
My Husband Gave Our Daughter’s Seat to His Mistress’s Son
Chapter 2
I found a forensic lab I trusted — one I had used twice before on federal cases, a quiet operation in a building with no signage and a director who understood the meaning of discretion. I called from my car, parked two blocks from the house, engine running.
I told them what I had. A coffee cup, Conrad's, retrieved from the recycling bin the morning after I listened to that recording. I had sealed it in an evidence bag with the same hands I used to make his breakfast. The lab director asked no questions I hadn't anticipated. We arranged a courier pickup for the following afternoon.
I drove home and made dinner.
I didn't have Kye's sample yet. I knew that. The paternity report would be incomplete without it — a single-source DNA profile, useful for building a chain of evidence, not yet sufficient for the confrontation I was constructing in my mind. One piece at a time. That was how every case worked. You didn't reach for the conclusion before the foundation was solid.
Conrad came home at seven. He smelled like the office and something else I had stopped trying to identify. He kissed my cheek. I handed him a plate.
We ate. Lilah told us about a book she was reading — something about a girl who could talk to birds. Conrad nodded at the right moments. He was good at that. The nodding, the eye contact, the performance of a man who was present.
I passed him the salt.
'How was your day?' I asked.
'Long,' he said. 'But fine.'
I said, 'Good,' and refilled his water glass.
---
He waited four days before he pushed again.
I had expected three, so he was running slightly behind. I noted that without satisfaction.
We were in the kitchen on a Saturday morning. Lilah was still asleep. Conrad was at the counter with his coffee, and I could see him working up to something — the particular set of his shoulders, the way he turned his mug in a slow circle on the countertop. He had a tell. He had always had it. I had filed it away years ago and never told him.
'I've been thinking,' he said.
I looked up from my laptop.
'Lilah's birthday is in three weeks.' He said it carefully, like he was placing something fragile on a shelf. 'I thought it might be nice to keep it small this year. Relaxed. A few people she knows.'
I waited.
'Priscilla mentioned Kye has been asking about Lilah.' He paused. 'They played well together last time. I thought — if we invited them, as family friends — it might be good for her. Normal. You know.'
He looked at me with that expression. The one that said: I am being reasonable. I am being generous. I am the bigger person here, and I am inviting you to be the bigger person too.
I had watched him use that expression on other people for years. I had never fully understood, until recently, that he had been using it on me the entire time.
'Sure,' I said.
He blinked. 'Yeah?'
'It's a birthday party.' I turned back to my laptop. 'Lilah likes Kye well enough. Invite them.'
A beat of silence. I could feel him recalibrating — he had prepared for resistance, had a whole architecture of gentle persuasion ready to deploy, and I had just walked through the door he was planning to pry open.
'Great,' he said. The word came out slightly uneven. 'That's — yeah. Good.'
I took a sip of my coffee.
He stood there another moment, waiting for something he couldn't name. Then he refilled his mug and went to the living room, and I listened to the sound of the television coming on, and I thought about Kye Mendez — his age, his height, the way he moved, the specific texture of his hair.
I thought about what a birthday party looked like. The juice boxes. The cake. The small, ordinary chaos of children in a room together.
I thought about chain of evidence.
I closed my laptop and went to wake up Lilah.
---
She was already half-awake when I pushed open her door, lying on her back with her eyes open, staring at the ceiling with the focused expression she wore when she was thinking through something important.
'Mama,' she said. 'If a bird could talk, what do you think it would say first?'
I sat on the edge of her bed. 'Probably something about food.'
She considered this seriously. 'Or maybe it would say it was cold. Birds are always outside.'
'That's true.'
She turned her head and looked at me. She had my eyes — the same shape, the same particular shade of dark — and sometimes the directness of her gaze caught me off guard, even now.
'Is Kye coming to my party?' she asked.
I kept my face still. 'Who told you that?'
'I heard Daddy on the phone.' She said it without accusation, just information. 'He said Kye would love it.'
'Does that bother you?'
She thought about it. Genuinely thought about it, the way she thought about everything. 'He broke my colored pencil last time,' she said finally. 'The dark blue one.'
'I remember.'
'He didn't say sorry.'
I looked at her. Six years old, and she already understood that an apology withheld was a statement. I felt something move through my chest — not grief, exactly. Something quieter and more permanent.
'I'll get you a new dark blue,' I said.
She nodded, satisfied, and sat up. 'Can we have waffles?'
'We can have waffles.'
She climbed out of bed and padded past me toward the hallway, and I sat there another moment in the warm mess of her room — the colored pencils on the desk, the bird book on the floor, the drawing of our house with more windows tacked above her headboard.
More windows, she had said. So the light comes in everywhere.
I stood up. I smoothed her blanket. I went to make waffles.
Three weeks was enough time. I had built cases in less.
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