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The Dead Woman Who Stole My Husband Was Coming For Me Next Novel Cover

The Dead Woman Who Stole My Husband Was Coming For Me Next

I found out my fiancé was in love with another woman the day she died. Not from him. From her Instagram memorial — 847 strangers grieving a stranger, and my fiancé's comment pinned at the top in a language he swore he didn't speak. "Mon trésor. Je t'attendrai." My treasure. I'll wait for you. Four years together. Four years of "you're the only one, Willow." Four years of him promising he didn't believe in emotional affairs because we "communicated everything." He met her in Aspen in December. A ski lodge. A stranger from Lyon with sad eyes and nowhere to go for Christmas. By February she was in Seattle — "for work," he said. I shook her hand in our kitchen. I saw the way she looked at him. Six days later she was dead. Fell from a lookout in the Cascades. No witnesses. And Ryker? Ryker stopped sleeping. Stopped eating. Started whispering her name in French into his phone at 3 a.m. So I did what any heartbroken fiancée would do. I packed a bag. Told him I needed space. Promised I'd be back when I could "support him through his grief." He cried. He thanked me. He called me his angel. What Ryker doesn't know? I already found her journal in his sock drawer. I already know she wasn't just some tourist. And the man whose name is written on the last page — Caspian Vance, the billionaire who owns half of Seattle — just sent a black car to my sister's house. "Miss Harper. Mr. Vance would like a word about the woman who died. He believes you and he… have the same enemy."
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Chapter 3

Harper took one look at my face and pulled me inside before I could even say hello.

She didn't ask if I was okay. She didn't say anything at all, just wrapped one hand around my arm and steered me past the entryway, past the neat row of shoes she kept by the door, past the framed print of downtown Seattle that I'd helped her hang three years ago. Her apartment smelled like coffee and something citrusy, clean and ordered in the way her whole life was ordered. I'd always envied that about her.

Right now I wanted to collapse into it.

"Sit," she said.

I sat on her kitchen stool and started unwinding my scarf. My fingers felt clumsy, like they belonged to someone else. Harper was already at the counter, and I heard the soft clink of glass, and then she set a lowball of whiskey in front of me. Not coffee. Whiskey, at eleven in the morning, without a word of explanation.

She sat down across from me and folded her hands on the counter.

"Willow," she said. "You look like someone who just found out her man's been sleeping with a ghost."

I laughed. It came out wrong, too sharp, too close to a sob. I pressed my fingers against my mouth.

Then I started crying.

I didn't mean to. I'd told myself the whole drive over that I was going to be calm about this, methodical, the way Harper always was. I was going to lay out the facts in order and let her respond and we were going to make a plan. I was not going to fall apart on her kitchen stool like a person who had no idea what to do next.

But the scarf was finally off, and the whiskey was sitting right there, and Harper was looking at me with that particular expression she reserved for clients who'd been holding themselves together for too long — not pity, just recognition — and something in me just gave.

I told her everything.

The comment on the memorial post. The Aspen photos. The February location tag. The video, seventeen seconds, Elodie's voice asking him to leave me, and Ryker's laugh, and his answer. The message from M. The box.

Harper didn't interrupt. She didn't gasp or reach across to touch my hand. She just listened, her eyes steady, her expression shifting in small ways that I'd learned to read over thirty years — a slight tightening around the mouth when something landed hard, a barely-there nod when she was filing something away.

When I finished, the apartment was very quiet.

Then Harper stood up.

She didn't say anything. She walked to the front door and turned the deadbolt, then moved through the living room pulling the curtains closed one by one, the gray morning light narrowing and then disappearing behind each panel of fabric. I watched her, my hands wrapped around the whiskey glass I still hadn't touched.

"Harper—"

"Give me a second."

She disappeared into her home office. I heard a drawer open, the soft sound of a laptop being lifted. When she came back, she set it on the counter between us and opened it without sitting down.

