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My Husband's Master Wasn't Me Novel Cover

My Husband's Master Wasn't Me

Vera Calloway spent three years being the perfect wife to a man who spent those same years being someone else's devoted submissive online. The day she finds his laptop open—chat logs, nude videos, a flight itinerary—she doesn't cry. She calls her divorce attorney. He expects forgiveness. She serves papers. He expects her to wait. She sells the house. By the time Daniel Calloway realizes what he's lost, Vera is already gone—and the woman rebuilding herself from the wreckage has no interest in being found.
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Chapter 1

"Daniel?" I called out, dropping my keys into the ceramic bowl by the door.

No answer.

I slipped my shoes off and walked into the kitchen. The overhead lights were off, but the room wasn't dark. A bright square of white light illuminated the granite island.

Daniel’s laptop sat open. The screen was awake.

"You never leave this thing unplugged," I muttered.

I stepped closer to close the lid. My hand reached out, but my eyes caught the bold text at the top of the screen. It was a chat interface I didn't recognize. Dark gray background, neon green text bubbles.

"Master R," I read aloud.

I stopped. My hand hovered over the keyboard. I didn't close the lid. I planted my feet on the hardwood floor and read the last seven messages visible on the screen.

**Master R:** *Did you secure the location for next week?*

**Daniel:** *Yes. The hotel is booked. She suspects nothing.*

**Master R:** *Are you sure? Wives have a habit of snooping.*

**Daniel:** *Vera is clueless. She thinks I have a marketing conference.*

**Master R:** *Good boy. Bring the collar. And bring the proof.*

**Daniel:** *I always do.*

**Master R:** *Wednesday will be intense. Prepare her.*

"Prepare her?" I whispered.

My fingers turned to ice. A sharp numbness spread from my chest down to my toes. The sheer confusion vanished, replaced by a cold, heavy dread.

"Wednesday," I said to the empty room. "He said he was flying out Wednesday."

I backed away from the counter. I turned and marched down the hallway toward the study.

I pushed the heavy oak door open. Daniel’s desk sat perfectly organized in the center of the room.

"Where is it?" I asked myself.

I pulled the top drawer open. Pens, sticky notes, paperclips. I slammed it shut.

I yanked the bottom file drawer open. Tax returns and mortgage documents. I reached in and ran my hand along the bottom panel. He always told me this was a spare drawer, empty for my use. But my fingernail caught on a ridge near the back corner.

A false bottom.

I wedged my nail under the wood and popped the thin panel up. A folded piece of printer paper lay flat against the real base of the drawer.

I pulled it out. I smoothed the sharp creases against the edge of the desk.

"United Airlines," I read aloud. "Flight 892."

Departure Date: Next Wednesday.

Destination: Seattle.

"You told me Chicago," I said, my voice barely a rasp.

I scanned the passenger details.

Buyer: Daniel Calloway.

Seat 4A: Daniel Calloway.

Seat 4B: Riley Thorne.

"Riley Thorne." I tested the syllables. I didn't know anyone named Riley.

I flipped the paper over. A blank white surface stared back at me. No hidden notes. No explanations.

I refolded the itinerary, matching the exact creases perfectly. I placed it back into the hidden compartment, pressed the false wood down, and shoved the drawer shut.

I hurried back to the kitchen. The laptop screen cast long shadows across the floor.

I stood in front of the keyboard. I pressed my finger against the trackpad and scrolled up the chat history.

"Come on," I urged the machine.

I found a section labeled *Attachments*. A row of video thumbnails lined the screen.

I hovered the cursor over the first square. I clicked play.

"Get on your knees," Daniel’s voice echoed from the tiny speakers.

I flinched. The audio was crystal clear.

The video frame shook for a second before stabilizing. A blonde woman knelt on a familiar beige rug. Behind her, a brass nightstand lamp cast a yellow glow against the painted wall.

"Look at the lens," Daniel commanded.

"Yes, sir," the woman replied.

"Tell Master R what you are."

"I'm your property."

"Say it like you mean it."

"I am your property, sir."

"Good girl. Now beg for it."

"Please, sir. Please give it to me."

I slammed my finger against the pause button. The timer read twelve seconds.

The frame froze on the woman's face. I didn't care about her. I stared at the background. The brass lamp. The beige rug.

It was our master bedroom.

My jaw locked tight. Total stillness gripped my limbs. I stopped breathing. The reality of the footage pinned me to the floor.

Metal scraped against the front door lock. The heavy jingle of car keys shattered the silence.

I snapped the laptop lid down.

I spun around, rushed to the refrigerator, and yanked the stainless-steel door open. I grabbed a blue can of ice water from the top shelf.

The front door creaked open. Heavy footsteps hit the foyer tiles.

I popped the aluminum tab. I took a massive swallow. The freezing water burned a path down my throat.

"Vera?" Daniel shouted from the hallway.

"In the kitchen," I called back. My tone came out flat. Normal. Just another ordinary Friday evening.

He rounded the corner. He loosened his silk tie and unbuttoned his collar.

"You're home early," he said.

"They let the whole department go at four," I said. "Dinner isn't made yet."

"Don't worry about it." He tossed his leather briefcase onto the nearest dining chair. "Traffic was a disaster. I'm too tired to care about a home-cooked meal anyway."

"Accident?" I asked.

"A massive pileup on the interstate. Took me an hour to go five miles."

"That sounds exhausting."

"It was," he said, rolling his shoulders. "I'm just glad I'm flying out next week. Driving is killing my back."

"Right," I said. "Chicago."

"Yeah. Three days of boring seminars and bad hotel coffee."

"You'll survive."

"Barely. Want to just order Chinese?"

"Whatever you want."

"You always say that," he chuckled. "And then you complain when I get the spicy garlic chicken."

"Get the chicken, Daniel. I don't mind."

"Alright." He stepped fully into the kitchen. "I need a drink first. My throat is completely dry."

Daniel reached into his suit pocket. He pulled out his phone and set it flat on the marble counter, the screen facing up toward the ceiling.

He turned his back to me and reached up to open the glass cabinet.

The phone buzzed against the marble. The screen flared bright white.

A push notification banner appeared across the center of the display.

**Riley Thorne:** *Did you pack the gear for Wednesday? Master R wants us ready as soon as we land. Make sure the wife doesn't find out.*

I stood exactly two steps behind him.

I held the cold water can against my chest. The condensation dripped onto my bare wrist.

"Do we have any clean glasses?" Daniel asked, staring into the empty shelf.

"Dishwasher," I said.

"Right. Forgot I didn't empty it this morning."

I didn't move. I stared at the name on the screen. Riley Thorne. The same name from the printed plane ticket.

Daniel bent down and opened the dishwasher door. He grabbed a clear glass and stood back up. He never turned around. He never glanced at the counter.

"You want any ice?" he asked.

"No," I said.

"Suit yourself."

The phone screen dimmed. A second later, it went completely black.

We stood in the kitchen, physical distance measuring less than a meter. The hum of the refrigerator filled the quiet space between us.

"So," Daniel said, turning on the faucet. "How was the rest of your day?"

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