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My Husband’s Mistress Destroyed Our Daughter’s Last Memories Novel Cover

My Husband’s Mistress Destroyed Our Daughter’s Last Memories

Three weeks after I buried my daughter, the house still smelled like her shampoo. I didn't know how that was possible. The cleaners had come twice. I had washed every sheet. But when I walked past Lyla's bedroom door, the strawberry sweetness drifted out like she had just stepped from the bath, like in a moment she would pad into the hall in her pink socks and ask me to braid her hair. I kept the door closed now. I closed it the way you close a wound. Caspian had not slept here in nine days. Business at the club, he said. Investors.
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Chapter 2

The doorman was young, broad-shouldered, and trained to look through women like me.

He clocked my face, then my clothes, then the bag on my shoulder. His expression didn't change. "Name?"

"Erin Cooper." I paused. "Howard. Caspian Howard's wife."

Something shifted behind his eyes. Not recognition. Calculation.

"Ma'am, the club is mid-session. If you're not on the guest list—"

"I'm not here as a guest." I kept my voice flat. Even. The way you keep a blade flat before you turn it. "I'm here to collect my daughter's belongings. They were removed from my home without my consent and brought here. I'd like them back."

He looked at me for a moment longer than was polite. Then he unclipped the radio from his belt and turned slightly away, like that would stop me from hearing.

I waited. The brass sign above the door caught the last of the evening light. No name on it. Just the metal, and the glow, and the dry desert air moving through the palms.

The radio crackled. He listened. Nodded once.

He stepped aside.

Not warmly. Not with apology. The way you step aside from something you've been told to let through and don't fully understand why.

A second man materialized from inside — older, gray at the temples, a suit that cost more than the doorman's monthly salary. He did not introduce himself. He said, "This way," and walked.

I followed.

---

The main floor was exactly what I had imagined in the four years I had not been allowed inside it.

Low ceilings. Lower light. Velvet booths along the walls in a deep burgundy that swallowed sound. The air smelled like aged wood and money and the particular stillness of a room where everyone is performing calm. Chips moved across green felt in quiet arcs. Glasses were set down without clinking. Even the laughter, when it came, was measured.

The men at the tables did not look up when I walked through. I was not the kind of interruption that required attention. I was the kind that got handled.

My escort steered me toward the VIP lounge at the back, past a bar that ran the length of one wall. The bottles were lit from below, amber and gold, and between them — on a glass shelf positioned like a display case in a museum — were three things I recognized before I was close enough to see them clearly.

The bear was propped between a bottle of Macallan 25 and a signed poker chip in a lucite case. His fur was matted on one side, the way it always was, because Lyla had slept with him pressed against her cheek for three years. His missing eye faced outward. Someone had positioned him to face the room.

The christening gown was folded beneath a small placard I didn't read. The photograph — the one from the lake, the one where she was laughing into my collarbone — was in a new frame. A nicer one than I had used. As if the upgrade made it less of a theft.

I reached for the bear.

A hand closed around my wrist.

Not rough. That was the thing. It was almost gentle, the way you'd stop a child from touching something hot. The grip of a man who had never needed force because presence had always been enough.

"Those aren't yours to take."

Caspian's voice. Behind me, and slightly to the left. The voice he used in rooms like this — unhurried, almost warm, the voice of a man who owned the air he was standing in.

I did not pull away. I turned.

He looked the way he always looked. Bespoke charcoal suit. Not a hair displaced. The kind of face that photographed well from every angle, which was why it was on the wall of every room he'd ever wanted to impress. He was watching me with an expression I had seen him use on difficult clients — patient, faintly amused, waiting for the other person to realize they had already lost.

I looked at his hand on my wrist. Then at his face.

He let go.

---

He steered me away from the shelf with two fingers at my elbow. Light. Immovable. His smile did not waver for the benefit of the room.

"Walk with me."

It wasn't a request. I walked.

He guided me toward the main game room, past a table of men who glanced up and glanced away, past a server who pivoted smoothly to avoid us. When we reached a quieter corner near the far wall, he turned to face me. His voice dropped, not in volume but in temperature.

"The items were transferred to club property as part of an estate reorganization." He said it the way you'd explain a filing system. Reasonable. Obvious. Slightly bored. "If you want to make a formal request, Marcus can walk you through the process. It's straightforward."

"They're Lyla's things."

"They're assets now." He adjusted his cufflink. Left one, then right. "That's how it works, Erin. You know how it works."

I looked at him. I looked at the man I had made coffee for every morning for nine years, the man whose shirts I had learned to press a specific way because he didn't like the collar stiff, the man who had stood at our daughter's funeral and read from a folded card without once looking at her casket.

I looked at him and I felt something in my chest go very, very quiet.

He held my gaze for a moment, then turned back toward his table. Done. Filed. Managed.

That was when I saw her.

Ryleigh Torres was draped across the chair to Caspian's left like she had been poured into it. White dress. Dark hair. A diamond bracelet on her wrist that caught the low light and threw it back in small cold sparks. I had seen that bracelet in the photographs on the burner phone. I had assumed it was a client gift. I had assumed a lot of things.

She was looking at me.

Not with hostility. That would have been easier. She was looking at me with the bright, settled satisfaction of a woman who had been waiting for this exact moment and found it exactly as good as she had imagined. Her chin tilted up a fraction. Her lips curved.

She leaned toward Caspian and said something low, her mouth close to his ear.

He smiled.

Around the table, the high rollers glanced at me with the mild, incurious eyes of men watching a minor inconvenience that someone else would clean up. Then they looked back at their cards.

I stood there in the middle of Caspian Howard's kingdom, with my daughter's bear six feet behind me on a shelf between a whiskey bottle and a poker chip, and I understood, with a clarity that felt almost physical, that he had not brought me in here to manage me.

He had brought me in here to finish me.

I pulled out the chair across from Ryleigh and sat down.

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