
Replaced by His Mistress
Chapter 2
I made it back to my apartment before I fell apart.
Not all the way apart. Just enough.
The second the door clicked shut behind me, I slid down against it until I was crouching on the cold floor, knees pulled to my chest, the signed papers still clutched in my hand. I breathed through my nose. Slow. Deliberate. The way the nurse at the clinic had taught me.
*In for four. Hold for four. Out for four.*
When the nausea passed, I got up.
I went straight to the closet.
The shoe box was on the bottom shelf, tucked behind a pair of rain boots I never wore. Plain white. No label. I pulled it out and sat on the edge of my bed, lifting the lid like I had a hundred times before.
Eighteen months of evidence.
Screenshots of Dante's black card statements, organized by date. A Birkin in cognac leather—fourteen thousand. A Cartier love bracelet—six thousand. A suite at the Mandarin Oriental Munich, billed for two—three nights. I had cross-referenced every charge against Sera's flight records, which I'd pulled from a source I wasn't proud of using. The dates lined up every single time.
And then the photographs. Three of them, printed on regular copy paper because I hadn't wanted them saved anywhere digital. Dante's white dress shirt collar. The smear of burgundy lipstick was the same shade in all three. I'd checked. Sera wore that color. I'd watched her apply it at our own dinner table once, without a mirror, with the casual confidence of a woman who knew exactly whose attention she was keeping.
I set the photos on top of the pile and stared at them.
People always assumed I started collecting the moment I found out. Like there was one devastating night, one unlocked phone, one overheard phone call that broke everything open.
But that wasn't how it happened.
It started on our one-year anniversary.
Dante had a meeting in Prague. He called to say he'd be late, then didn't call again. I'd made dinner—nothing elaborate, just pasta, because I was still learning the kitchen in that enormous house. I'd set the table with candles. I'd waited until eleven, then put the food away and blew out the candles myself.
He came home at two in the morning, smelling like scotch and someone else's perfume. He walked past the dining room without looking in. He didn't remember what day it was.
That was the night I understood something that no amount of lipstick stains could have taught me.
He wasn't cruel to me. He wasn't even distant, exactly. He simply didn't register that I was there. I wasn't someone he was hiding things from. I was just someone he'd forgotten to notice.
I started collecting after that. Not out of anger. Out of self-preservation. I needed proof that I hadn't imagined four years of my own life.
---
I drove back to the estate that evening for dinner.
I don't know why I still did that. Habit, maybe. Or some last reflex of the girl I used to be, the one who thought showing up was enough.
The dining room was warm and smelled like rosemary and roasted garlic. Dante sat at the head of the table, jacket off, sleeves rolled to the elbow. Sera was across from him, her dark hair loose around her shoulders. They were already mid-conversation when I came in.
"The villa has a private dock," she was saying, scrolling through her phone. "We could take the boat out Friday evening, before the other guests arrive."
"Make sure Marco confirms the security detail by Thursday," Dante replied.
I sat down. A plate appeared in front of me—filet, asparagus, roasted potatoes. I picked up my knife and started cutting the steak into small pieces.
Neither of them looked up.
Not once did anyone say, *Elena, are you coming to Lake Como?*
Not once did anyone say my name at all.
The smell of the meat hit me wrong. My stomach turned, slow and insistent. I set down my fork and pressed my fingers flat against the table, breathing through it quietly. I moved the asparagus around my plate. I didn't eat.
No one noticed.
After dinner, Dante pushed back from the table and walked toward the hallway. He passed behind my chair.
His fingers grazed the back of my neck. Barely a touch—just the tips, brushing the skin above my collar the way he used to when we were first married. A reflex, probably. Meaningless.
I waited for my pulse to spike.
It didn't.
I sat very still and waited, and felt absolutely nothing.
*That was the moment I knew. Not the receipts. Not the lipstick. This—my own skin, forgetting how to miss him.*
The candle at the center of the table flickered once, then went still.
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