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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 5

"Have a good day at work," I called out toward the front door.

"See you tonight!" Daniel yelled back.

The deadbolt clicked into place. His heavy footsteps faded down the porch steps, followed by the distant hum of his car engine pulling out of the driveway.

I didn't move for a full minute. Then, I walked straight to the master closet.

I bypassed the matching silver hardshell luggage we bought for our honeymoon. I reached the very back corner, pushing aside his row of tailored suit jackets. I dragged out a faded navy canvas suitcase.

"Just you and me again," I whispered to the frayed handle.

I had bought it fresh out of college, long before Daniel Calloway ever knew my name.

I unzipped the main compartment. It smelled faintly of old cedar. I tossed in my passport, my birth certificate, and a stack of outdated bankbooks.

Next came a small velvet pouch. Inside sat the gold bangles I wore before my marriage.

I pulled out a tiny wooden box from the top shelf. My mother’s sapphire ring rested on the satin cushion.

"He doesn't get to keep you," I told the ring.

I shoved the box into the canvas bag and zipped it shut.

I carried the suitcase down the hall into the study. I pushed it onto the highest shelf of the guest closet. I threw a heavy, moth-eaten winter coat over the navy fabric, hiding it completely from view.

I sat at my desk. I flipped my laptop open.

"Routing number," I muttered.

I typed the digits from my newly opened, independent account into the banking portal.

I selected the total balance of my pre-marriage savings. Seventy-four thousand dollars.

"Confirm."

The page refreshed. A green checkmark appeared. *Transfer Successful.*

I hit the print command. The machine hummed to life, spitting out a single sheet of paper. I folded the receipt twice. I shoved it deep into the zippered pocket of my handbag.

I opened the bottom desk drawer. The fireproof lockbox sat heavy in my hands.

"Let's see the paperwork."

I pulled out the original marriage certificate. The embossed gold seal caught the morning light shining through the blinds.

I held my phone over the paper. I snapped a photo, ensuring the date and signatures were perfectly clear. I put the certificate back.

Next was the house deed. I ran my finger down the thick parchment.

*Joint Tenants with Right of Survivorship: Daniel Thomas Calloway and Vera Elizabeth Calloway.*

I photographed the entire page. I made sure my name was perfectly legible.

I shoved the physical copies back into the box. I locked it. I stuffed my printed bank records and the lawyer's folder into my bag.

I stood in the doorway of the study. My eyes tracked over the mahogany bookshelves we built together over a long weekend. I stared at the brass reading lamp on his desk. I looked at the potted monstera plant I watered every Sunday morning.

"Goodbye," I told the room.

An hour later, I sat across from Sandra Okafor.

"You secured the funds?" Sandra asked. She tapped her silver pen against the yellow legal pad.

"Seventy-four thousand," I answered. I dropped my heavy bag onto the carpet. "Moved to an account entirely under my name."

"Good. And the deed?"

I unlocked my phone. I slid the device across the polished wood. "Photographed."

Sandra swiped through the images. She nodded once.

"This is exactly what we need," she said. "I'm printing the final dissolution petition now."

"What happens to the joint checking accounts?" I asked.

"I filed the freeze request this morning," Sandra replied. "By tomorrow, he won't be able to withdraw a single cent."

"He's going to notice."

"He won't have time to care." She handed me a thick stack of stapled pages. "Sign the back page."

I grabbed her pen. The metal felt cold against my fingers.

"Is this the point of no return?" I asked.

"The point of no return was him filming strangers in your bed," Sandra countered. "This is just the consequence."

I pressed the pen tip to the paper. I signed my name fast, the ink bleeding slightly into the page.

"Done." I pushed the document back.

Sandra stamped the front page in red ink.

"The court clerk processes this today," she explained. "The official summons will be issued by tomorrow morning."

"When does he get it?"

"Forty-eight hours," Sandra said. "Wednesday morning. He lands in Seattle at eight-thirty Pacific time."

"And then?"

"A process server will be waiting at the arrival gate," she stated flatly. "He will be handed the papers physically. A digital copy will hit his email simultaneously."

My stomach dropped. A cold rush of adrenaline replaced the numbness I had carried all morning.

"At the airport," I repeated.

"In front of whoever he is traveling with," Sandra confirmed. "Ms. Thorne will get a front-row seat to the fallout."

"Will he call me?"

"Immediately," Sandra warned. "You will not answer. You will block his number the second the clock strikes eight-thirty."

"I need to be out of the house by then."

"Take your suitcase and leave Tuesday night," she instructed. "Change the locks on Wednesday."

"I can't change the locks on a house he co-owns."

Sandra offered a sharp, humorless smile. "You are citing extreme financial dissipation and marital misconduct. The judge granted an emergency order of exclusive occupancy."

I stared at her. "The house is mine?"

"The house is yours," she said. "He cannot legally step foot on the property once he is served."

I let out a long breath. The tension in my jaw finally released.

"He thinks he's coming back to a packed house and a clueless wife," I said.

"Let him think that," Sandra advised. "Forty-eight hours, Vera. Keep playing the game. Don't let the mask slip."

I walked out of the glass building into the glaring midday sun.

Downtown traffic honked along the avenue. I dug my car keys out of my bag.

My phone vibrated against my palm.

I stopped on the pavement. I flipped the screen up.

*Daniel: Craving that soup you make for dinner tonight. Can you pick up the ingredients?*

I read the message twice.

He wanted me standing over a hot stove. He wanted me chopping vegetables for him, playing the dutiful wife, while he finalized his plans to abandon me for a European kink compound.

My fingers hovered over the keyboard.

*Vera: Of course. I'll make it extra special tonight.*

I hit send.

The digital clock at the top of my screen read 11:15 AM.

"Forty-five hours left," I whispered to the busy street.

Enjoy your soup, Daniel. It's the last meal I'll ever cook for you.

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