"I've handled forty-three divorce cases in the last two years," she said, her voice flat and precise. "Eleven of them involved affairs. Six of those involved a third party who was somehow connected to both spouses. And two of them—" She paused, pulling up a browser tab. "Two of them involved a third party who died under circumstances that were never fully explained."

I stared at her. "What are you saying?"

"I'm saying I've seen this before." She turned the laptop toward me. "Not this exactly. But the shape of it."

On the screen was a news article. Local, small, the kind that gets buried under bigger headlines within a day. The headline read: *Woman Dies in Fall at Cascade Viewpoint; Authorities Investigating.* Below it, a photo of a trailhead, yellow tape, the kind of gray sky that could be any day in Washington.

Elodie Marchand. Thirty-two years old. Found at the base of an overlook on a trail that saw maybe a dozen hikers a week at this time of year. No witnesses. Police were calling it a probable accident, pending further review.

"Probable," Harper said, like the word tasted bad. She pointed at a paragraph near the bottom of the article. "Her backpack wasn't recovered at the scene."

I leaned closer. "They mention that here?"

"No. I called the station this morning." She said it simply, without any drama, the way she said everything. "I have a contact there. I asked some questions."

I sat back. My chest felt strange, too tight in some places and hollowed out in others. "Harper. When did you—how long have you been—"

"Since you texted me at seven-thirty asking if you could come over." She closed the laptop. "You never ask to come over without a reason. And you sounded—" She stopped. "You sounded like you needed a lawyer, not a sister."

I picked up the whiskey and finally drank some. It burned in a way that felt almost useful.

"A徒步 hiker doesn't lose their backpack in a fall," Harper said. "They go down with it, or it lands nearby. It doesn't disappear. Which means either someone took it before anyone arrived, or someone took it after. Either way, someone knew to go back for it."

The word *someone* sat between us like something with weight.

"I need you to do three things," Harper said. She held up one finger. "First. Don't touch his phone again. He's going to start being careful now — he's already scared, you could see it. You said he was holding his phone like it might bite him. That means he knows something's wrong, even if he doesn't know what you've seen."

I nodded.

"Second." Another finger. "That box. Whatever M is holding for him — you need to find it tonight. Before he gets to it. I think Elodie left something behind deliberately. People who know they're in dangerous situations sometimes do. A paper trail, a letter, a drive. Something that explains what she knew."

"You think she knew she was in danger."

Harper looked at me steadily. "I think a woman who asks a married man to leave his wife, and records him saying he will, is a woman who's building a case. Just in case."

Just in case.

I thought about the video. The way she'd looked into the camera. Not at Ryker — at the camera. Like she'd known, even in that moment, that she might need it later.

"Third," Harper said. "I'm going to run her background through the firm's investigative contacts. A French national who's been in Seattle multiple times with no visible visa trail, no company affiliation, nothing on public record — that's not normal. That's someone who was very careful about not being found."

I turned the whiskey glass in my hands. "Or someone who was being hidden."

Harper's expression shifted, just slightly. "Yes," she said. "That too."

We sat with that for a moment. Outside, a car passed slowly, its tires loud on the wet pavement. The curtains didn't move.

I was about to ask her where to even start with the box — how to find M, how to get there before Ryker did — when my phone buzzed against the counter.

Ryker.

I looked at Harper. She gave me a single, small nod.

I picked up.

"Hey—"

"Willow." His voice was wrong. Frayed at the edges, like something had pulled it apart and he'd tried to put it back together too fast. "I— babe, I messed up. I need you to come home. Right now. Please."

In the background, faint but unmistakable, I heard sirens.

"Ryker, what happened?"

A long pause. The kind that isn't silence, that's full of breathing and held-back words and something that sounds a lot like fear.

"Just come home," he said. "Please."

I met Harper's eyes across the counter. She'd heard it too — the sirens, the shake in his voice. Her expression hadn't changed, but her hand moved to her phone.

I kept my voice even. "I'm on my way."

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