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My Husband Faked Our Daughter’s Death to Give Her Away Novel Cover

My Husband Faked Our Daughter’s Death to Give Her Away

The penthouse was too quiet on Tuesday nights. Camden had been at 'business dinners' three times this week. I'd stopped asking which restaurant. I'd stopped a lot of things. I sat on the living room floor with my back against the couch, a glass of red wine going warm on the coffee table beside me. The city hummed forty floors below. I'd turned off the overhead lights an hour ago and hadn't bothered turning them back on. The glow from the skyline was enough. It usually was. My phone buzzed.
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Chapter 1

The penthouse was too quiet on Tuesday nights.

Camden had been at 'business dinners' three times this week. I'd stopped asking which restaurant. I'd stopped a lot of things.

I sat on the living room floor with my back against the couch, a glass of red wine going warm on the coffee table beside me. The city hummed forty floors below. I'd turned off the overhead lights an hour ago and hadn't bothered turning them back on. The glow from the skyline was enough. It usually was.

My phone buzzed.

Unknown number. No message. Just a video attachment.

I almost didn't open it. Spam, probably. Or a wrong number. I set the phone face-down on the carpet and reached for my wine. Then I picked the phone back up.

I pressed play.

The footage was shaky, shot through a window from outside. Whoever filmed it was standing on a sidewalk, angling up toward a lit apartment. The image was grainy at the edges but clear enough in the center — a living room I recognized. Cream walls. A low white sofa. The kind of apartment that looked like it had been assembled by someone who wanted you to know exactly how much everything cost.

Laurel Griffin's apartment.

A little girl was on the floor. She couldn't have been more than two, maybe two and a half. Dark curls, loose and wild around her face. She was laughing at something off-camera, that full-body laugh that toddlers have, the kind that uses their whole stomach. She reached up with both arms and Laurel leaned down and scooped her up, pressing a kiss to her forehead, and the little girl grabbed a fistful of Laurel's hair and laughed again.

The video was eleven seconds long.

I watched it four more times before I understood what I was looking at.

The little girl's eyes.

Even through the grainy window glass, even in that warm apartment light — they were my eyes. The exact shape. The exact color. The slight downward tilt at the outer corners that I'd spent my whole life seeing in mirrors.

My daughter was born fourteen weeks early on a February morning two years ago. The NICU team worked on her for forty minutes. Camden held my hand in the hallway and told me she didn't make it. I signed a form. There was a small private service. I planted a rosebush in the garden of his family's Connecticut house and I visited it every spring and I grieved her every single day.

Her name was going to be Emryn.

My phone slipped out of my hand and hit the carpet.

I don't know how long I sat there. Long enough for the wine to go completely cold. Long enough for the city lights to blur and then sharpen again. I picked the phone back up. I watched the video again. And again. I pressed pause on the frame where the little girl looked directly toward the window, her face open and bright and laughing.

I pressed my thumbnail hard into my palm.

I was still sitting on the floor when I heard Camden's key in the lock.

He came in the way he always did — jacket over one arm, phone in hand, already halfway through some thought. He saw me on the floor in the dark and stopped.

'Ivey.' A small frown. 'Why are you sitting in the dark?'

I stood up. I crossed the room and held the phone out to him, the video already playing.

He watched it. His face didn't move. That was the thing I would remember later — his face didn't move at all. He watched eleven seconds of footage of our daughter laughing in another woman's arms and his expression stayed exactly the same.

He handed the phone back to me.

'That's Laurel's adopted daughter,' he said. 'You know she adopted. We've discussed this.'

The words were so smooth. So ready.

'That is our daughter,' I said. 'Look at her face, Camden. Look at her eyes.'

'Ivey.' His voice shifted. Still quiet, but the warmth drained out of it. 'You're not thinking clearly. You need to calm down.'

'I am completely calm.'

