
My Husband Plotted My Death for Her Love
Chapter 4
Mrs. Wheeler called on a Tuesday afternoon.
I was at my desk reviewing structural drawings when my phone lit up with her name. I let it ring once — just once — then picked up.
'Aurelia, sweetheart.' Her voice was the same as always. Warm. Slightly breathless, like she'd been thinking about me all day and couldn't wait another moment. 'I've been so worried about you. You've seemed tired lately. I hope you're not pushing yourself too hard with work.'
I hadn't seen her in three weeks.
'I'm fine,' I said. 'Really. It's just a busy season.'
'Of course, of course.' A small pause — the kind that was designed to feel like concern. 'I'd love to come by. Just a short visit. I found a little something for the house and I've been meaning to bring it over.'
'That's so thoughtful,' I said. 'I'd love that.'
We settled on Thursday. I hung up and sat for a moment with my hand still on the phone.
A little something for the house.
I went back to my drawings.
---
That evening I told Carson over dinner.
'Your mom called,' I said. 'She's coming Thursday. She wants to bring something by.'
I was watching his face when I said it. Not obviously — I was reaching for the bread at the same time, my eyes moving the way they naturally would. But I was watching.
There it was. A fractional tightening around the eyes. Gone in under a second, smoothed back into his easy smile.
'That's nice,' he said. 'She's been meaning to visit.'
'I know. I've missed her.'
He poured himself more wine and asked about my site visit, and I answered, and we finished dinner, and I washed the dishes while he watched something in the other room, and the whole time I was thinking about that half-second around his eyes.
He knew exactly what his mother was planning.
Which meant this had been planned.
---
Thursday arrived gray and still, the kind of Seattle morning where the clouds sit so low they feel like a ceiling. I made coffee and arranged the living room the way I always did when we had guests — a small thing, just the throw pillows straightened, the coffee table cleared. Normal. Domestic. The picture of a woman with nothing on her mind.
The doorbell rang at eleven.
Mrs. Wheeler stood on the step with a potted orchid in her hands and a smile that had been practiced in a mirror. Behind her, slightly to the left, was Marlowe Reed. And beside Marlowe, holding her hand with the easy trust of a child who had done this before, was the boy.
He was wearing a navy sweater. His hair was dark. He had Carson's jaw.
'Surprise,' Mrs. Wheeler said warmly. 'I hope you don't mind — Marlowe was with me when I was leaving, and I thought, the more the merrier.'
'Of course,' I said. I stepped back and opened the door wider. 'Come in. I'll put on more tea.'
Marlowe met my eyes as she passed me. Her smile was the careful kind — sweet, slightly tentative, the performance of a woman who was a little nervous about imposing. She was wearing Penhaligon's Halfeti. I caught it the moment she crossed the threshold.
Of course she was.
The boy let go of her hand and walked straight to the living room rug — a large geometric wool piece I'd bought in Istanbul two years ago — and crouched down to trace the pattern with one finger. Children always went for that rug. Something about the geometry of it.
I made tea. I brought out the good cups. I sat across from Mrs. Wheeler and I listened.
She was good. I'll give her that. She spent the first twenty minutes on nothing — the orchid, the neighborhood, a restaurant she'd tried recently, a question about my work that she didn't actually want answered. She let Marlowe play the gracious cousin, asking about the house, complimenting the light in the living room. The boy stayed quiet on the rug, absorbed in his own world.
Then Mrs. Wheeler set down her cup.
'Aurelia.' Her voice shifted — still warm, but with a new weight underneath it. The weight of a woman arriving at the point. 'I hope you know how much Carson and I care about you. How much we want good things for you.'
'I know that,' I said.
'It's just —' She glanced at the boy, then back at me. A gesture so practiced it looked spontaneous. 'He's had such an unstable situation. Marlowe does her best, she really does, but a child needs roots. A real home.' She folded her hands in her lap. 'We've been thinking — and I want you to know this comes from love — that you might consider adoption. Legally. You're so wonderful with children, Aurelia. And given your situation —'
She let that hang. Given your situation. The delicate, devastating shorthand for everything the accident had taken from me.
'It would be good for everyone,' she continued. 'The boy gets stability. You get —' Another pause. '— a family. And we stay together. All of us.'
Marlowe was watching me over the rim of her cup. Her expression was soft, sympathetic, the face of a woman who was doing me a favor.
I looked at Mrs. Wheeler. I let a beat pass — the beat of a woman who was genuinely moved, who was turning something over carefully.
'That's a lot to consider,' I said quietly. 'The legal process alone —'
'We'd handle everything,' Mrs. Wheeler said quickly. 'You wouldn't have to worry about any of it.'
I nodded slowly. I looked at the boy on the rug.
Then I said, as if the thought had only just surfaced: 'Actually — I've been meaning to mention something. I wasn't sure it would come to anything, so I didn't want to get anyone's hopes up.' I looked back at Mrs. Wheeler. 'I've been researching a clinic in Prague. Reproductive medicine. They specialize in cases like mine — women with my specific surgical history.' I paused. 'The success rates are quite good, actually. I have a consultation scheduled for next month.'
The room was very quiet.
I watched Mrs. Wheeler's face.
One second. That was all it took. One second where the warmth dropped completely — where the careful architecture of her expression came apart at the seams and something cold and calculating looked out from behind her eyes.
Then the smile came back. Slightly tighter. Slightly too bright.
'Well,' she said. 'That's — wonderful news, Aurelia. Of course. That's just wonderful.'
'Isn't it?' I said.
Marlowe had gone very still.
The boy looked up from the rug, bored with the pattern, and reached toward a coaster on the coffee table. Marlowe leaned forward automatically and moved it out of his reach.
I watched her hand. The way it moved. Practiced. Maternal. The hand of a woman who had been doing this alone for three years while waiting for a promise to be kept.
I picked up my tea.
'More?' I asked, and smiled at both of them.
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