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My Husband Let Her Imitate His Dead Lover Novel Cover

My Husband Let Her Imitate His Dead Lover

The divorce papers were twelve pages long. I had drafted them myself, which felt right. No one else in Manhattan knew Callan Crawford's assets the way I did. No one else knew which holding companies were shells and which ones had teeth. I set the folder on the edge of my desk, aligned the pen beside it, and turned my coffee cup so the handle faced east. Eleven p.m. Forty-first floor. The city spread out below me like a circuit board—all those lit windows, all those lives running their quiet algorithms behind the glass. I had been a divorce attorney for nine years. I had sat across from women who wept, women who screamed, women who went very still and did not move for a long time.
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Chapter 1

The divorce papers were twelve pages long.

I had drafted them myself, which felt right. No one else in Manhattan knew Callan Crawford's assets the way I did. No one else knew which holding companies were shells and which ones had teeth. I set the folder on the edge of my desk, aligned the pen beside it, and turned my coffee cup so the handle faced east.

Eleven p.m. Forty-first floor. The city spread out below me like a circuit board—all those lit windows, all those lives running their quiet algorithms behind the glass.

I had been a divorce attorney for nine years. I had sat across from women who wept, women who screamed, women who went very still and did not move for a long time. I had always understood the ones who went still.

I picked up my coffee. Drank it black and scalding, the way I always did. Set it back down.

Tomorrow I would hand Callan the papers. That was all. There was nothing else to decide.

I slid the folder into my bag, shut off the desk lamp, and rode the elevator down to the street alone.

---

The penthouse smelled wrong before I got through the foyer.

I noticed it the moment the elevator opened—a fragrance threading through the cool air of the entryway, light and floral and specifically white. Freesia and something warmer underneath. My hand tightened on my bag strap without my permission.

Eliana's perfume.

I stood there for two seconds. Maybe three. Then I walked into the living room.

She was on my sofa.

A woman I had never met, curled into the corner cushions in a pale gold silk robe I recognized immediately—one of Eliana's robes, the one I had kept folded in the cedar chest at the back of our closet because I had not known what else to do with it. The woman was laughing at something on her phone. The laugh was almost right. Almost. The pitch was correct but the rhythm was half a beat off, the sound landing a fraction too late, like a translation rather than the original.

Callan stood at the floor-to-ceiling window with his back to the room. He did not turn when I came in. The city behind him made him look like a silhouette of himself.

"Margo." His voice was flat. Functional. The same voice he used to confirm dinner reservations. "Bianca will be staying with us for a while."

That was all he said.

The woman—Bianca—looked up from her phone. And then her face rearranged itself. I watched it happen, the calculation running just beneath the surface, and then the warmth arrived: a soft smile, a slight tilt of the head, the eyes going gentle in a way that was practiced rather than felt.

I knew every one of those gestures. I had watched the real version of them for four years. I knew the warmth that came before the smile, the way Eliana's eyes always moved a half-second faster than her mouth because the feeling reached her face before she decided to show it.

Bianca's eyes moved after.

"You must be Margo," she said. Her voice had that slightly tremulous softness in it—another studied detail. "I've heard so much—"

"That robe," I said.

She stopped.

"It belongs to me." I kept my voice even. Clean. The way I kept it in depositions when I wanted someone to understand they had already lost. "Not to the woman you're performing. Mine. You'll find it folded on the guest bed by morning."

I did not look at Callan. I did not need to see his face to know what was on it—that closed, unreadable expression he had perfected over seven years, the one that told me nothing and cost me everything. I walked past him toward the hallway.

Behind me, the room was very quiet.

---

I closed the bedroom door and put my back against it.

The room was dark. I did not turn on the light. I stood there with one palm flat against the wood and felt my own heartbeat—steady, deliberate, almost impersonal—and noticed that something was different.

Quieter.

Not the room. The room was the same: gray walls, low furniture, the faint ambient light of the city bleeding in through the drapes. The quiet was inside me, in the place that had been loud for fourteen years. The place that had spent fourteen years cataloguing the angle of his shoulders and the specific weight of his silences and the precise distance between his hand and mine at every dinner table we had ever shared.

That place was still.

I took the folder from my bag and set it on the nightstand. Smoothed the corner once with my thumb. The edge was crisp.

Twelve pages. Fourteen years. Seven years of marriage. All of it reducible to a stack of paper I had drafted myself in a corner office above a city that did not care.

I went to bed. I did not sleep.

---

At midnight I heard her voice in the hallway—high and fragile, a sound designed to carry.

"Callan. I don't feel well. I think I need— could we maybe—" A soft gasp. The theatrical sound of someone catching themselves against a wall.

I got up. I do not know why. Some remnant reflex, maybe, some old habit of needing to see the thing that was hurting me rather than only hear it.

I stood just inside the bedroom doorway in the dark.

Bianca was in the hall, one hand against the wall, her face arranged into an expression of fragile distress. Callan was there—already there, as though he had been waiting for her to need something. She tilted her head and looked up at him through her lashes.

"Buffalo wings," she said softly. "The spicy ones. I know it's late. I just—they always made me feel better. Eliana used to say the same thing."

The name landed in the hallway like a stone.

Callan did not speak. He pulled out his phone.

I watched him press the screen—a few taps, deliberate and quiet—and then slide it back into his pocket. He sat with her in the kitchen while she ate. His expression was the one I had never been able to read, but I had learned, over seven years, what it meant in the aggregate: it meant I am somewhere you cannot reach me.

I stood in the shadow of the doorway and watched the man I had loved for fourteen years order the dead woman's favorite dish for the dead woman's understudy at midnight.

And I felt it go out.

No sound. No ceremony. Just—absence, where something had been burning for so long I had forgotten it was fire.

I went back to the bedroom. I picked up the folder from the nightstand and held it for a moment in both hands.

Twelve pages.

I set it back down. Smoothed the corner again. This time I did not need to think about it.

Tomorrow was just a formality.

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