'You're sitting alone in the dark watching a stranger's home video on repeat.' He set his jacket over the back of the chair. 'That's not calm. That's—'

'Don't.' I took a step toward the door. 'I'm going to Laurel's. I'm going to see her myself.'

He moved faster than I expected. His hand closed around my arm — not rough, not yet, but firm enough that I felt the intention behind it.

'Listen to me.' His voice was very low. Very even. The voice he used in boardrooms when he wanted someone to understand that the conversation was already over. 'If you go there and make a scene, I will make sure you get the help you clearly need. I will protect Laurel. I will protect that child. And no one—' he paused, just briefly, '—will believe a word you say.'

I looked at his face.

Seven years. I had looked at this face across breakfast tables and hospital waiting rooms and the altar of St. Patrick's Cathedral. I had memorized the way he looked when he was tired, when he was proud, when he was pretending to listen. I thought I knew every version of this face.

I had never seen this one before.

This was not my husband. This was the man my husband had always been underneath.

I stopped pulling against his grip.

He let go.

I don't remember the next two hours clearly. I remember calling my mother and getting her voicemail. I remember sitting on the edge of the bed and pressing my thumbnail into my palm over and over until the skin went white. I remember the sound of Camden's voice somewhere in the apartment, low and deliberate, talking to someone on the phone.

The buzzer rang at eleven-fifteen.

Two men and a woman in gray uniforms. A folded set of papers in a manila envelope. Camden stood in the doorway of the bedroom and watched them come in and he did not look guilty. He did not look conflicted. He looked like a man who had made a decision and was satisfied with it.

'Camden—'

'This is the right thing,' he said. 'You need help.'

I ran for the front door. I got my hands on the frame. One of the men caught my wrists and the woman was already uncapping a syringe and I was screaming — not words, just sound, the rawest thing I had — and then there was a cold sting in my arm and the doorframe started to slide.

The last thing I saw was Camden's face.

Resolved. That was the word. Like a problem he had finally solved.

Then the ceiling, and then nothing.

I woke up in a room with no windows.

White walls. A narrow bed with rails. A door with a small reinforced glass panel. The kind of light that has no source you can point to — just a flat, even brightness that makes every hour feel the same.

Brookfield Psychiatric Wellness Center. I would learn the name later, from a laminated card on the wall beside the door. Private facility. Midtown Manhattan. The kind of place that had a website with words like 'compassionate' and 'evidence-based' and photographs of people sitting in sunlit gardens.

There were no gardens in my room.

I asked for a lawyer. The nurse — young, Vietnamese, with careful eyes that didn't quite meet mine — wrote something on her clipboard and told me the care team would address my concerns at the next scheduled check-in.

I asked for my phone. Another note on the clipboard.

I asked to call my mother.

Sympathetic nod. More notes. A small paper cup with two white pills that I palmed and dropped behind the radiator when she turned away.

On the fourth day, two orderlies came before breakfast.

The table was in a room at the end of the hall. There were straps — wrists, ankles, a band across the forehead. The man who introduced himself as Dr. Daniel Marsh had silver hair and a pleasant, professional face, the face of someone who had learned to perform reassurance so many times it had become structural.

'This is a standard course of treatment,' he said. 'You'll feel some disorientation afterward. That's normal.'

'I am not delusional,' I said. My voice was steady. I needed it to be steady. 'My husband had me committed to silence me. My daughter is alive. She is living with a woman named Laurel Griffin on the Upper East Side and I need someone to—'

The first shock hit.

It wasn't pain exactly. It was the absence of everything — thought, word, the thread of who I was — for one white, obliterating second.

Then it came back. Fragmented. Slow.

Dr. Marsh made a note.

I lay on that table and I stared at the flat, sourceless light on the ceiling and I thought about a little girl with dark curls and my eyes, laughing on a cream carpet in a stolen life.

I thought: I am going to get out of here.

I thought: I am going to get her back.

I pressed my thumbnail into my palm until I felt something real.

And I held onto it.

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