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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 2

The bell above the door of *Claire’s Confections* jingled, a cheerful, brassy sound that usually signaled the best part of my afternoon. The scent of toasted pecans and brown sugar clung to my clothes, a warm armor against the relentless Seattle drizzle. I clutched the white paper box against my chest—a pair of Kinsley’s favorite strawberry tarts—and stepped out onto the cracked pavement of the marina district.

The cold air hit my face, sharp and sobering.

He was standing next to a rusted streetlamp, trembling.

My footsteps stopped. The warmth of the bakery vanished, replaced instantly by the icy, suffocating pressure of the past. Brayden. He wore a heavy, designer wool coat that looked entirely out of place against the peeling paint of the nearby storefronts. His dark hair was plastered to his forehead by the mist. In his trembling hands, he clutched a crumpled white pastry bag—the exact one I had carried yesterday. He had tracked the blue heron logo all the way from the alley to this street corner.

I didn’t speak. I didn’t close the distance between us. I simply watched him, my scarred fingers tightening instinctively around Kinsley’s pastry box.

"Mom." The word tore from his throat, ragged and small.

I didn't flinch. "I am not your mother, Brayden. Not anymore."

He recoiled as if struck, but the desperation in his eyes only hardened into something frantic. He took a staggering step forward, shoving a glossy, printed photograph toward me.

"I found it," he gasped, the words spilling out of him like broken glass. "After you left yesterday... I waited until Dad and Salem went down to the hotel lounge. I went through Dad’s locked briefcase. He always told me never to touch it. I found an SD card hidden in the lining."

My gaze dropped to the photograph trembling in his hands. It was a picture from our ten-year anniversary. The yacht. The sun setting in a blaze of oblivious gold. In the frame, I was laughing, my hands—smooth, unblemished, whole—cradling a six-year-old Brayden’s cheeks.

"You weren't a mermaid," he choked out, his chest heaving as he stared at my mangled knuckles, then back to the photo. "Salem told me you were a mermaid who could swim away. She told me that for five years."

The sheer, unadulterated cowardice of it all made the blood roar in my ears. Reign had kept the photos, locking away the evidence of his crime like a trophy, while Salem spun fairy tales to ensure the boy never asked questions.

"And what did Salem say when you showed her this?" I asked. My voice was a flat, dead calm.

Brayden’s face crumpled. "I went down to the lounge. I screamed at her. I asked her why she lied." A sob ripped through his chest, his shoulders shaking under the expensive wool. "She started crying. She swore she only lied to protect me. She... she said you left us because you didn't love me enough. That you chose to walk away and she had to pick up the pieces."

A bitter, hollow laugh scraped the back of my throat. Salem Snyder. Always the victim, always pivoting the narrative, weaving guilt into the boy’s mind to keep him tethered to her.

Brayden closed the distance between us, his eyes begging for a lifeline. "It’s a lie, right?" he pleaded, his voice cracking. "Tell me she’s lying. Tell me you didn't leave because you hated me. Tell me you still love me."

He wasn't looking for the truth. He was looking for absolution. He wanted me to sweep away the crushing weight of his guilt, to tell him that his choice on that life raft didn't matter. He wanted me to make him feel better.

I looked at the boy I had carried, birthed, and loved with every fiber of my being. Then, I looked through him, seeing the dark, churning waters of the Pacific. I saw Reign’s boot coming down on my fingers. I saw Salem’s manicured hands pulling Brayden onto the raft. And I saw my son—my beautiful, terrified son—burying his face in his father's mistress's coat, turning his back on my screams.

My knuckles throbbed, a phantom agony that anchored me perfectly to the present.

"Salem is a liar," I said, my voice dropping to a whisper that cut through the rain. "But she is the mother you chose."

Brayden’s breath hitched. The color drained entirely from his face.

"I didn't leave you, Brayden," I continued, my gaze locking onto his, refusing to let him look away from the cold, hard reality. "I was thrown away. And you let them do it."

"I was six!" he wailed, his tears mixing with the Seattle rain. "I didn't know!"

"You're eleven now," I said softly, stepping around him. "Old enough to know what you saw. Old enough to live with it."

I didn't wait for his response. I didn't look back to see him collapse against the rusted streetlamp. I walked away, the warmth of the pastry box pressed against my heart, heading toward the marina where my real family was waiting.

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