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My Husband Tried to Erase Me from Our Son’s Life Novel Cover

My Husband Tried to Erase Me from Our Son’s Life

The Seattle drizzle was a fine, persistent mist that clung to the collar of my unbranded trench coat. I liked the cold. It was a sharp, waking contrast to the suffocating warmth of the bakery I’d just left, the scent of vanilla and spun sugar still lingering around the brown paper bags in my arms. I was taking the shortcut down Mercer Street, a stretch of cracked pavement and peeling brick facades that the city hadn’t yet bothered to gentrify. It was quiet. Predictable. Until a sleek, charcoal-black SUV pulled up to the curb, its heavy tires hissing against the wet asphalt. I didn’t look up immediately. But then I heard the heavy, metallic thunk of a car door closing, followed by a voice that made the marrow in my bones turn to ice. "Well.
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Chapter 1

The Seattle drizzle was a fine, persistent mist that clung to the collar of my unbranded trench coat. I liked the cold. It was a sharp, waking contrast to the suffocating warmth of the bakery I’d just left, the scent of vanilla and spun sugar still lingering around the brown paper bags in my arms. I was taking the shortcut down Mercer Street, a stretch of cracked pavement and peeling brick facades that the city hadn’t yet bothered to gentrify. It was quiet. Predictable.

Until a sleek, charcoal-black SUV pulled up to the curb, its heavy tires hissing against the wet asphalt.

I didn’t look up immediately. But then I heard the heavy, metallic thunk of a car door closing, followed by a voice that made the marrow in my bones turn to ice.

"Well. I’ll be damned."

My footsteps faltered. For a fraction of a second, the damp Seattle air vanished, replaced by the suffocating blackness of the Pacific Ocean. I tasted salt. I felt the agonizing, sickening snap of bone.

I forced my lungs to expand, grounding myself in the rough texture of the paper bag pressed against my chest. I blinked, and the phantom water receded. I was no longer the discarded woman drowning in the dark. I was Seraphina Lane. I was safe.

Standing ten feet away, blocking the narrow sidewalk, was Reign.

Five years hadn't changed him. He still wore his arrogance like a perfectly tailored suit. He adjusted his left cufflink—a nervous, calculating tic I knew as intimately as my own heartbeat. Beside him stood Salem, draped in camel-hair cashmere, clutching the straps of her Birkin bag as if the damp air of the neighborhood might infect her.

And slightly behind them, half-hidden by Reign’s shadow, was a boy.

*Brayden.*

My breath hitched, a treacherous, involuntary reflex. He was eleven now. The baby fat had melted from his cheeks, leaving the sharp, angular jawline of his father. He was staring at me, his eyes wide and unblinking, like he was looking at an apparition. *Mommy is a mermaid who can swim.* The lie Salem had spun to cover her tracks, to cover *his* guilt. He was looking for the mermaid. All he found was me.

I locked away the sudden, violent twisting in my chest. I couldn't afford to bleed here. Not in front of them.

Reign’s gaze swept over me. He took in my plain raincoat, the scuffed canvas of my sneakers, the modest groceries in my arms, and the crumbling brick wall behind me. I watched the math happen in his head. I watched him arrive at the entirely wrong conclusion.

He stepped forward, flanking me, cutting off my path to the main avenue.

"Seraphina," Reign said, his voice dripping with that smooth, rehearsed sympathy he used for shareholders and mistresses. "Look at you."

"Reign," I said. My voice was completely flat. It didn't tremble. That alone seemed to surprise him.

"We were just passing through on our way to the harbor," Salem chimed in. Her smile was a razor blade dipped in honey. "We had no idea you were... living like this. In this part of town."

I didn't dignify her with a look. My eyes remained locked on Reign.

"It’s a tragedy, really," Reign sighed, reaching into the breast pocket of his coat. "A woman of your former standing, reduced to carrying her own groceries through the slums. But I’m not an unreasonable man, Seraphina. Despite everything, I don't want the mother of my child starving in the gutter."

He pulled out a sleek, leather cardholder and extracted a heavy platinum credit card. He held it out to me, pinched between his index and middle finger. It was an offering meant to demand a beggar's gratitude. He wanted me to reach for it. He wanted me to bow.

Brayden shifted on his feet, his gaze darting between the card and my face. His throat bobbed as he swallowed hard.

I looked at the piece of plastic. Then, slowly, I shifted the grocery bags entirely to my left arm.

I extended my right hand.

I didn't rush. I let him see it. I let Salem see it. The thick, jagged scars snaking across my knuckles, twisting the skin where the bones had been pulverized against the yacht's iron railing beneath Reign's heel. The physical proof of my murder, worn out in the open.

Reign’s smile faltered. His eyes dropped to the scars, and for a split second, the polished veneer cracked, revealing the coward underneath.

I pinched the edge of the platinum card from his grip.

Reign exhaled, clearly relieved that I had taken the bait, his superiority complex instantly repairing itself. "Use it to get yourself something decent to wear. Maybe a better place to—"

I opened my fingers.

The heavy metal card dropped. It hit the wet pavement with a dull, pathetic *clack*, landing squarely in a puddle of dirty rainwater.

Silence descended on the alley, thick and absolute. Salem’s smirk vanished. Reign stared at the card in the mud, his face flushing a dark, ugly red, the muscles in his jaw ticking.

I met his eyes, my expression a mask of absolute cold.

"I have nothing you could afford to give me," I said.

I didn't wait for his response. I stepped forward, forcing Reign to either move or be walked through. He flinched, stepping aside.

As I walked past, I felt Brayden's eyes tracking me. The boy who had turned his back on me while I drowned was now watching me walk away, the foundation of his fabricated life fracturing under the weight of a single, discarded piece of plastic.

I kept walking toward the marina, toward the life Elliott had built with me, and I didn't look back.

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