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My Husband Gave Our Anniversary Ring to His Mistress First Novel Cover

My Husband Gave Our Anniversary Ring to His Mistress First

The candlelight flickered across Xander's face as he reached into his pocket, his practiced smile never wavering. Five years of marriage, and he still performed these moments with the calculated precision of a hedge fund manager closing a deal. The small velvet box appeared between his fingers, and I felt my own smile mirror his—reflexive, perfectly calibrated, utterly convincing. "Lorelai," he began, his voice carrying that warm timber that had once made my heart race, "five years ago, you became the foundation of everything I've built. This ring is just a small token of my gratitude for your unwavering support." I extended my left hand across the dining table, watching the candlelight dance across the diamond as he slipped it onto my finger. It caught the light beautifully—a perfect, dazzling deception. "It's beautiful, Xander. Thank you." He reached across the table to take my hand, his thumb brushing over the diamond. "You're beautiful. You're everything.
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Chapter 4

The call came at 7:14 in the evening.

I was in the kitchen, slicing an apple, when my phone buzzed against the counter. A number I recognized — Lenox Hill. I set the knife down before I answered.

The nurse's voice was careful and practiced. Elevated cardiac event. Very sudden. They had done everything they could.

I stood there with the phone against my ear and the apple half-sliced in front of me and said, 'I'm on my way.'

I didn't run. I put on my coat, picked up my bag, and walked to the elevator. I hailed a cab on the street because it was faster than waiting for a car. The driver had the radio on — something with a lot of bass, a song I didn't recognize. I watched the city move past the window and kept my hands flat on my thighs and breathed.

Twenty minutes. That was all it took to get from our apartment to the hospital. Twenty minutes, and the world had already finished rearranging itself without asking my permission.

---

A nurse met me at the elevator on the fourth floor. Young, dark-haired, with the particular expression of someone who had delivered this kind of news before and had not yet learned to be numb to it. She touched my arm lightly and said she was sorry. She said it had been very fast. She said Grandma Rose had not been in pain.

I thanked her.

The curtain was already drawn around the bed. I pushed it aside and went in.

She looked smaller than I remembered. That was the first thing I noticed — the way the body contracts into itself, how the absence of a person makes the physical fact of them seem diminished. Her hands were folded on top of the blanket. Someone had done that for her, arranged them with care, and I was grateful for that small, anonymous kindness.

I pulled the chair close and sat down.

I picked up her right hand and held it between both of mine — the way she always did when she wanted me to listen carefully. Her skin was still warm. Not warm the way living skin is warm, but not cold yet either. Something in between. A threshold.

I sat there and held her hand and looked at her face.

Three days ago she had been fine. I had visited on Sunday and she had complained about the hospital food and asked me twice whether I was sleeping enough and told me, with the quiet precision she reserved for things that mattered, that I looked tired in a way that had nothing to do with sleep. I had squeezed her hand and changed the subject and she had let me, because she always let me arrive at things in my own time.

She had been waiting. She had always been waiting — for me to see what she had seen from the beginning, to stop protecting a version of my life that had already stopped being real. She had never pushed. She had just stayed close, kept the light on, trusted that I would find my way to the truth eventually.

She ran out of time.

I pressed her hand harder between mine and stared at the curtain across the room and thought about the tablet.

Xander had visited this afternoon. I knew because he had texted me from the lobby — *Stopping by to see Rose, don't wait on dinner* — the kind of message that performs consideration without requiring any. He had stayed forty minutes. Long enough to be seen, short enough to be elsewhere by evening.

A nurse had called him into the hallway. He had left his tablet on the bedside table.

He had forgotten it when he left.

I knew this because the nurse had mentioned it, gently, when she met me at the elevator. She said they had found it on the table after. She said she wasn't sure if it was relevant. She said it in the careful way of someone who suspected it was very relevant indeed.

I had nodded and thanked her and not asked what was on the screen.

I already knew.

I had forty-seven files in an encrypted folder on a device Xander had never seen. I had timestamps and screenshots and archived streams and geotags. I had built the case with the same methodical patience I once used to build trading models — clean, complete, airtight. I had known for weeks exactly what he was and exactly what he had done.

But Grandma Rose had not known. Not until this afternoon. Not until a tablet screen lit up on a hospital bedside table and showed her things no one should have to see — least of all a woman in a cardiac ward, least of all a woman who had spent eighty-one years loving people carefully and being repaid in varying degrees of carelessness.

Xander had not meant to leave the tablet. I was certain of that. He was not cruel in the deliberate way — he was cruel in the ordinary way, the way of men who move through the world assuming their comfort is the only variable that matters. He had forgotten it the way he forgot things that weren't important to him.

He had not considered that it might be important to someone else.

That was the thing about carelessness. It didn't require intent. It just required the absolute, unshakeable belief that your actions existed in a vacuum — that the mess you made would stay contained, that the people around you were furniture, that nothing you did in one room could reach into another.

He had been wrong.

I sat with Grandma Rose for a full hour. I did not cry. I did not speak. I held her hand between mine and breathed and let the silence be what it was — not empty, not peaceful, just the specific quality of a room from which something irreplaceable has been removed.

She had been the last person in my life who loved me without condition. The last person who knew the full story — the career, the sacrifice, the seed capital, all of it — and had never once used it against me or treated it as currency. She had kept every secret I gave her. She had pressed my hand between hers and waited for me to be ready.

I was ready now.

When I finally stood, I smoothed the blanket over her hands and looked at her face one last time. I memorized it the way I memorized things that mattered — completely, without sentimentality, with the knowledge that I would carry it forward and it would not leave me.

'I heard you,' I said quietly. 'I'm sorry it took me so long.'

I pushed the curtain aside and walked out into the corridor.

The nurse was at the station at the end of the hall. She looked up when she saw me, her expression ready to offer something — comfort, paperwork, a glass of water. I stopped in front of her.

'The tablet,' I said. 'My husband's. Do you still have it?'

She nodded and reached beneath the desk.

I took it from her, slipped it into my bag, and thanked her.

Then I walked to the elevator, pressed the button for the lobby, and took out my phone.

I opened the encrypted channel.

I typed four words: *The infrastructure. Activate it now.*

The elevator doors opened. I stepped inside.

Marcus replied before the doors closed.

*Already done. Welcome back, Fox.*

I put the phone in my pocket and watched the floor numbers descend and felt something settle into place inside me — not peace, not anger, something colder and more permanent than either. A door that had been standing ajar for weeks finally closing all the way.

The lobby was bright and busy and full of people moving through their ordinary evenings. I walked through it without stopping and pushed through the glass doors into the February air.

The city was loud and indifferent and exactly as it had always been.

I hailed a cab and got in and gave the driver our address, and as we pulled into traffic I looked out the window at the lights and thought about nothing at all.

The stillness was over.

The Fox was hungry.

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