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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 5

I requested thirty minutes.

His assistant—a precise woman named Claire who spoke the way people do when they have learned that brevity is a form of protection—called me back within the hour. Thursday, ten-thirty. His office. Forty-second floor.

I said that would be fine.

I wore gray. Not black, which reads as mourning. Not anything that reads as trying. Just gray, clean lines, the kind of outfit that belongs in a boardroom and says nothing about the person inside it. I put Lily's bracelet on my right wrist instead of my left, where I always wore it. I wanted it somewhere I could feel without being obvious about reaching for it.

The building lobby was all glass and cold marble, the kind of space designed to make you feel small before you've said a word. I rode the elevator without looking at my reflection.

Kason Wright was standing when I was shown in. That was the first thing I registered—not that he was tall, not that he was composed, but that he was standing. As if he had decided, before I arrived, that I deserved to be met on equal footing.

I set the folder on the conference table and sat down.

'Thank you for seeing me,' I said.

He sat across from me. 'You mentioned Bianca Mason.'

'I did.'

I slid the folder toward him and said nothing else.

He opened it. He read the way I had expected him to read—methodically, without expression, each page given its full due before he moved to the next. The paternity timeline first. Then the clinic records, the dates, the weeks. Then Bianca's communications, annotated in my careful hand, showing the architecture of what she had been building. And last—I had placed it last deliberately—the copy of his own azoospermia diagnosis, with a single highlighted passage and a note in the margin showing how and when Bianca had obtained it.

He sat with that last page for longer than the others.

The room was quiet. Forty-two floors below, the city went on doing whatever the city does. I kept my hands flat on my thighs and my breathing even and I looked at the middle distance just past his left shoulder.

When he closed the folder, he aligned the edges against the table. Once, precisely.

'How long have you known,' he said. It wasn't a question.

'Long enough.'

He looked at me directly then. Not with pity—I had prepared myself for pity and had planned exactly how I would let it move through me without effect. But there was no pity in it. There was recognition. The specific, quiet recognition of someone who has been in a burning building and sees, across the smoke, another person who is also still standing.

'What do you need from me?' he asked.

I looked back at him. 'Not much yet,' I said. 'But I will.'

He nodded once.

That was Thursday.

---

We met seven times over the next three weeks.

His office twice—early morning, before his staff arrived, the kind of meeting that doesn't appear on a calendar. A café three blocks from the park where I walked Biscuit every morning, three times. Once at a corner table in a restaurant neither of us chose for its food.

He was exactly on time. Every time. Not early—I would have found that eager, performative. Not late. Exactly on time, to the minute, which I eventually understood was not a habit but a choice.

We built the architecture carefully. Documentation protocols first—how we stored things, where, what format, what redundancy. A secure channel for communication, separate from anything either of our existing devices touched. Division of roles: what I held, what he held, who contacted whom and when.

We did not talk about what it felt like.

That was also a choice, and we had both made it without discussion, which told me something about him.

But I noticed things. I noticed that when I said Lily's name—only twice, in factual context, briefly—he didn't offer condolences or shift in his chair or do any of the twelve things people do when they don't know what to do with someone else's grief. He simply absorbed it. Continued. Let it be real without making it into a moment.

I noticed that I touched the bracelet both times. And that he saw me do it and said nothing.

On the fourth meeting, Biscuit had come along and sat under the café table with his chin on my shoe. Kason looked down at him once, early in the meeting, and then did not look again—not because he was uninterested, I thought, but because he understood that Biscuit was mine in a way that didn't require comment.

I filed all of it away. Not as evidence. As something else I didn't have a word for yet.

---

The company audit began on a Wednesday.

I had watched Ephraim's mornings change shape over four weeks. The early waking. The face-down phone. The coffee going cold. The particular stillness of a man staring at a number that keeps going the wrong direction. He had passed some internal threshold two weeks ago—I could see it in the way he answered ordinary questions, a half-beat delayed, his mind elsewhere doing arithmetic.

The first transfer from the subsidiary account came on a Tuesday. Forty-eight hundred dollars. Conceivable as an operating expense. I caught it through the shared household account he had forgotten, years ago, to revoke my access to. He had added me during a business trip to Chicago, so I could handle a vendor payment. He had never removed me. That was Ephraim: meticulous about the things that felt important and careless about the ones that didn't.

I photographed the timestamp on my phone. Added it to the encrypted file. Sat for a moment.

Then I opened a throwaway account I had made three weeks earlier from a coffee shop Wi-Fi two neighborhoods over, and I sent one sentence to the company's general counsel.

*You may want to look at the Q4 subsidiary account transactions—something in the October figures doesn't reconcile.*

I closed the account. Deleted the browser history. Ordered another coffee.

The internal audit began four days later.

I knew because Ephraim came home that Wednesday evening and went directly to his office without speaking. Biscuit went to the office door and sat outside it, waiting, then eventually padded back to the kitchen to find me.

I gave him his dinner. I washed the bowl when he finished. I stood at the sink for a moment with the water running, feeling the weight of the bracelet at my wrist.

Lily had given it to me on a Tuesday. She had made the clasp herself and bent it slightly wrong and been so proud of it anyway.

I turned off the water.

I went to the laptop and typed the date, the amount, and the time the audit had started.

Then I closed it and went to sit with Biscuit on the kitchen floor, in the quiet, in the dark that was starting to feel, slowly and without fanfare, like the beginning of the end.

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