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When Dad Kissed My Nanny at Mom's Funeral Novel Cover

When Dad Kissed My Nanny at Mom's Funeral

When Ellie Hudson catches her father Jenson in bed with their longtime nanny Martha on the day of her mother's funeral, she is betrayed by not only her father and her nanny, but her husband too.
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Chapter 1

The funeral parlor's heavy air pressed against my chest as I sat in the front pew, my mother's casket just feet away. Claire Hudson—my mother, the only person who had ever truly loved me—lay still and cold, surrounded by lilies that couldn't mask the underlying scent of death.

My hands trembled as I clutched the tissue Leo had pressed into my palm earlier. My husband sat beside me, his arm around my shoulders, but even his warmth couldn't chase away the bone-deep chill that had settled into me three days ago when the cancer finally won.

"She looks peaceful," someone whispered behind me.

Peaceful. The word felt like a slap. There had been nothing peaceful about watching my mother waste away, her vibrant spirit dimming with each passing day while my father, Jenson, remained coldly absent, citing work obligations even as his wife drew her final breaths.

The service dragged on, a blur of hymns and condolences from people who barely knew her. I caught glimpses of my father's stoic profile, his jaw set in that familiar expression of detached authority. Not once did I see him shed a tear.

When the final prayer ended, the crush of mourners overwhelmed me. Hands reached out, voices murmured sympathies I couldn't process. The room spun, my vision blurring at the edges.

"Ellie, you need to rest," Leo's voice cut through the fog. His hand found the small of my back, guiding me away from the crowd. "Come on, let's get you upstairs."

I let him lead me through the familiar hallways of our family home, past the portraits of ancestors who had never felt like mine, up the grand staircase to my childhood bedroom. The walls still held traces of my teenage years—faded posters, a bookshelf crammed with novels, the window seat where I'd spent countless hours reading while waiting for my father to notice me.

"Lie down for a bit," Leo said gently, his brown eyes soft with concern. "I'll handle things downstairs."

I nodded, sinking onto the bed that had been mine for twenty-six years. The house felt different now—hollow, like something essential had been carved out of it. My mother's presence had been the warmth that made this place a home. Without her...

Leo kissed my forehead before closing the door behind him, leaving me alone with my grief. I closed my eyes, trying to summon happier memories of my mother, when a sound drifted through the wall.

A low moan, rhythmic and unmistakable.

My eyes snapped open. The sound was coming from my parents' room—the room that adjoined mine through a door that had been locked for as long as I could remember. But sound traveled easily through these old walls.

Another moan, deeper this time. A man's voice.

My father's voice.

Ice flooded my veins. It couldn't be. Not today. Not on the day we buried my mother.

I slipped off the bed, my funeral dress rustling as I moved toward the shared wall. There—near the corner where the rooms connected—was an old keyhole from when this had been a single suite decades ago. My hands shook as I knelt, pressing my eye to the small opening.

What I saw shattered something inside me.

My father, still in his funeral suit, his jacket discarded on the floor. His hands tangled in familiar auburn hair as he pressed his mouth against a woman's neck. But it wasn't some stranger he'd found to comfort him in his grief.

It was Martha.

Martha, our longtime nanny who had been with our family for over twenty years. Martha, who had braided my hair when I was small, who had held me when I cried over scraped knees and broken hearts. Martha, who I had trusted like a second mother, who had been at my mother's bedside just hours before she died, holding her hand and whispering prayers.

Now she was in my father's arms, her fingers working at his belt with practiced familiarity while he lifted her onto my mother's dressing table—the same table where my mother had sat every morning, brushing her silver hair.

"Jenson," Martha breathed, her voice thick with desire. "We shouldn't... not today..."

"She's gone," my father replied, his voice rough. "We don't have to pretend anymore."

Pretend. The word hit me like a physical blow. How long had this been going on? How long had they been laughing behind my mother's back, behind my back?

Rage exploded through me, white-hot and consuming. I lurched to my feet, my vision tunneling as I stumbled toward the door. I had to stop this. I had to make them see how sick, how wrong this was.

My hand closed around the doorknob when another hand clamped down on my wrist.

"Ellie, no." Leo's voice was urgent, his grip firm as he pulled me back from the door.

"Let me go," I hissed, trying to wrench free. "Do you hear what's happening in there? On the day of my mother's funeral?"

"I know, but—"

"You know?" The words came out strangled. "You know and you're stopping me?"

