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My Husband Wanted Custody While Cheating With His Mistress Novel Cover

My Husband Wanted Custody While Cheating With His Mistress

I stared at the mirror, tugging at the black dress that had fit perfectly three years ago. Now it clung to every curve I'd gained during pregnancy, every stretch mark my body had earned carrying Ethan. Kevin's voice echoed in my head before he'd even spoken a word. "You need to be there," he'd said that morning, his tone carefully neutral. "It's our high school reunion. People will ask questions if you don't show." What he meant was: *I* need you to be there. Not for me, but for the audience. I applied another coat of lipstick, trying to remember the woman I used to be. The one who laughed easily, who didn't check her reflection fifty times before leaving the house. That woman felt like a stranger now.
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Chapter 4

Ethan's forehead burned against my palm like a coal.

I'd checked it three times already, pressing the back of my hand to his skin, then the thermometer, then my hand again, like maybe the numbers would change if I asked them nicely. They didn't. 104.1. Then 104.3.

It was two in the morning. The apartment was dark and quiet except for Ethan's small, ragged breathing and the sound of my own heartbeat in my ears.

I called Kevin.

Voicemail.

I called again.

Voicemail.

I stood in the middle of Ethan's room holding the phone with both hands, staring at his face — flushed and slack, his lips dry, his eyelashes damp against his cheeks. He whimpered when I lifted him. A small, helpless sound that went straight through me.

"I've got you," I said. "Mommy's got you."

I called Kevin four more times on the way to the car. Each time the line clicked straight to voicemail, something in my chest pulled tighter. His phone wasn't ringing. It was off. Completely off.

I buckled Ethan into his car seat, his head lolling against the side, and I drove.

Seattle at two in the morning is a different city. The streets were wet and empty, the traffic lights cycling through their colors for no one. I ran a yellow on Eastlake and didn't care. Ethan made a sound in the backseat and I said, "Almost there, baby, almost there," and I don't know which one of us I was trying to convince.

Children's Hospital blazed white against the dark. I pulled up to the emergency entrance, got Ethan out of his seat — he was heavier than usual, or maybe my arms were just shaking — and carried him through the sliding doors.

The fluorescent lights hit me like a slap. A nurse was at my side almost immediately, asking questions I answered on autopilot. Age. Weight. When did the fever start. Any other symptoms. I sat in a plastic chair with a clipboard and filled out forms while Ethan lay across my lap, and my handwriting looked like someone else's.

I didn't know who to call. My mother was three time zones away. I had no one in this city who was mine anymore — I'd let those friendships go, one by one, in the years of trying to be what Kevin and Patricia needed me to be.

I opened my phone and found an old group chat. High school people, mostly. I hadn't sent a message in it for two years. I typed without thinking: *At Children's Hospital. Ethan has a high fever. Kevin isn't answering. I don't know why I'm sending this. Sorry.*

I put the phone face-down on my knee and went back to the forms.

---

He was there in twenty minutes.

I looked up and Daniel was walking through the emergency entrance in a gray sweatshirt, his hair slightly disheveled, like he'd left wherever he was the moment he read the message. He scanned the waiting room, found me, and crossed to us without hesitation.

He didn't say *I came as fast as I could* or *don't worry, it'll be fine.* He just crouched down in front of Ethan and said, quietly, "Hey, buddy."

Ethan opened his eyes halfway. "Hi," he said, in the small, exhausted voice of a sick child who has run out of energy to be afraid.

"Can I hold him for a minute?" Daniel looked at me. Not asking permission exactly. Asking if it was okay. If I was okay.

I nodded.

He lifted Ethan with a steadiness that made something in me go loose. Ethan didn't protest. He just tucked his head against Daniel's shoulder and closed his eyes again, and Daniel stood there holding my son in the middle of a hospital waiting room at two-thirty in the morning like it was the most natural thing in the world.

The nurses took Ethan back around three. I followed, answered more questions, watched them work. Daniel stayed in the hallway outside the room — I could see him through the small window in the door, leaning against the wall, arms crossed, not going anywhere.

At four, I sat down in a plastic chair beside Ethan's bed and did not get up again. The next thing I knew, something warm settled over my shoulders. Daniel's jacket. I hadn't heard him come in.

I was asleep before I could say thank you.

---

Kevin arrived at two-fifteen in the afternoon.

I heard him before I saw him — his voice in the hallway, asking a nurse which room. Ethan was sleeping. His fever had broken around nine that morning, and the color had come back to his face, and I had cried in the bathroom for ten minutes out of pure relief.

Kevin walked in with a coffee cup in his hand. He glanced at Ethan. Then at me.

"He looks fine," he said.

I waited for the rest of it. The apology. The explanation. Something.

"You should have handled this better," he said. "Calling everyone, making a scene — it's a fever, Laila. Kids get fevers."

I stared at him. "His temperature was 104."

"And he's fine." Kevin gestured at Ethan with his coffee cup. "You panicked. You always panic."

In the other bed, Billie Andrews looked up from her phone. She had been there since last night — her daughter had a respiratory infection, nothing serious, but they were keeping her for observation. Billie had brought me a blanket from the nurses' station around midnight without saying a word. She had watched Daniel hold Ethan in the waiting room. She had watched me sleep in that chair.

Now she watched Kevin.

His phone buzzed. He pulled it out, glanced at the screen, and stepped into the hallway. Through the glass I could see him answer it, his whole posture shifting — shoulders dropping, a small smile starting at the corner of his mouth. The name on the screen had been visible for half a second before he turned away.

Cassidy.

Billie set her phone down.

"How long has he been like that?" she asked.

I didn't answer.

"That man," she said, "walked in here fourteen hours late with a coffee he bought for himself, told you that you panicked, and is now in the hallway talking to whoever that is." She paused. "And the guy who showed up at two in the morning and held your kid and sat in that hallway all night — where is he?"

I looked at the door. Daniel had left around noon, quietly, after making sure Ethan's fever had broken. He'd pressed a hand briefly to my shoulder on his way out. Hadn't said anything.

"He's a delivery driver," I said. The words felt thin even as I said them.

Billie looked at me for a long moment. "Honey," she said, "I don't know what he is. But I know what he did last night. And I know what your husband just did." She picked her phone back up. "You're a smart woman. Do the math."

I opened my mouth. Closed it.

Through the glass, Kevin laughed at something Cassidy said. The same low laugh I used to know. The one that said he was happy, really happy.

I looked at Ethan, sleeping with his cheek pressed against the pillow, his breathing finally even and slow.

I thought about Daniel's jacket on my shoulders. The way he'd held Ethan without being asked. The way he'd stood in that hallway all night watching a door.

I did not say anything. But something shifted, quiet and irreversible, like a lock turning over in the dark.

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