At two thousand degrees, bone bruising turns to ash. The tissue matrix dissolves. The chemical compounds of oxycodone vaporize. Jared wasn't just silencing me; he was incinerating the primary crime scene.

At 2:00 AM, the back alley of Restlawn Funeral Home smelled of wet dumpsters and ozone. The rain masked the sound of my boots as I approached the reinforced steel delivery door. I bypassed the electronic keypad, sliding my master ME lock-pick—a perk of my former title—into the mechanical override. The cylinder clicked.

I slipped inside, enveloped instantly by the suffocating, sweet stench of floral arrangements masking the sharp chemical tang of cavity fluid. The emergency lights cast long, skeletal shadows across the stainless steel prep tables.

I moved with surgical precision, pulling a sterile scalpel and a collection vial from my coat pocket. I just needed a deep tissue sample from the lacerated liver. Enough to prove the blunt force trauma trajectory.

I pushed through the swinging double doors into the crematorium.

The room was cavernous and pulsing with the low hum of industrial gas lines. I froze.

The prep tables were empty.

My eyes darted to the massive, brick-lined retort dominating the far wall. The heavy steel door was sealed shut, a thick iron padlock engaged through the latch. A digital timer on the control panel blinked mercilessly: *AUTO-IGNITE: 06:00*.

My mother was already inside. Locked in the firing chamber.

"No," I choked out, a dry sob tearing at my throat. I threw my weight against the steel door, my palms slapping the cold metal. "No, no, no."

It didn't yield. I was too late.

I backed away, my chest heaving, vision blurring with hot tears. As I turned, my hip bumped a rolling cart pushed against the wall.

Sitting on the aluminum tray was a heavy, polished brass urn. Beside it lay a velvet bag containing her personal effects.

I uncinched the velvet. Inside was her gold wedding band, her watch, and a small, sealed plastic pouch.

A lock of her silver hair.

Standard practice for grieving families. A sentimental keepsake. But to a forensic pathologist, hair wasn't just a memory. It was an anchor of mitochondrial DNA. It was biological proof of identity.

My trembling fingers closed around the plastic pouch. I shoved it deep into my coat pocket. Then, my gaze shifted to the heavy brass urn. It was meant to hold the ashes of a lie.

I grabbed the urn by its cold, unforgiving neck. The weight of it grounded me, the solid brass a physical manifestation of my hardening resolve. I wasn't leaving empty-handed. I turned my back on the locked retort and walked out into the storm.

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