Leo's face was pale but resolute. "Your father is grieving. People handle grief differently. He has a right to find comfort—"

"Comfort?" My voice cracked. "He's desecrating my mother's memory! He's with Martha, Leo. Martha, who was supposed to care for our family. This is betrayal of the worst kind."

"You're being dramatic," Leo said, his tone taking on that patronizing edge I'd learned to hate. "Your father is a grown man. He's allowed to seek solace wherever he finds it."

The words hit me like ice water. "Solace? Is that what you call adultery now?"

"Keep your voice down," he whispered urgently, glancing toward the stairs.

But I was beyond caring about discretion. "How can you defend this? How can you stand there and tell me this is acceptable?"

"Because it's not our place to judge," Leo snapped, his patience finally fraying. "Your mother is dead, Ellie. She's gone. The living have to go on living."

His words were a slap across my face. I stared at him, this man I'd married three years ago, this man who was supposed to love and protect me, and saw a stranger.

"Get away from me," I whispered.

"Ellie—"

"I said get away!" My voice rose, echoing off the walls.

The sound of our argument must have carried downstairs because I heard footsteps on the staircase, voices murmuring in concern. The rhythmic sounds from my parents' room had stopped.

Leo grabbed my arm again. "Now look what you've done. You're making a scene."

"I'm making a scene?" I laughed, the sound bitter and sharp. "My father is fucking the help on the day of my mother's funeral, and I'm the one making a scene?"

The bedroom door opened behind us, and my father emerged, his hair disheveled, his shirt hastily buttoned. His face was flushed, but his eyes held no shame—only cold annoyance.

"What is this noise?" he demanded.

Behind him, Martha appeared, smoothing down her skirt, her cheeks pink but her expression carefully composed. She looked exactly as she always did—the picture of maternal warmth and concern.

"Oh, Ellie, sweetheart," she said, moving toward me with outstretched arms. "You look so pale. This day has been so hard on all of us."

I recoiled from her touch as if she were poison. "Don't you dare touch me."

Martha's face crumpled with practiced hurt. "Ellie, I know you're grieving, but—"

"You were in there with him," I snarled. "On today of all days. How could you?"

By now, several funeral guests had gathered at the top of the stairs, their faces a mixture of curiosity and concern. I could see Mrs. Patterson from down the street, my father's business partner Mr. Chen, and several of my mother's bridge club friends.

My father's face darkened. "That's enough, Ellie."

"Enough?" I turned on him, all my years of seeking his approval crumbling into dust. "You want to talk about enough? How about having enough respect for your dead wife not to—"

"You will not speak to me that way in my own house," Jenson's voice cut through mine like a whip. "Especially not in front of our guests."

"Your guests? These people came to mourn my mother, and you're—"

"I'm what?" His eyes were chips of ice. "Grieving in my own way? Finding comfort in the arms of someone who has been part of this family for decades?"

Martha stepped forward, placing a gentle hand on my father's arm—a gesture so intimate, so familiar, it made my stomach turn.

"Jenson, please," she said softly. "Ellie is overwrought. She doesn't know what she's saying."

She turned to me, her eyes glistening with crocodile tears. "Sweetheart, I know this is hard. Your mother's death has been devastating for all of us. But you can't let your grief make you say things you'll regret."

The gathered mourners murmured their agreement. I could see it in their faces—they thought I was the hysterical daughter, unable to cope with loss. They saw Martha as the long-suffering nanny, trying to keep the family together in their darkest hour.

"Get away from me," I whispered, backing away from her reaching hands.

"Ellie," Leo's voice was sharp with embarrassment. "Apologize to Martha. You're being completely unreasonable."

I stared at him in disbelief. My own husband was taking their side.

"Unreasonable?" The word came out as a broken laugh.

"Yes," my father said, his voice carrying the authority that had cowed me my entire life. "You're making a spectacle of yourself. You're disrespecting the memory of your mother and embarrassing our family in front of our friends."

The injustice of it—being accused of disrespecting my mother's memory when he was the one who had betrayed her—sent rage coursing through my veins.

"I'm the one disrespecting her memory?" I looked around at the faces staring down at me—some pitying, some disapproving, all of them seeing me as the problem. "I'm the one embarrassing the family?"

Leo moved to my side, his hand closing around my elbow with bruising force. "Come on, Ellie. Let's get you some air."

As he pulled me away from the crowd, away from my father's cold stare and Martha's false concern, I felt something fundamental shift inside me. The three people who should have been my anchor in this storm—my father, my husband, my second mother—had formed a united front against me.

I was utterly, completely alone.

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