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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 3

I did not sit down because I had a plan.

I sat down because standing felt like surrender, and I had already given that man enough.

The chair was leather, cool against the backs of my arms. The table was green felt, the same green as every table in every room Caspian had ever owned, and the chips stacked in front of the other players caught the low light the way his cufflinks did — deliberately, expensively, designed to remind you of the distance between what you had and what they had.

Caspian looked at me across the felt. His expression did not change. That was the thing about him — his face was a room with all the furniture bolted down. Nothing shifted unless he allowed it.

"You want to make a scene," he said. Not a question. Almost fond, the way you'd say it to a child who had knocked over a glass.

"I want Lyla's bear."

Somewhere to my left, Ryleigh made a small sound. Not a laugh. Something quieter and more satisfied than a laugh.

Caspian tilted his head. He let the silence sit for a moment, long enough that the men around the table felt it, long enough that two of them set down their drinks. He was conducting the room the way he always conducted rooms — without appearing to try.

"All right," he said.

He said it the way you say all right when you have already decided what comes next and you are simply waiting for the other person to step into it.

"One hand." He gestured toward the dealer, a thin man in a white shirt who had not moved since I sat down. "Your car against the bear. You win, you take it and walk out. No argument."

I looked at him.

"And if I lose?"

His smile was small and clean. "Then we keep playing."

The room was very quiet. Not the quiet of discomfort — the quiet of attention. These were men who paid to watch high-stakes games, and something better than the game they had paid for was happening right in front of them. I could feel it, the way you feel a current in water before you see it move.

I said, "Deal."

---

I lost the car in four minutes.

I knew I was losing before the cards landed. I knew it the way you know a room has changed before you can name what's different — something in the air, something in the angle of his shoulders, the particular stillness of a man who is not playing but operating.

He knew my tells. Of course he did. He had spent fifteen years watching me read tables from the chair beside him, feeding him the quiet signals — the slight lean when the odds shifted, the way my thumb moved against my ring finger when I was calculating, the half-second pause before I pushed chips forward when I was certain. I had never thought of them as tells because I had never thought of myself as someone he was watching. I had thought I was helping.

I understood now what helping had looked like from his side of the table.

The dealer turned the last card. The room exhaled. Caspian did not look at his hand when he laid it down. He looked at me.

"The car," he said.

His man materialized at my shoulder. I set my keys on the felt without being asked. The man took them and stepped back.

Caspian signaled the dealer again. The same small gesture, two fingers, the way you'd signal a waiter for another round.

"We keep playing," he said.

---

The second hand was my jewelry.

He stacked the christening gown against it — had someone bring it from the shelf, still folded, and set it on the edge of the table like a centerpiece. The white fabric caught the light. I had dressed Lyla in it the morning of her baptism. She had been six weeks old and she had grabbed my finger and held on.

I did not look at it. I looked at my cards.

I lost in six minutes.

I set my earrings on the felt. My bracelet. The thin gold chain I had worn since college. The dealer swept them to Caspian's side with the same practiced neutrality he used for chips.

Ryleigh reached for her champagne. She was not watching the cards. She had not been watching the cards. She was watching my face, her chin resting lightly on two fingers, her eyes moving over me with the slow, deliberate attention of someone cataloguing damage.

She wanted to see me break.

I kept my face still. I had learned that from him, at least.

---

The third hand was my savings account.

Caspian had Marcus Webb produce a document — one page, clean, already prepared. Of course it was already prepared. He had known how this evening would go before I walked through the door. Possibly before I had even picked up my keys.

He set the framed photograph against it. The lake house photo. Lyla laughing into my collarbone, me laughing into her hair. Someone had put it in a new frame, nicer than the one I had used, and the upgrade made my stomach turn in a way the theft alone had not.

"Sign the account transfer," he said, "or fold."

I looked at the photograph.

I looked at his hands, flat on the felt, relaxed. I looked at Ryleigh, who had set down her champagne and was sitting forward now, her diamond bracelet catching the light as she leaned in. I looked at the men around the table, who were no longer pretending to watch anything else.

I picked up the cards.

I lost in three minutes.

I signed the document. Marcus Webb took it without meeting my eyes.

Caspian leaned back in his chair. He looked satisfied in the way that had nothing to do with the money — the money was incidental. What he wanted was the shape of this. Me, across the table from him, diminished hand by hand, in front of witnesses, until there was nothing left to take and nothing left to fight with.

He wanted me to understand that this was always how it was going to end.

Ryleigh reached for the photograph. She turned it face-down on the table, slowly, deliberately, her eyes on mine the whole time.

Something moved through my chest. Not grief. Not yet. Something older and quieter than grief, something that had been sitting at the bottom of me for three weeks, waiting for the exact temperature that would change its state.

Caspian picked up his chips. He was already looking past me, toward the next hand, the next arrangement, the next thing to be managed.

He had made one mistake.

He thought he was finishing me.

He had no idea he had just run out of things I was afraid to lose.

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