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My Husband Locked Me Away While His Mistress Wore My Ring Novel Cover

My Husband Locked Me Away While His Mistress Wore My Ring

Seven years. Seven years of marriage, of endurance, of hoping that someday Watson would change. I stood in our dining room, adjusting the silver candlesticks for the third time, watching the flames dance in the reflection of the crystal glasses. The table was set with Watson's favorite dishes—roasted duck with orange glaze, truffle mashed potatoes, and a bottle of Château Margaux from our wedding year. I smoothed down my navy dress, the one Watson once said made my eyes look like sapphires. My hair was styled in loose waves, the way he preferred it. Everything was perfect for our seventh anniversary. "He'll notice tonight," I whispered to myself, touching the small diamond at my throat—a gift I'd bought myself last month. "He has to." The grandfather clock in the hallway chimed nine. Nine o'clock.
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Chapter 1

Seven years. Seven years of marriage, of endurance, of hoping that someday Watson would change. I stood in our dining room, adjusting the silver candlesticks for the third time, watching the flames dance in the reflection of the crystal glasses. The table was set with Watson's favorite dishes—roasted duck with orange glaze, truffle mashed potatoes, and a bottle of Château Margaux from our wedding year.

I smoothed down my navy dress, the one Watson once said made my eyes look like sapphires. My hair was styled in loose waves, the way he preferred it. Everything was perfect for our seventh anniversary.

"He'll notice tonight," I whispered to myself, touching the small diamond at my throat—a gift I'd bought myself last month. "He has to."

The grandfather clock in the hallway chimed nine. Nine o'clock. Watson was already two hours late.

I checked my phone again. No messages. No calls. Just the silent screen reflecting my increasingly anxious face.

"Mrs. Brooks?" Our housekeeper appeared in the doorway, her expression carefully neutral. "Should I keep the food warm?"

"Yes, please, Martha. He'll be here soon." The words sounded hollow even to my own ears.

At nine-thirty, I heard the front door open. My heart leapt—then immediately sank as I heard not one set of footsteps, but two. A woman's laugh, light and tinkling, echoed through the foyer.

I stepped into the hallway, and my world tilted on its axis.

Watson stood there in his tailored charcoal suit, his dark hair slightly tousled. But it wasn't his disheveled appearance that made my blood run cold—it was the woman clinging to his arm.

Stella Harris. Her sleek blonde hair cascaded over bare shoulders left exposed by a red dress that clung to every curve. Her lips, painted the same shade as her dress, curved into a smile that didn't reach her eyes.

"Harper." Watson's voice was cool, detached. "I'd like you to meet Stella."

"I know who she is," I said, my voice barely above a whisper.

"Good." He stepped further into the hallway, pulling Stella with him. "Then you'll understand why I've brought her home."

Home. The word echoed in my mind like a slap.

"Martha!" Watson called, his voice carrying up the stairs. "Have the staff move Mrs. Adams' things from the master bedroom to the east guest suite. Immediately."

"Watson," I began, my voice shaking. "Today is our anniversary."

He looked at me as if I'd spoken in a foreign language. "And?"

"Seven years," I said, gesturing toward the dining room with its perfect table setting. "Our vows—"

"Vows?" He laughed, the sound sharp and cutting. "You still believe in those?"

Stella's smile widened as she pressed herself closer to Watson's side.

"You're being ridiculous," I said, finding a thread of strength somewhere deep inside. "This is my home too."

Watson's expression hardened. He crossed the space between us in two strides, his fingers closing around my chin with bruising force.

"Let me make something perfectly clear, Harper." His voice was low, dangerous. "You are Mrs. Brooks because I allow it. Nothing more."

I tried to pull away, but his grip tightened. "Watson, please—"

"Please what?" He released me abruptly, turning to Stella. "Please understand that this house has a new future?"

Before I could respond, he pulled Stella against him and kissed her—not a gentle kiss, but one of possession and dominance. Right in front of me.

"Take her things out of my room," he ordered over his shoulder, his lips still pressed against Stella's. "Now."

They turned and walked toward the master bedroom—our bedroom—leaving me standing alone in the hallway.

I watched them go, my husband and the woman who had just been installed in my place. Something inside me—something that had bent and stretched for seven years—finally snapped.

I didn't cry. Not then.

Instead, I walked to the guest room with measured steps, opened the closet, and pulled out a single suitcase. Seven years of marriage reduced to what could fit in a single bag.

But before I could leave, there was one thing I needed.

My mother's music box.

I made my way to Watson's study, where he insisted my precious memento be kept "safe" in his wall safe. The room was dimly lit, shadows pooling in the corners.

I approached the safe with trembling fingers—and found it standing open.

"Looking for something?"

I whirled around to find Martha, our housekeeper, standing in the doorway. Her eyes were wide with fear.

"The music box," I said, my voice hollow. "Where is it?"

Martha's gaze dropped to the floor beside my feet. I followed her gaze and felt my knees buckle.

There, on the Persian rug, lay the splintered remains of my mother's music box. The delicate wooden casing had been smashed beyond recognition, the tiny ballerina that once spun to Tchaikovsky's melody broken in half.

And the diamond ring—my mother's wedding ring—that had been nestled inside was gone.

"Miss Stella was in here earlier," Martha whispered, tears welling in her eyes. "I saw her... I'm so sorry, Mrs. Brooks."

I stared at the shattered remains of my last connection to my mother, something cold and hard crystallizing in my chest where my heart had been.

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