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My Husband’s Affair Cost Our Daughter Her Life Novel Cover

My Husband’s Affair Cost Our Daughter Her Life

Three weeks after we buried my daughter, I returned to the neighborhood supermarket to retrieve a handbag I'd left behind. The fluorescent lights hummed overhead as I approached the customer service desk, my fingers absently tracing the gold charm bracelet Lily had made me at summer camp. The manager, a middle-aged man with kind eyes, recognized me immediately. He'd attended the funeral, standing at the back with a bouquet of white lilies—the same flowers Kason would later send anonymously each year on Lily's birthday, though I didn't know that then. "Mrs. Carter," he said softly, "I'm so sorry for your loss. Is there anything else I can help you with today?" I hesitated, something catching in my throat. "Actually, I was wondering if you keep security footage. I think I might have dropped my phone here the day of... the accident." His expression shifted, understanding washing over his features.
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Chapter 1

Three weeks after we buried my daughter, I returned to the neighborhood supermarket to retrieve a handbag I'd left behind. The fluorescent lights hummed overhead as I approached the customer service desk, my fingers absently tracing the gold charm bracelet Lily had made me at summer camp. The manager, a middle-aged man with kind eyes, recognized me immediately. He'd attended the funeral, standing at the back with a bouquet of white lilies—the same flowers Kason would later send anonymously each year on Lily's birthday, though I didn't know that then.

"Mrs. Carter," he said softly, "I'm so sorry for your loss. Is there anything else I can help you with today?"

I hesitated, something catching in my throat. "Actually, I was wondering if you keep security footage. I think I might have dropped my phone here the day of... the accident."

His expression shifted, understanding washing over his features. "We do. Would you like me to check the footage from that day? Sometimes seeing things can help people remember."

I nodded, not trusting my voice.

He led me to a small back office, the air thick with the smell of old coffee and paperwork. A monitor flickered to life as he pulled up the recordings. "Here's that afternoon," he said, fast-forwarding through the grainy footage.

And then I saw it.

In the corner of the frame, partially visible through the parking lot adjacent to the supermarket, was a familiar black sedan. My husband's car. I leaned closer, my heart hammering against my ribs. Two figures emerged: Ephraim and Bianca. Their hands were interlocked, their bodies pressed close together. His mouth brushed against her ear as they slipped into the backseat.

"Can I see more?" My voice sounded foreign to my own ears—calm, controlled, when everything inside me was screaming.

The manager frowned slightly but complied, pulling footage from different dates. Pattern after pattern emerged across months of recordings. My husband and my best friend, meeting in secret, their hands always touching, their faces always too close.

Then he pulled up the footage from the exact afternoon Lily died.

"Your daughter," he said gently, "she was supposed to be picked up at four, right? From her piano lesson?"

I nodded, unable to look away from the screen.

The timestamp read 3:47 PM. There was Ephraim, pulling Bianca into the hotel parking lot, his hands already on her waist. Seventeen minutes. He was seventeen minutes late because he was with her, not on his way to get our daughter.

Lily, waiting alone at the music school door, had accepted a ride from a neighbor's teenage son. A boy who shouldn't have been driving. A car that never made it home.

I sat in that security office, watching the timestamp in silence, my fingers still wrapped around Lily's bracelet. I didn't cry. I didn't scream. I simply watched, committing every detail to memory.

An hour later, I sat in my car in the supermarket parking lot, engine off, hands flat on my thighs. The footage played on endless loop in my mind: Ephraim's hand on Bianca's waist, the timestamp, Lily waiting at the piano school door. The betrayal was so complete, so devastating, that it transcended tears.

When I finally drove home, I found Ephraim asleep on the couch, his phone buzzing with a text from Bianca. I stood over him, watching the screen illuminate with her words: "Miss you already. Last night was amazing. Can't wait until next time."

I read every message without touching the phone, memorizing the intimate shorthand of their deception. Then I set it back exactly as I'd found it.

That night, I lay beside my husband in the dark, Biscuit pressed against my legs, Lily's bracelet cool between my fingers. I stared at the ceiling, my mind racing with the implications of what I'd seen. The affair wasn't a recent development; it was a pattern, a routine they'd established long before Lily's death. And that death—my daughter's death—was the indirect result of their selfishness.

I made the only decision I had left.

I would not scream.

I would not confront.

I would make them destroy themselves with their own hands.

The next morning, I began my war room. Using a laptop purchased with cash, I opened encrypted files and began documenting everything: timestamped screenshots photographed discreetly on my phone, a handwritten timeline stored in a locked box at the back of a closet Ephraim hadn't touched in years, and a growing record of Bianca's texts I captured during the moments he left his phone unguarded.

I touched Lily's bracelet once, grounding myself in her memory, then closed the laptop and went downstairs to make Ephraim breakfast. I kissed him on the cheek as I set his coffee down, the perfect picture of a devoted wife.

The following week, I booked an appointment with a therapist, Ruth Calloway, under the name "Claire Bennett." In our first session, I said almost nothing about the affair. I talked about Lily. I talked about Biscuit choosing a toy in the shelter the day Lily picked him. When I finally stopped talking, Ruth observed quietly that I seemed to be carrying something I didn't yet have a word for.

I looked at her for a long moment, my fingers finding Lily's bracelet. "I know exactly what it is," I said finally. "I just can't put it down yet."

I booked the next session on my way out, my mind already calculating the next move in the chess game no one else knew I was playing.

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