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My Husband Plotted My Death for Her Love Novel Cover

My Husband Plotted My Death for Her Love

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.
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Chapter 3

The first day, I made Carson's favorite pasta for dinner.

Pancetta, fresh sage, a splash of white wine. I stood at the stove and stirred and listened to him talk about a golf game he'd played with a client, and I said the right things at the right moments, and when he laughed I smiled, and when he reached past me for the pepper grinder our arms touched and I didn't flinch.

That was the work. Not the pasta. The not flinching.

I had two data points that weren't yet facts. A vehicle registration with a three-week gap. A cash deposit with no paper trail. Anders had been careful to say it — I'm not drawing conclusions. And he was right not to. I was an architect. I knew the difference between a load-bearing wall and a partition. You didn't demolish one until you were certain which was which.

So I waited.

Carson poured himself a second glass of wine and asked if I wanted to watch something. I said sure. We sat on the couch and I watched the screen and I thought about a hospital room three years ago. The particular quality of the light. The way the IV line ran from the bag to the back of my hand. Carson in the chair beside me, leaning forward with his elbows on his knees, his face doing something I had read as grief.

I had been so certain of what I was seeing.

That was the thing about being wrong at that scale. It didn't announce itself. It just sat there quietly inside everything you thought was true, and you carried it around for years, and you called it your life.

The second day was harder.

I had a site visit in the morning — a mixed-use project in South Lake Union, still in the framing stage. I walked the floor plates with the project manager and checked the sightline calculations I'd done in the office against what was actually being built. There's always a gap between the drawing and the thing. You account for it. You adjust.

I stood on the third floor with the wind coming off the water and looked at the steel skeleton rising around me and thought: he sat beside me and held my hand and he knew.

I wrote a note in my site log. Adjusted a dimension. Kept moving.

That evening Carson said he had a work call and went to his study. I sat in the living room with a book and listened to the low murmur of his voice through the door and didn't try to make out the words. I already knew enough about what I didn't know. What I needed now was the piece that would make the structure complete.

On the third morning I called Anders from my car.

'The DNA,' I said. 'Where are we?'

'I was going to call you this afternoon.' His voice was the same as always — level, no preamble. 'I got a sample from the courtyard two days ago. A juice box the boy left on the bench. The lab has it. Seventy-two hours from collection, so we're looking at tomorrow morning.'

He had already anticipated it. Of course he had.

'Good,' I said.

A brief pause. 'How are you holding up?'

It was the first time he'd asked me anything like that. I looked at the steering wheel.

'I'm functioning,' I said.

'Okay.' He didn't push. That was the right answer — not because it was reassuring, but because it was accurate, and Anders dealt in accuracy. 'I'll call you the moment the results come in.'

I drove to the office.

---

The call came at 11:14 the next morning.

I was in the middle of a client presentation — a residential commission, a couple who wanted a house that felt 'open but intimate,' which was the kind of brief that required you to hold two contradictory things in your mind at once and find the geometry that resolved them. I had the section drawings up on the screen. I was explaining how the clerestory windows would pull light deep into the plan without sacrificing privacy.

My phone buzzed on the table beside my laptop. Anders.

I glanced at it. Turned it face-down.

'The east wall,' I said, and kept going.

The clients left at twelve-thirty, pleased. My assistant, Priya, started gathering the presentation materials. I helped her stack the boards and told her she could head out early — she had a thing, she'd mentioned it twice that week, some birthday dinner. She thanked me and was gone by one.

I picked up my phone.

Anders had sent the report as a PDF. I opened it at my desk and read it once, straight through, the way I read any technical document. No skimming. No skipping to the conclusion.

The conclusion was what I already knew it would be.

The boy was Carson's biological son. The probability margin was 99.998 percent. The kind of number that wasn't a probability anymore. It was a fact.

I set the phone face-down on my desk.

I sat there for a moment. Then I got up, turned off the lights in my office, walked down the hall to the conference room, and sat at the long table in the dark.

The city was visible through the floor-to-ceiling glass. Late afternoon, the light going amber and low, catching the glass faces of the buildings across the street and throwing it back in long horizontal bands.

I thought about what I actually knew now.

Not an affair. That word was too small, too ordinary. An affair was a failure of character. What I was looking at was a parallel life — years deep, structurally complete, with a child at its center. A child who was three years old. A child who had been conceived while I was still believing, completely and without reservation, that I was loved.

And underneath that: a man who had visited Marlowe's building eleven minutes before walking away. A cash deposit with no source. A vehicle registration with a three-week gap around the date of the accident that had taken something from me I would never get back.

I looked at the amber light on the glass across the street.

I thought about the Pantheon. The oculus. The way the light moves across the floor in a path so precise you can set a clock by it, if you know the geometry.

I knew the geometry now.

I sat in the dark conference room for exactly one hour. I let myself feel the full weight of it — not managed, not redirected, just felt. The grief of it. The specific, structural grief of a woman who had loved something real and discovered the thing she loved had never existed.

Then I stood up.

I turned the lights back on. I walked to my desk. I opened my notebook to a clean page and uncapped my pen.

At the top of the page I wrote one word.

Blueprint.

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