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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 2

The Nelson family dinners always smelled the same. Pot roast and old money and something faintly sour underneath, like resentment that had been simmering so long nobody noticed it anymore.

I had suggested the gathering myself. A memorial dinner for Lily, I told Ephraim. Something intimate. Just family.

He'd looked at me with that careful guilt he'd been wearing for weeks—soft eyes, a hand on my shoulder, the performance of a husband in mourning. 'That's a beautiful idea,' he said.

I smiled and said nothing.

The table was set by the time Donovan and his wife, Clara, arrived. Clara was seven months along, her belly round and obvious beneath a pale blue dress. Ephraim's mother, Margaret, greeted her at the door with both hands outstretched, her whole face opening up in a way it never quite did for me.

'Look at you,' Margaret said, touching Clara's stomach without asking. 'Just look at you.'

I watched from across the room and kept my face soft.

We sat down. The food came out. Conversation moved in the careful, circular way Nelson family dinners always moved—around the subjects that mattered, never through them. Ephraim's father talked about interest rates. Donovan talked about the new property they were developing upstate. Clara sat beside him, quiet and luminous, one hand resting on her belly like a statement.

I waited.

The moment came between the main course and dessert, in a pocket of silence. I set down my fork. I touched the charm bracelet at my wrist—just once, just briefly—and let my voice go soft.

'I've actually been meaning to see a specialist,' I said. I kept my eyes on my plate. 'Since Lily. The grief, the stress—my doctor mentioned it might have affected things. My ability to...' I paused. Let the pause do the work. 'I just worry sometimes that I may never be able to give Ephraim the son he deserves.'

The table went still.

I looked up then. Margaret had straightened in her chair, her expression doing something complicated. Across from her, Ephraim's father glanced at Donovan with the particular look of men who have always kept a running scorecard and never bothered to hide it.

Clara touched her belly again, unconsciously.

I didn't look at Ephraim. I didn't need to. I could feel the shape of his silence from across the table—the absence of any instinct to defend me, to reach for my hand, to say a single word on my behalf.

I noted it. Filed it. Moved on.

'I'm sure it will work out,' Margaret said finally, in the tone she reserved for things she was sure would not work out.

'Of course,' I said, and smiled, and picked up my fork.

On the drive home, Ephraim stared at the road and said he was sorry about what his mother hadn't said. I told him it was fine. He believed me because he needed to.

---

Marcus had worked the door of Bianca's building for eleven years. He was the kind of man who noticed everything and mentioned nothing, which made him invaluable to Bianca's residents and, it turned out, to me.

I had met him the usual way—Bianca's dinner parties, handed off coats, exchanged pleasantries over the years. He had a daughter in middle school. I remembered her name. That is the whole of the strategy, sometimes.

The first coffee was at the café on the corner, a Thursday morning. I asked him how she was doing. He told me about her science fair project, beaming. I listened the way I meant it.

The second coffee was two weeks later. Somewhere in the middle of it, I mentioned, almost as an aside, that I'd been trying to surprise Ephraim more lately—show up at places he'd be, that sort of thing. I laughed lightly. 'He's such a creature of habit. You probably see his car in this neighborhood more than I do.'

Marcus nodded slowly. 'That black sedan? Yeah, he's here pretty regular. Private bay, maybe three, four times a week.'

'Oh, that's sweet,' I said. 'He never mentioned how often he visited Bianca. You know how men are.'

Marcus smiled. Let it go. Never thought about it again.

I tipped him well that morning. On my way to the parking garage, I opened the encrypted file on my phone and added the entry. Three to four times weekly. Confirmed.

I thought about Lily the whole drive home. I thought about a seventeen-minute window and a teenage boy behind a wheel and a piano school door.

I drove carefully.

---

Lunch with Bianca was always a performance we both enjoyed, each for our own reasons.

She chose the restaurant—somewhere midtown, all white linen and women who ate half their salads. She arrived four minutes late in sunglasses she didn't remove immediately, the way she'd been doing since Kason started taking her to places where people recognized him.

We ordered. We talked. I asked about him in the warm, unhurried way of a friend who had all the time in the world.

Bianca smiled into her water glass. 'It's serious,' she said. 'I think it's really serious.'

'Are you thinking about the future?' I asked. 'Long-term?'

Her smile shifted—something sharper moving beneath it. 'I think about it.'

'Children?' I let it land gently. 'I imagine he'd want a family eventually.'

She set her glass down. I watched her do the math behind her eyes, the same calculation I already knew she was running. 'I've been tracking my cycle,' she said, and her voice had dropped to something conspiratorial, something she was giving me as a gift. 'Just paying attention.'

'That's smart.' I reached across the table and touched her hand. 'Actually—there's this clinic I know. Very discreet. They work with women on exactly this kind of planning.'

Her eyes lit up.

'Let me book it for you,' I said. 'As a favor. You shouldn't have to navigate that alone.'

She squeezed my hand. 'You're always looking out for me.'

'Always,' I said.

I booked the appointment that same afternoon, from a bench in Bryant Park with Biscuit at my feet. He rested his chin on my shoe while I typed. I looked down at him when I finished, at his patient, uncomplicated face.

'Six weeks,' I told him quietly.

He didn't look away.

I closed the phone and let him lead me home.

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