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My Husband Moved His Mistress Into Our Home Novel Cover

My Husband Moved His Mistress Into Our Home

The morning sunlight streamed through the kitchen window as I arranged fresh berries on a plate. Six years of silence had taught me to navigate the world through touch and sight. My fingers danced across the countertop, feeling the vibrations of appliances, the cool surface of the marble, the soft texture of fruit. I hummed silently to myself—a habit from before the explosion that had stolen my hearing. I reached for a glass, intending to pour orange juice for Teo before he woke up. My fingers closed around it, but something slipped. The glass tumbled from my grasp, time seeming to slow as it fell toward the floor. Then I heard it. The sharp, crystalline crash of glass shattering on tile. I froze, my breath catching in my throat.
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Chapter 5

I stood in the hallway, a ghost in my own home, watching as Kiana moved through the kitchen with the ease of someone who had lived here for years. The morning light streamed through the windows, casting a warm glow over the scene that should have been mine.

Kingsley stood at the stove, his back to me as he flipped pancakes with practiced precision. Teo sat on a barstool at the counter, his legs swinging as he chattered animatedly. And there was Kiana, her sleek dark hair pulled into an elegant ponytail, reaching for the maple syrup with her perfectly manicured fingers.

"More butter, please," she called to Kingsley, her voice musical even in such an ordinary request.

He passed it to her without hesitation, their fingers brushing in a way that made my stomach clench. "Here you go, darling."

Darling. The endearment hung in the air like a slap.

"Mom used to make blueberry pancakes every Sunday," Teo said, his voice bright with excitement. "But Kiana says chocolate chips are way better."

"Life's too short for boring breakfasts," Kiana replied with a laugh that tinkled like crystal. "Don't you think so, Kingsley?"

"Absolutely," he agreed, his voice warm in a way it hadn't been with me in years. "Sometimes you need to shake things up a bit."

I pressed myself against the wall, my fingers digging into the plaster. This was our routine—mine and Teo's. Every Sunday morning for six years, we'd made breakfast together while Kingsley read the paper. Now they were rewriting our history, erasing me so completely that my son couldn't even remember what we used to do.

They laughed—all three of them—at some joke I couldn't see, their voices blending in perfect harmony. I'd become invisible in my own home.

---

"The results are quite remarkable, Mrs. Owens," Dr. Martinez said, her voice crisp and professional as she reviewed my test results. "Your hearing has fully restored itself."

I sat in the sterile audiologist's office, surrounded by equipment that had confirmed what I already knew. My hearing was back—a miracle that should have been celebrated.

"Is it permanent?" I asked, my voice still feeling strange to my own ears.

She nodded, removing her glasses as she looked up at me. "Based on these readings, yes. The neural pathways have regenerated in a way we rarely see. You've essentially healed yourself."

I closed my eyes, letting the words sink in. Healed myself. While my family had been busy healing themselves by pushing me aside.

"What about... repercussions?" I asked carefully. "Will it come back?"

"There's no medical reason to expect any further hearing loss," she replied. "You should consider yourself extremely fortunate."

Fortunate. Was that what I was? I thought of Kingsley's voice on the phone, calling me his "deaf wife" with such contempt. Of Teo's cruel words about my being "broken." Of Kiana's casual dismissal of everything I'd sacrificed.

"Mrs. Owens?" Dr. Martinez's voice pulled me back to the present. "Is everything alright?"

I straightened in my chair, a new resolve hardening within me. "Yes," I said firmly. "Everything is about to be."

---

I'd left the house that morning with a plan. Visit the doctor, confirm what I already knew, and then... then I would stop pretending. Stop hiding. Stop allowing them to treat me like I was still deaf.

But as I drove home, something changed. The anger that had been simmering beneath the surface crystallized into cold determination. I wouldn't wait until evening. I wouldn't give them time to prepare excuses.

I parked in the driveway and walked up the path to my front door, using my key with deliberate slowness. The house was quiet when I entered—too quiet.

"Hello?" I called out, my voice echoing through the empty foyer.

No answer.

I moved through the downstairs rooms methodically. The kitchen was spotless, as if no one had been there all day. The living room sat undisturbed, magazines neatly arranged on the coffee table.

Then I heard it—a strain of classical music drifting down from upstairs. A violin's melody, played with expert precision.

My heart began to pound as I climbed the stairs, each step deliberate and silent. The music grew louder as I approached the master bedroom—our bedroom.

And then I heard her laugh.

"Oh, Kingsley," Kiana's voice was breathless, intimate in a way that made my skin crawl. "You're impossible."

"I've been waiting all day," my husband's voice replied, low and husky. "Teo's at baseball practice. Lorelai's at her appointment."

I froze at the top of the stairs, my hand gripping the banister so tightly my knuckles turned white. Through the partially open door of our bedroom, I could see them—Kingsley's back as he leaned over her, Kiana's face tilted up toward his, her eyes closed in anticipation.

The violin lay discarded on our bed, its bow hanging over the edge like a discarded promise.

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