
My Husband Plotted My Death for Her Love
My Husband Plotted My Death for Her Love Chapter 1
Sunday mornings in our house had a rhythm. Carson slept late. I woke early. By the time he came downstairs, the coffee was made, the weekend papers were stacked on the island, and everything looked exactly the way a happy marriage is supposed to look.
I was in the laundry room sorting his shirts when I found it.
I almost missed it. I was moving fast, checking collars and cuffs the way I always did before dropping things at the dry cleaner. But something made me stop. A scent. Faint, but precise. I lifted the collar of his blue Oxford and held it close.
Penhaligon's Halfeti.
I knew the fragrance. I'd smelled it once at a counter in Nordstrom and put it back down — too dark, too resinous, not mine. Not Carson's either. He wore Creed. Had worn it for the six years I'd known him.
This was something else entirely.
I stood there in the laundry room for a long moment. The washing machine hummed. Morning light came through the small frosted window above the sink. I held the shirt and I didn't move.
I'm an architect. My entire professional life is built on the discipline of reading what's actually there — not what you hope is there, not what the client tells you is there. Load-bearing walls. Stress points. The places where a structure is quietly failing before anything visible cracks.
I folded the shirt. Set it aside. Finished sorting the rest.
That evening, Carson came out of the shower smelling like himself again — Creed and soap and the cedar of his shampoo. He dropped his phone on the nightstand and went to the closet to dress. I was sitting on my side of the bed with a book I wasn't reading.
I waited until I heard the closet door slide open. Then I picked up his phone.
The screen unlocked on my thumbprint. He'd added me to his biometrics two years ago, a gesture he'd framed as intimacy. I'd thought it was sweet.
I went to his messages first.
They were clean. Not sparse — clean. Every thread wiped to a single exchange or nothing at all. The kind of empty that takes effort. You don't accidentally delete that thoroughly. You do it with intention, on a schedule, the way you'd clear a job site before an inspection.
I navigated to his secondary email. The one he used for subscriptions and deliveries, the one he thought I didn't know about.
Three confirmations. All within the last six weeks.
Lingerie. A silk robe. Condoms.
All shipped to the same address. Capitol Hill. The name on the account: Marlowe Reed.
I put the phone back on the nightstand. Exactly where it had been. Same angle.
Carson came out of the closet in a gray henley and sweatpants, already reaching for the remote. 'You want to order in tonight?' he asked.
'Sure,' I said. 'Whatever you want.'
I went to the kitchen at midnight and made pour-over coffee. I didn't turn on the overhead light. I sat at the island in the dark with both hands around the mug and I let myself think.
Not about the shirt. Not about the name on the delivery confirmation. Those were data points. What I needed was the structure underneath them — the load-bearing logic of what I was actually looking at.
By the time the coffee was cold, I had the outline of a plan.
---
Sylvia Hartman had been my attorney for four years. She was the kind of woman who wore the same three blazers on rotation and billed in six-minute increments and had never once told me what I wanted to hear when the truth was more useful. I trusted her completely.
I called her Monday morning from my car, parked two blocks from our house.
'I need a referral,' I said. 'Someone discreet. Private investigation.'
She didn't ask why. That was one of the things I valued about Sylvia. 'Anders Ferguson,' she said. 'He's the best I've worked with. I'll send you his contact.'
His office was on the fourth floor of a building in Belltown — the kind of space that was deliberately unremarkable. No logo on the door. Frosted glass. A waiting area with two chairs and no magazines.
Anders Ferguson was already standing when I walked in, which told me he'd been watching the door. He was somewhere in his late thirties, lean, with the kind of stillness that didn't read as calm so much as controlled. He shook my hand once, firm and brief, and gestured to the chair across from his desk.
I sat down and opened my bag.
'I have delivery confirmations,' I said, 'shipping records, and an address in Capitol Hill registered to a woman named Marlowe Reed.' I set the printed pages on his desk. 'My husband has introduced her to me as his cousin. I need to know what she actually is to him. I need photographs. And I need to know everyone in her orbit.'
Anders picked up the pages. He read them the way I'd read them — methodically, without reaction.
'Timeline?' he asked.
'The deliveries go back six weeks. I don't know how long the relationship does.'
He looked up. His eyes were gray and very steady. 'And you want documentation before you move.'
'I want the full picture before I do anything at all.'
He studied me for a moment. I let him. I had nothing to hide and nothing to perform.
'I'll have something for you within the week,' he said.
He did.
Seven days later I was back in that same chair. Anders set a folder on the desk and opened it without preamble. Surveillance photographs, printed clean and sharp.
Carson and Marlowe at a café in downtown Seattle. A corner table, afternoon light. His hand covering hers on the table. Her leaning into him — not the careful lean of a cousin at a family lunch, but the unconscious lean of a woman who had been doing it for years. Easy. Habitual. Owned.
I looked at each photograph the way I'd look at a site survey. Methodically. Completely.
In the last one, she was laughing at something he'd said, her head tilted back, and he was watching her with an expression I recognized. I had seen it on his face before. I had believed, when I saw it, that it was meant for me.
'Widen the investigation,' I said. My voice came out level. 'Everyone connected to her. Anyone who visits her apartment. Financial records if you can get them legally. I want the full structure.'
Anders made a note. 'Anything specific you're looking for?'
I closed the folder and slid it back across the desk.
'I'll know it when you find it.'
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