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My Husband Missed Our Daughter’s Birthday for His Mistress Novel Cover

My Husband Missed Our Daughter’s Birthday for His Mistress

I spent the afternoon making Penny's birthday perfect. The dining table in our Manhattan apartment gleamed under the soft light of the crystal chandelier I'd insisted we install when we first moved in. I'd hand-painted three place cards with delicate gold edges—one for Mommy, one for Penny, and one for Daddy—each with tiny flowers that matched the cake I'd spent three hours baking this morning. Penny twirled in her new birthday dress, a pale pink confection with layers of tulle that made her look like a miniature ballerina. Her dark hair, so like Brayden's, was pulled back in a neat ponytail with a ribbon I'd tied myself. "Mommy, does Daddy know I picked the restaurant?" she asked, her voice bright with anticipation. "He promised he'd be here by six. He said he'd take us to Luciano's in the West Village." I smiled, smoothing down the front of my own dress. "Of course he does, sweetheart. He wouldn't miss your special day." At six-thirty, Penny's eyes began darting to the door every few minutes.
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Chapter 1

I spent the afternoon making Penny's birthday perfect. The dining table in our Manhattan apartment gleamed under the soft light of the crystal chandelier I'd insisted we install when we first moved in. I'd hand-painted three place cards with delicate gold edges—one for Mommy, one for Penny, and one for Daddy—each with tiny flowers that matched the cake I'd spent three hours baking this morning.

Penny twirled in her new birthday dress, a pale pink confection with layers of tulle that made her look like a miniature ballerina. Her dark hair, so like Brayden's, was pulled back in a neat ponytail with a ribbon I'd tied myself.

"Mommy, does Daddy know I picked the restaurant?" she asked, her voice bright with anticipation. "He promised he'd be here by six. He said he'd take us to Luciano's in the West Village."

I smiled, smoothing down the front of my own dress. "Of course he does, sweetheart. He wouldn't miss your special day."

At six-thirty, Penny's eyes began darting to the door every few minutes. At seven, she sat down at the table, her hands folded carefully in her lap. At seven-fifteen, I called Brayden's office. The receptionist—Sloan, I remembered, the young woman with the perpetually bright smile—said he'd left hours ago.

My phone buzzed with a text. *Working late. Don't wait up.* No mention of Penny. No mention of the dinner he'd promised to take her to.

Penny's face crumpled slightly, but she was trying so hard to be brave. "Maybe he got caught in traffic," she said, picking at her untouched plate. "Or maybe he's getting me a surprise."

I cut a slice of cake and placed it in front of her, watching as she took one small bite and then pushed it around her plate. The candles remained unlit. Brayden never came home that night.

The next morning, I was emptying the dishwasher when I heard the front door open. Brayden's cologne hit me before he did—that expensive sandalwood scent he wore to the office. He dropped his gym bag by the door with a casual thud and headed straight for the coffee machine.

"You're home," I said, my voice carefully neutral. "Penny waited up for you."

He shrugged, not meeting my eyes. "I told you I was working late. The Henderson account needed attention."

I said nothing as I finished putting away the dishes. When I heard the shower running, I walked to his gym bag and stood there, staring at it. Something compelled me to look inside—a feeling I couldn't name but couldn't ignore.

In a side pocket, tucked behind his protein bars and workout clothes, I found a phone. Not his regular phone, which he'd left on the counter. This was smaller, cheaper—a burner phone.

My hands didn't shake as I turned it on. No password. The screen lit up with a text conversation that made my blood freeze.

*Miss you already babe. When can I see you again?* Sloan's name was at the top of the screen. Below it was a selfie of her in a bikini on a beach, her face turned slightly toward the camera in that practiced way women do when they want to be looked at.

I scrolled up. Days of messages. Weeks. Months, maybe. Plans made and broken. Inside jokes. Pet names. And then, photos from a weekend in Miami—Brayden and Sloan at a beachside bar, their bodies pressed close together. The timestamp read 7:23 PM. Yesterday. When Penny sat in her birthday dress, watching the door.

I heard the shower shut off and quickly replaced the phone, my heart hammering against my ribs. I walked to the kitchen window and looked out at the Manhattan skyline, trying to steady my breathing. The burner phone burned in my mind like a brand.

That evening, I waited until Penny was asleep before I confronted him. I held the phone in my hand, my voice low and controlled as I asked him about Miami.

Brayden's face twisted into something I'd never seen before—not guilt, not remorse. Rage. He snatched the phone from my hand. "You went through my things? Jesus, Lucia. You're so clingy. So exhausting. Do you know how suffocating it is to have you always watching, always needing something from me? You should be grateful I still come home at all. Look at yourself—you've let yourself go. You used to be so put-together. Now you're just... this."

His words hit me like physical blows, but I didn't flinch. I didn't cry. I simply looked at him—really looked at him—for the first time in years. The man I'd given up everything for. The man who'd just missed his daughter's birthday to be with another woman. The man who now stood in our kitchen, rewriting our entire marriage in a tone of weary disappointment, as though my pain was an inconvenience he was generously tolerating.

Something inside me shifted. Not broke. Crystallized. I went very still, and in that stillness, I felt a cold, clear purpose take shape.

Later that night, after Brayden left for the office again, I sat at our kitchen table with a cup of chamomile tea and my worn notebook. I opened it to a fresh page, but I didn't write anything. I just sat there, thinking with the methodical clarity of a woman who had just decided exactly what she was going to do.

It wasn't a list of grievances I needed to make. It was a plan.

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