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My Husband Saved His Mistress and Let Me Die Novel Cover

My Husband Saved His Mistress and Let Me Die

The champagne in my glass had gone warm, but the chill radiating from my husband was absolute. We stood twenty stories above Seattle, the city lights blurring through the rain-streaked floor-to-ceiling windows of the gala, yet Caleb wasn’t looking at the view. He wasn’t looking at me, either. His thumb hovered over his phone screen, the blue light casting a ghostly pallor on his jaw. He was typing. Again. "Caleb," I said, keeping my voice low, a practiced calm I’d perfected over five years of marriage. " The Board Chairman is looking this way. You might want to pretend you’re here with your wife." He didn't flinch. He didn’t even look up.
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Chapter 1

The champagne in my glass had gone warm, but the chill radiating from my husband was absolute. We stood twenty stories above Seattle, the city lights blurring through the rain-streaked floor-to-ceiling windows of the gala, yet Caleb wasn’t looking at the view. He wasn’t looking at me, either.

His thumb hovered over his phone screen, the blue light casting a ghostly pallor on his jaw. He was typing. Again.

"Caleb," I said, keeping my voice low, a practiced calm I’d perfected over five years of marriage. " The Board Chairman is looking this way. You might want to pretend you’re here with your wife."

He didn't flinch. He didn’t even look up. "It’s a crisis, Estelle. Logistics for the merger."

"The merger closed three weeks ago."

His head snapped up then, eyes narrowing. It wasn't guilt I saw there; it was annoyance. The look a parent gives a pestering child. "Don't start, Estelle. Not here."

"I’m not starting anything. I’m asking you to be present."

"I have to take this," he muttered, already turning his back to me. He strode toward the balcony doors, sliding them open just enough to slip into the wind and rain. Through the glass, I watched him lift the phone to his ear, his posture shifting from rigid defense to something softer. Something intimate.

I gripped the stem of my flute until my knuckles turned white.

"He’s missing the best speeches," a deep voice murmured beside me.

I unclenched my hand, turning to find Soren Bishop watching me. Caleb’s business partner and best friend held two tumblers of whiskey, offering one to me. He didn’t look at the balcony. He was looking at the tension in my shoulders.

"I think champagne has lost its appeal," I said, trading my glass for the amber liquid. "Thank you, Soren."

"You don't have to cover for him, Estelle," Soren said, his voice rougher than usual. He took a sip, his gaze finally flicking toward the balcony where Caleb was laughing—actually laughing—into the receiver. "He’s an idiot."

"He’s stressed," I lied, the taste of whiskey burning pleasantly down my throat. "Business never sleeps."

Soren turned fully toward me, his dark eyes searching mine. He didn't buy it. He never did. "Business doesn't make him smile like that. Not anymore."

The air in the room shifted before I could answer. A sharp pop, like a gunshot, echoed from the kitchen doors, followed instantly by the shriek of the fire alarm. The gentle murmur of the gala shattered into screams.

Thick, black smoke billowed into the ballroom with terrifying speed, rolling over the ceiling like an inverted wave. The lights flickered and died, plunging us into a chaotic gray twilight.

"Move!" Soren grabbed my arm, his grip bruising. "Estelle, move!"

The crowd surged toward the main exit, a stampede of tuxedos and gowns. I stumbled, my heel catching on the plush carpet, and fell hard against a heavy catering table. The impact knocked the wind out of me, and before I could scramble up, the crowd shoved the table, pinning my legs against the wall. Pain shot up my hip, hot and sharp.

"Caleb!" I screamed, coughing as the acrid smoke filled my lungs.

Through the haze, I saw him. He had come back inside, eyes wild, scanning the room. For a heartbeat, his gaze locked with mine. I reached out, the smoke stinging my eyes.

Then he looked past me.

Near the falling heavy velvet drapes, a woman was cowering. Elodie. How she had gotten past security, I didn’t know, but there she was, coughing into a silk handkerchief, looking fragile and terrified.

Caleb looked at me—pinned, immobile, reaching for him. Then he looked at her.

There was no hesitation. No agonizing debate. He turned his back on me and sprinted toward Elodie. He scooped her up in his arms, shielding her face with his jacket, and ran for the emergency exit without looking back once.

The realization hit me harder than the smoke: *He left me.*

My vision blurred. The heat was becoming unbearable, a physical weight pressing against my chest. I slumped against the wall, the roar of the fire drowning out my own thoughts. This was it. This was how five years of devotion ended.

Then, a crash.

Wood splintered nearby. A figure emerged from the gray wall of smoke, coughing violently, a wet napkin pressed to his face.

"Estelle!" Soren’s voice was a raw tear in the noise. He wasn’t with the crowd. He had come back.

He saw me trapped behind the table and didn't wait. He threw his shoulder against the heavy wood, groaning with exertion, shoving it just enough to free my legs. He hauled me up, his arm wrapping around my waist like an iron band.

"Stay with me," he shouted over the roar. "Don't you dare close your eyes!"

The world dissolved into heat and darkness.

***

Beeping. Rhythmic, annoying beeping.

I opened my eyes to harsh fluorescent light and the smell of antiseptic. My throat felt like I had swallowed broken glass. I tried to sit up, but a hand gently pushed my shoulder down.

"Easy," Soren whispered. He looked terrible. His tuxedo shirt was stained with soot, his face streaked with ash, and his eyes were bloodshot. He held a paper cup of coffee in his free hand, the steam rising in the quiet room.

I blinked, the memory of the fire rushing back. The smoke. The table. Caleb’s back turning away from me.

I rasped, my voice barely a whisper. "Where is he?"

Soren’s jaw tightened. He set the coffee down on the bedside table with deliberate slowness, avoiding my gaze. He pulled a plastic chair closer, the legs screeching against the linoleum.

"Soren," I tried again, louder this time, though it hurt. "Where is my husband?"

Soren looked at me then, and the pity in his eyes was worse than the smoke.

"He’s not here, Estelle."

"Is he hurt?"

"No," Soren said, his voice dropping to a growl. "He’s fine. He’s... he wanted to make sure Elodie was settled. She inhaled some smoke. He went with her to the other hospital."

I stared at the ceiling tiles, counting the little dots to keep from screaming. My husband wasn't here. He was with the woman he had saved instead of me.

Soren’s hand hovered over mine, then settled, warm and steady. "I’m here, Estelle. I’m not going anywhere."

I closed my eyes, a single tear escaping to track through the soot on my cheek. I knew, in that cold, sterile room, that the fire had burned away more than just the gala. It had burned down the lie I’d been living in.

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