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Thanksgiving Dinner Deception Novel Cover

Thanksgiving Dinner Deception

I'd been cooking since dawn. The turkey had been basting for hours, filling the house with that warm, golden smell that's supposed to mean family and gratitude. I'd made Eleanor's favorite cranberry sauce from scratch, the one with orange zest that takes forever to set properly. The table gleamed under the chandelier, each place setting arranged with the expensive china Eleanor insisted we use for holidays. My hands ached from peeling potatoes. My back hurt from standing. But I'd smiled through it all because this was what you did for family. This was what made a home. The doorbell rang at exactly six o'clock. Eleanor was always punctual.
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Chapter 2

"No."

The word came out of me like a gunshot, sharp and final. Eleanor's eyebrows shot up, her mouth forming a perfect O of surprise. Even Wilson looked up from his napkin origami.

"I beg your pardon?" Eleanor's voice dropped to that dangerous register I'd heard her use on misbehaving students.

"I said no." I stood straighter, my hands still gripping the table edge. "I will not pay thirty thousand dollars for my husband's illegitimate child. I will not be manipulated into raising another woman's baby. And I will not pretend this is anything other than exactly what it is—a conspiracy."

The baby's wails seemed to grow louder, filling the silence that followed. Eleanor's face flushed red, the careful composure she wore like armor beginning to crack.

"How dare you." Her voice started low but climbed steadily. "How dare you be so selfish, so ungrateful. After everything this family has done for you—taking you in when you had nothing, giving you a home, a husband, a place in society—and this is how you repay us?"

She stepped closer, her finger jabbing toward me like a weapon. "You're barren, Florence. Five years of marriage and not so much as a pregnancy scare. This child is a gift, a blessing, and you're too proud to accept it?"

Each word hit like a slap. Barren. Selfish. Ungrateful. The labels she'd been thinking all along, finally spoken aloud.

"Connor." I turned to my husband, desperate for him to say something, anything, to defend me or at least acknowledge the insanity of what his mother was proposing. "Are you going to let her talk to me like this?"

He finally looked up, his face pale and drawn. For a moment, I thought I saw something like regret in his eyes. Then he opened his mouth.

"Maybe you should think about what's best for the family, Flo."

What's best for the family.

Not what's best for me. Not what's right. What's best for the family that had conspired behind my back for three months while I cooked their meals and washed their clothes and played the perfect wife.

"You're pathetic," I whispered, and watched him flinch. "Both of you."

I turned and walked out of the dining room, leaving Eleanor's voice rising behind me like a siren. "Don't you walk away from me, young lady! This conversation is not over!"

Our bedroom door slammed behind me with a satisfying crash. I leaned against it, my heart hammering so hard I could feel it in my throat. The familiar space felt foreign now—the bed where Connor had lied beside me for five years, the dresser where I kept the jewelry he'd given me for birthdays and anniversaries, the closet where...

I froze.

The closet door was slightly open. It was never open. I was meticulous about keeping it closed.

I walked over and pulled it wide.

Connor's side was half-empty. His favorite sweater was gone. His good shoes. The leather jacket I'd bought him for our third anniversary. In their place, pushed toward the back like shameful secrets, were boxes. Small boxes with pictures of bottles and diapers and baby monitors.

He'd already been shopping. He'd already been planning.

I pulled out one of the boxes—formula, expensive organic formula—and stared at the smiling baby on the package. The price sticker was still attached. Forty-two dollars. For one container.

They'd been planning this for months. While I'd been cooking and cleaning and believing in our marriage, they'd been shopping for baby supplies and negotiating custody arrangements and deciding my future without me.

I grabbed my phone from the nightstand, my hands shaking as I scrolled to my parents' number. I needed to hear my mother's voice. I needed someone to tell me I wasn't losing my mind.

The bedroom door burst open.

"What do you think you're doing?" Eleanor stood in the doorway, her carefully styled hair slightly mussed, her lipstick smeared. She looked like a different person—wild, desperate.

"Calling my parents." I held up the phone. "Remember them? My actual family?"

"You will not involve outsiders in family business." She stepped into the room, blocking my path to the door. "This is a private matter."

"Outsiders?" I laughed, the sound harsh and bitter. "My parents are outsiders, but your son's mistress gets a vote?"

Eleanor's eyes narrowed to slits. "Give me that phone."

"No."

"Give me that phone right now."

She lunged forward, her manicured nails reaching for my hand. I jerked back, but she was faster than I'd expected. Her fingers closed around the device.

"Let go!" I pulled back, but she held on, her grip surprisingly strong for a woman her age.

"You have no right—" she panted, tugging harder "—to drag innocent people—" another yank "—into this mess!"

The phone flew out of our joined hands, arcing through the air in slow motion. It hit the wall with a sharp crack, the screen spider-webbing before it clattered to the floor in pieces.

We both stared at the wreckage.

"Now look what you've done," Eleanor said, smoothing her hair back into place. Her voice had returned to that terrifyingly calm register. "You've made me lose my temper. I hope you're satisfied."

I looked at my destroyed phone, at the woman who'd just physically fought me for it, at the baby supplies hidden in my closet like evidence of a crime.

And I realized that this was never going to end. Not with reason. Not with pleading. Not with hoping Connor would grow a backbone or that Eleanor would develop a conscience.

This was war.

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