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My Husband Defended the Woman Who Replaced Me Novel Cover

My Husband Defended the Woman Who Replaced Me

The tea tray was warm against my palms, and the baby kicked once, low and soft, like a small fist knocking from the inside. "Easy," I whispered, one hand drifting to the curve under my sweater. "I'm going. I'm going." The Burke house was too big for the sound of one person climbing stairs. Marble underfoot, a chandelier overhead that Sylas's mother had picked out a decade before I ever set foot in this place. I'd lived here three years. It still didn't feel like mine. Nothing in it did. Ophelia had left an hour ago. I could still smell her perfume on the banister — that sharp white-floral thing she wore like a flag planted in enemy territory.
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Chapter 1

The tea tray was warm against my palms, and the baby kicked once, low and soft, like a small fist knocking from the inside.

"Easy," I whispered, one hand drifting to the curve under my sweater. "I'm going. I'm going."

The Burke house was too big for the sound of one person climbing stairs. Marble underfoot, a chandelier overhead that Sylas's mother had picked out a decade before I ever set foot in this place. I'd lived here three years. It still didn't feel like mine. Nothing in it did.

Ophelia had left an hour ago. I could still smell her perfume on the banister — that sharp white-floral thing she wore like a flag planted in enemy territory. She always touched the railing on her way out. Always. As if to remind me whose house this used to be.

Ayden had been crying behind his door since she'd gone. Not the loud kind. The quiet, theatrical kind, just loud enough to travel.

So here I was. Chamomile. Honey. The little ginger cookies he pretended he didn't like. Six months pregnant and climbing toward a fourteen-year-old boy who had spent the morning telling his mother, through the open door, that I was "that woman."

I didn't blame him. I kept telling myself that. He was a child. Ophelia had filled his head the way you fill a glass — slowly, deliberately, until it spilled.

My back ached. The tray was heavier than it should have been. I shifted it to balance the weight off my hip, and the baby kicked again, harder this time, like a question.

*I know,* I thought. *I know, sweetheart. One more flight.*

I reached the landing.

Ayden's door swung open before I could knock.

He came out fast — too fast — and for a half-second I thought he was running to me, the way he used to when he was small enough to forget he was supposed to hate me. I started to smile. I started to say his name.

Then his hands hit my chest.

It wasn't a slap. It wasn't a flail. It was a push — two flat palms, shoulder height, with his whole body behind them. The kind of push you plant your feet for.

The tray went first. I heard the china before I felt the fall — that high bright shatter, porcelain breaking against marble in a sound like a bell. Then the world tilted, and I was weightless, and my hands were reaching for nothing, and the only thought in my head was *not the baby not the baby not the baby—*

I hit the third step with my hip. The seventh with my shoulder. Somewhere in between, I bit my tongue, and the taste of copper bloomed in my mouth like a warning I had heard too late.

I stopped at the bottom.

The ceiling was very far away. The chandelier swung — no, it didn't, I was the one swinging, my vision rocking like a boat — and somewhere up at the top of the stairs there was a small dark figure standing very still.

Ayden.

Looking down.

I waited for him to scream. To cry. To run for help. That's what a frightened child does. That's what Ophelia would coach later, in the hospital, with her hand pressed to her chest like a martyr.

He didn't scream.

He stood there, framed by the landing light, and his face was perfectly empty. Not panicked. Not sorry. Just — calculating. Like a boy doing math in his head. Like a boy waiting to see whether the thing on the floor was going to move again.

My hand drifted to my belly.

It was warm.

Then it was wet.

---

They wouldn't let me sit up.

The hospital lights were the color of dishwater. Someone had put an IV in the back of my left hand, and the tape pulled at my skin every time I breathed. The doctor had a kind face. That was the worst part. He had a kind face and he sat down beside the bed instead of standing, and I knew before he opened his mouth.

"Mrs. Burke," he said. Very softly. "I'm so sorry."

I didn't cry. I remember being surprised about that. I had expected crying to be the easy part.

Instead I just nodded, once, and turned my face toward the window, where the blinds were half-shut against a flat gray afternoon. Somewhere down the hall, a phone rang and rang and no one answered it.

Sylas arrived forty-three minutes later. I counted. I had nothing else to do.

He didn't take off his coat.

That's the detail I keep coming back to. He stood at the foot of the bed in his black wool overcoat, snow still melting on the shoulders, and he didn't take it off. As if he wasn't planning to stay.

Behind him: Ayden. Behind Ayden: Ophelia, with one hand pressed flat to her collarbone like she was holding her own heart in.

"Dad—" Ayden's voice cracked beautifully. He had practiced. I could hear it. "I didn't — she was bringing tea and I — I got scared, I thought she was mad at me, and I — I tried to grab her arm, I swear, I tried to catch her—"

His shoulders shook on cue. Ophelia's hand slid from her chest to the back of his neck. Her thumb stroked once, slow, a small invisible *good boy*.

Sylas listened.

He listened the whole way through, the way he listens in board meetings — head slightly tilted, eyes fixed somewhere just past the speaker's left ear. When Ayden finished, Sylas exhaled through his nose. A short, controlled sound.

Then, finally, he turned to me.

His eyes did not go to my face. They went to the blanket over my stomach, and away again, fast, the way you flinch from a stove.

"Olive."

Low. Even. The voice he used for things he had already decided.

"Stop blaming a frightened child."

I opened my mouth. Closed it.

"He is fourteen years old," Sylas said. "He is grieving too. You are the adult in this house. I need you to know your place."

*Know your place.*

The words landed like three small stones dropped, one after another, into a very deep well. I waited for the splash. It never came.

He did not touch my hand. He did not ask where it hurt. He did not look at the bruise blooming purple along my jaw or the gauze taped low across my abdomen. He simply turned, put his hand on Ayden's shoulder, and walked the boy out of the room.

Ophelia lingered a heartbeat longer in the doorway. Long enough to meet my eyes. Long enough to let the corner of her mouth lift, just barely, like a curtain twitching.

Then she was gone too.

I turned my face to the wall.

The wallpaper was beige with a thin silver stripe. I counted the stripes. I got to forty-seven before I stopped, because something inside me had quietly, completely, gone out — like a pilot light I hadn't realized was still burning until the cold rushed in to fill the place where it had been.

I did not cry.

I did not argue.

I did not, in any way that mattered, exist in that room anymore.

---

Three nights later I sat at the kitchen table at midnight with my diary open in front of me.

The house was asleep. Sylas in the east wing. Ayden in the room at the top of the stairs I would never climb again. The kettle ticked softly on the stove behind me, cooling. My tea had gone lukewarm. The bruise along my hip was the color of a thunderstorm.

I uncapped the pen.

I held it over the page for a long time. Long enough that a single drop of ink bloomed on the paper like a small black flower, and I watched it spread, and I did not move to stop it.

Then, in my own careful handwriting — the handwriting of a girl who had been writing in this book since she was seventeen years old and stupid in love with a boy who walked past her in a library — I wrote three words.

*I am done.*

I looked at them.

I underlined them, once.

Then I closed the diary, set the pen beside it, lifted my cup, and finished my tea in the dark. The clock on the microwave ticked over to 12:47.

By 12:48, I had begun, in absolute silence, to plan.

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