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My Husband Gave Our Daughter’s Seat to His Mistress’s Son Novel Cover

My Husband Gave Our Daughter’s Seat to His Mistress’s Son

The letter arrived on a Tuesday. It came in a cream envelope with the Aldermoor Academy crest embossed in navy on the upper left corner. I recognized it immediately. I had been waiting for the enrollment confirmation for weeks — the final piece, the last formality before Lilah's future clicked into place. I set my coffee down and opened it at the kitchen table. Dear Ms. Bennett-Hawkins, We regret to inform you that the admission placement previously reserved for Lilah Hawkins has been reassigned to another applicant. We wish Lilah the very best in her academic journey. I read it once. Then I read it again.
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Chapter 5

He brought it up on a Tuesday night.

Lilah was in bed. The dishes were done. Conrad was at the kitchen table with his laptop open and a look on his face I recognized — the one that meant he had been rehearsing.

I poured myself a glass of water and sat down across from him.

'I've been thinking,' he said.

I waited.

'About Priscilla's situation.' He turned the laptop slightly, like he was going to show me something, then seemed to think better of it. 'She's been struggling with the commute. Kye's school, the new schedule — it's a lot for her to manage alone. And with the academy placement sorted out, it makes sense for them to be closer to that district anyway.'

Sorted out. That was the phrase he used. Like it was a done thing. Like it had been agreed upon.

I took a sip of water.

'There's an apartment,' he said. 'Two-bedroom, good building. She found it last week. The down payment is forty thousand.' He paused. 'I thought we could help. From the joint account. It's sitting there — we're not using it for anything immediate. And it would stabilize things for Kye. For the whole family situation.'

Family. There it was. He used it three times in the next two sentences — family situation, family responsibility, what family does. I counted without moving my face.

'It's not charity,' he added. 'It's practical. It makes the whole arrangement easier for everyone.'

I looked at him across the table. He looked back at me with that expression — reasonable, generous, the bigger person, inviting me to be the bigger person too.

'Let me think about it,' I said.

He blinked. He had expected more resistance. I could see him recalibrating again, the same way he had at the birthday party conversation, the same slight unsteadiness of a man whose prepared arguments have no target.

'Yeah,' he said. 'Of course. Take your time.'

I finished my water. I rinsed the glass. I said goodnight and went upstairs.

The next morning, after Conrad left for work and Lilah was on the bus, I sat down at my desk and opened my laptop.

It took eleven minutes.

I transferred the full balance of the joint savings account into a separate account in my name alone — an account Conrad had no access to, no knowledge of, and no legal claim to, given what I now had sitting in the folder in my bottom drawer. I did it the same way I did everything: methodically, without hesitation, without drama.

I closed the laptop.

I made coffee.

I thought about the word family, and what it meant to a man who had been building a second one for seven years on my money and my silence and my willingness to believe the best of him.

I drank my coffee by the window.

The forty thousand dollars stayed where I put it.

---

Mrs. Hawkins called on a Friday afternoon.

I was at my desk when the phone rang. I looked at the name on the screen for a moment before I answered. She almost never called me directly. That she was doing it now told me Conrad had gone home to regroup.

'Elouise.' Her voice was the same as always — declarative, slightly theatrical, the voice of a woman who had never been told no by anyone she considered beneath her. 'I'm calling because the family has talked. We've all talked. And we've reached a decision.'

I leaned back in my chair. I said nothing.

'The academy slot belongs to Kye. That's been decided. Conrad made the right call, and the family supports him.' A brief pause, the kind designed to let the weight of collective opinion settle. 'Lilah is a bright girl. She'll find her place. But that boy has had nothing handed to him, and this is an opportunity that could change his life. I would think a mother could understand that.'

I understood a great many things.

'You've always been a little rigid about these things, Elouise. A little — possessive. It's not an attractive quality. Holding onto something just because you feel entitled to it, when someone else needs it more.' Her tone shifted slightly, warming into something that was almost kind, the way a verdict can sound almost kind when it's being delivered to someone who has no recourse. 'Let it go. Be gracious. That's what we're asking. That's what family does.'

There was that word again.

She talked for another four minutes. I listened to all of it — the full architecture of it, every brick she had laid over years of small dismissals and pointed silences and the particular way she said Elouise, like my name was a mild inconvenience. I had been a nobody to her since the day Conrad brought me home. I had been beneath her consideration, beneath the Hawkins name, beneath the threshold of a woman worth taking seriously.

I had let her believe that.

I had been very patient.

'Thank you for calling,' I said, when she finished.

A beat of silence. She had expected something else — pushback, or capitulation, or tears. Something she could work with.

'I mean it, Elouise. Think about what I've said.'

'I will,' I said. 'Have a good evening.'

I hung up.

I sat for a moment with the phone in my hand. Outside, the afternoon light was going flat and gray, the same noncommittal gray it had been all week, pressing down on the rooftops and the bare trees and the quiet street below.

I picked up my phone again and called Marcus.

He answered on the second ring.

'It's me,' I said. 'They're moving. How close are you?'

'Package is clean,' he said. 'Arrest coordination is confirmed. I can have agents on standby within forty-eight hours.'

'Do it,' I said.

'Done.'

I hung up.

I opened the bottom drawer of my desk. I looked at the folder — Evidence — Federal Referral — sitting exactly where I had left it, solid and complete and patient.

I closed the drawer.

I went to start dinner.

Lilah would be home in twenty minutes. She would want to tell me about her day. She would want to know what we were having. She would press her palm flat against the bus window when she saw me waiting at the corner, and I would wave, and she would climb down the steps with her backpack bouncing, and none of what was coming would touch her tonight.

Tonight was just dinner.

Everything else was already in motion.

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