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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 3

The DM came on a Tuesday morning.

I was at my kitchen counter, both hands wrapped around a mug of chamomile, watching the early light move across the new apartment's walls. My phone buzzed. I picked it up without thinking.

The notification was from Instagram. A follow request from an account I didn't recognize — @sloanfox.official — and below it, a direct message.

I opened it.

The photo loaded slowly, the way bad news always seems to. Sloan Fox, draped sideways across Brayden at a rooftop bar I recognized immediately — the one on the forty-second floor of the Meridian Hotel, the one Brayden had taken me to on our third anniversary. Her head was tipped back, laughing at something. His hand was on her waist. They both looked very comfortable.

The caption read: *He upgraded.* Followed by a kiss emoji.

I set my mug down.

I looked at the photo for a long moment. Not because it hurt — though somewhere beneath the ice, something did register, something small and tired — but because I was already thinking about the folder on my desktop. The one I'd labeled, simply, *Evidence.*

I took a screenshot of the DM. Then I went to her profile and screenshotted every public photo. The rooftop. A weekend brunch. A hotel room with the curtains half-open and the Manhattan skyline behind her. I didn't rush. I was methodical about it, the way I was methodical about everything now.

I did not respond to the message.

I dragged everything into the folder, created a subfolder labeled *Sloan — Instagram,* and went to make a second cup of tea.

She wanted a reaction. I was saving mine for the right audience.

---

The strategy call was scheduled for Thursday at ten.

I still had access to Brayden's company conferencing system — a login I'd used for years while managing international client calls on his behalf, translating in real time, smoothing over the cultural friction his team never noticed because I'd already handled it. No one had thought to revoke my credentials. Why would they? As far as Brayden's office was concerned, I was just his wife.

I joined the call two minutes early, my camera off, my name listed simply as *L. Robertson — Invoice Consultation.* Marcus Hale had agreed to the meeting. He wanted to discuss the $140,000 figure. I was happy to discuss it.

There were eight people on the call. Marcus. Two senior partners. Two investors whose names I recognized from the Singapore deal I had personally translated and restructured eighteen months ago. Three other faces I didn't know.

Marcus opened the meeting with the careful tone of a man trying to contain something. 'Lucia, thank you for joining. We wanted to address the invoice directly and—'

'Of course,' I said. 'I've prepared a screen share. It might be easier to walk through the documentation visually.'

A brief pause. 'Go ahead.'

I opened the share.

For exactly four seconds, I let them see the invoice — the itemized breakdown, the project names, the hours, the market rates. Clean. Professional. Damning in its own right.

Then I 'accidentally' tabbed to the wrong window.

Sloan's DM filled every screen in that boardroom. The photo. The caption. *He upgraded.* Kiss emoji.

I let it sit for three seconds before I tabbed again — this time to the burner phone screenshots. The Miami photos. The timestamps. The pet names. The weekend Penny sat in her birthday dress watching the door.

I heard someone on the call make a sound. Not a word. Just a sound.

I tabbed back to the invoice with the unhurried calm of a woman who had simply made a small technical error. 'I'm sorry about that,' I said. 'Wrong window. Now — if you look at line item seven, the Singapore acquisition translation—'

No one asked about line item seven.

One of the senior partners — a man named Gerald Fitch whose name I'd seen on a dozen contracts — put his head in his hands. I watched his shoulders drop in real time.

Marcus said, very quietly, 'I think we should reschedule.'

'Of course,' I said. 'Whenever is convenient.'

The call ended four minutes later.

I closed my laptop, picked up my tea, and looked out the window at the street below. A woman was walking a dog. A delivery truck was double-parked. The city moved the way it always did, indifferent and continuous.

I felt very calm.

---

Brayden called at noon.

I let it ring twice before I answered, just to make him wait.

'What the hell did you do.' It wasn't a question. His voice had that particular edge — the one that used to make me careful, used to make me smaller, used to make me choose my words like I was defusing something.

I didn't say anything. I let him keep going.

'You think this is a game? I will bury you in this divorce. Full custody. Asset freeze. Every account, every asset, every—' He was breathing hard now. 'You will have nothing. You hear me? Nothing. I will make sure of it. I have lawyers who eat people like you for breakfast and I will—'

He went on for another two minutes. I stood at my kitchen window and watched a pigeon land on the fire escape across the alley. It pecked at something, found nothing, flew away.

When Brayden finally stopped, the silence stretched between us.

'Noted,' I said.

I hung up.

I opened my call recording app, saved the file, and forwarded it to Diane Winters with a single line of text: *He called. Recording attached. Do with it what you will.*

Her reply came back in under four minutes: *Perfect. This is exactly what we needed.*

I set my phone face-down on the counter.

In the next room, I could hear Penny humming to herself — some song from a cartoon she liked, tuneless and cheerful and completely unbothered. I stood there and listened to it for a moment.

Then I went to make a third cup of tea and started drafting the agenda for my first client meeting at the new firm.

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