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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 2

The house remained completely silent, save for the rhythmic, heavy snoring drifting down the hallway from the master bedroom.

I sat in the study, staring at the closed silver lid of Daniel’s laptop.

"Four, zero, eight, nine," I whispered.

I lifted the lid and pressed the numbers on the keypad. The lock screen vanished.

"Your mother's birth year," I told the glowing display. "You really think you're a genius, Daniel. Three years later, and you never changed it."

I clicked the browser icon. The window snapped open.

"Let's see what else you forgot to clear."

I pulled up the history tab. A massive list populated instantly.

"Fourteen months," I said, tracking the dates on the right side of the screen. "August of last year."

I counted the URLs. The same domain name repeated in block text.

"Fifty. A hundred. Two hundred times."

"This wasn't a mistake," I told the monitor. "This wasn't a sudden urge."

I scrolled further down the list, reading the search queries aloud.

"Search query: How to secure a second phone line," I read.

"Search query: Best encrypted messaging apps."

"You've been living a second life right under my nose."

I clicked the messenger archive. A folder sat right on the desktop, labeled 'Exports'.

"You organized it," I noted. "By quarter."

I double-clicked 'Q2'. A grid of video thumbnails loaded.

"Play," I commanded, hitting the spacebar on the first file.

Daniel's voice came through the muted speakers. *"Turn around and face the camera."*

A woman in a red collar spun on her knees.

"That's our guest room," I said, noting the floral curtains in the background.

I checked the file properties.

"Created: October twelfth."

I grabbed my cell phone from the desk and opened the notes app.

"October twelfth," I muttered as I typed. "I was in Denver. The regional marketing summit."

"You picked me up from the airport the next day and brought me flowers," I said.

I closed the video and opened another from the 'Q1' folder.

A different woman. The familiar beige rug of our master bedroom filled the frame.

"March fourth," I read the timestamp aloud.

My thumb hovered over the phone keyboard. The screen blurred for a fraction of a second.

"March fourth," I repeated. "Mom had her stroke on the third."

"You filmed a stranger in our bed while I sat in the ICU waiting room."

"You texted me that you were praying for her," I said to the empty room.

I typed the second date into the note. My fingers struck the glass hard.

I backed out of the folder and opened his photo gallery. A screenshot sat at the top, dated three weeks ago.

I zoomed in on the text.

"Daniel: *My wife is completely frigid. I haven't been satisfied in months.*" I read the words out loud.

"Master R: *Does she reject you?*"

"Daniel: *She doesn't even try. It's like sleeping next to a corpse. I need someone who actually wants to serve.*"

I slammed my palm flat against the desk. The wood stung my skin.

"October twenty-eighth," I read the time at the top of the image. "Eleven forty-five at night."

I picked up my phone and checked my calendar app.

"October twenty-sixth," I told the empty chair beside me. "Two days before you sent this."

"I bought that black lace set," I said, my voice dropping to a harsh whisper. "I lit the candles. I touched your chest."

"You pushed my hand away," I reminded him, though only the walls heard me.

"You said you were too exhausted from the quarterly review. You rolled over and snored."

"Frigid," I spat the word into the quiet room. "You rejected me, and then you used it to play the victim."

I kept reading the text in the image.

"Master R: *A corpse? That sounds boring.*"

"Daniel: *It is. I have to fake it every time she touches me. I just close my eyes and pretend she's someone from the site.*"

"Pretend," I whispered. My throat tightened. "You faked it."

I minimized the photos and opened his email client.

"Nothing in the sent folder," I observed.

I clicked on Drafts. One message sat waiting.

"To: admin@kinkhaven.eu," I read.

"Subject: Application for Relocation."

I opened the draft.

"Daniel: *I am seeking a permanent arrangement. I am willing to relocate to the European compound by next spring.*"

"Next spring," I said. "Six months from now."

"Daniel: *Attached is my passport scan for the background check. I will be traveling solo. My current marital ties will be severed by the end of the year.*"

"Severed," I repeated.

I scrolled to the bottom of the draft.

"Daniel: *I have liquidated my personal stock options. The funds are currently resting in an offshore account, ready for the compound entry fee.*"

"Liquidated," I said. "The joint account. You drained the Vanguard portfolio."

I clicked the attachment. Daniel's face stared back at me, his expression neutral, official.

"You're planning to leave the country," I said. "You're building a whole new life."

I held my phone up to the monitor. I pressed the side buttons. The camera captured the draft, the timestamp, and the passport photo.

I closed the email client.

I exited the browser.

I shut the laptop lid. The screen went black.

I sat back in the leather chair.

"No tears," I said aloud.

I stared at the dark monitor. My eyes stayed completely dry.

From down the hall, the familiar, rhythmic sound vibrated through the drywall. Daniel's snoring. Steady. Peaceful.

"Sleep well," I whispered.

I looked down at my phone. The notes app was still open.

I tapped the screen and typed one final line below the dates.

"Contact a lawyer tomorrow morning."

I set the phone face-up on the desk.

The overhead light glared against the ceiling. I didn't reach for the switch.

I kept my feet planted on the rug. The digital clock on the bookshelf ticked past four, then five, then six.

The screen on my phone never timed out. The white text glowed against the dark background, locking those six words into place.

"Wednesday," I said to the rising sun outside the window. "Let's see what happens before Wednesday."

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