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When His Mistress Became Co-Author, I Divorced Him Novel Cover

When His Mistress Became Co-Author, I Divorced Him

I smoothed the delicate lace of my wedding dress against the hotel bed, carefully arranging it for packing. Three years of marriage, and I'd never had proper photos in this dress. Our rushed city hall ceremony had left no time for the dreamy Italian backdrop I'd imagined. This trip—our tenth attempt at a proper honeymoon—would finally change that. My fingers traced the intricate beadwork as I folded tissue paper between the layers. Some might call me foolish for still caring, for meticulously preserving a symbol of promises that seemed increasingly hollow. But hope is a stubborn thing. "Emma, have you seen my phone charger?" James called from the bathroom, his voice echoing off marble tiles. "Check the front pocket of your carry-on," I replied, carefully placing the dress in its acid-free box. "I labeled it yesterday." I'd labeled everything—luggage compartments, toiletry bags, even the folder containing our itinerary.
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Chapter 1

I smoothed the delicate lace of my wedding dress against the hotel bed, carefully arranging it for packing. Three years of marriage, and I'd never had proper photos in this dress. Our rushed city hall ceremony had left no time for the dreamy Italian backdrop I'd imagined. This trip—our tenth attempt at a proper honeymoon—would finally change that.

My fingers traced the intricate beadwork as I folded tissue paper between the layers. Some might call me foolish for still caring, for meticulously preserving a symbol of promises that seemed increasingly hollow. But hope is a stubborn thing.

"Emma, have you seen my phone charger?" James called from the bathroom, his voice echoing off marble tiles.

"Check the front pocket of your carry-on," I replied, carefully placing the dress in its acid-free box. "I labeled it yesterday."

I'd labeled everything—luggage compartments, toiletry bags, even the folder containing our itinerary. Control what you can when everything else feels like it's slipping through your fingers.

James emerged, already scrolling through his phone. "Found it."

He didn't look up, didn't notice the dress, didn't comment on the hours I'd spent researching the perfect spots along the Amalfi Coast for our photos. I sealed the box and placed it in my suitcase, wondering if I was packing a dream or a delusion.

---

Logan Airport hummed with morning travelers. James walked slightly ahead of me, his attention fixed on his phone as usual. I watched his shoulders—the slight tension, the way they hunched forward as he typed. I knew that posture. It meant Olivia.

"Coffee?" I asked, hoping to break his trance.

"Hmm? Oh, sure." He finally looked up, but his eyes darted back to the screen when it chimed with a new message.

I moved toward the counter, but something made me pause. Maybe it was the slight flush creeping up his neck, or the way his thumb hovered over the screen. I stepped closer, pretending to check the departure board above his head.

The message preview glowed brightly: "Can't wait to celebrate my one-year anniversary tonight. Hope you'll be there!"

My stomach clenched. Below it, another message: "LOL the guys are saying the wife's always waiting!"

James quickly turned the screen away, but not before I caught Olivia's name at the top.

"Something important?" I asked, my voice steadier than I felt.

"Just hospital stuff." He slipped the phone into his pocket. "You know how it is."

I did know. I knew exactly how it was.

"Your coffee, black with one sugar," I said, handing him the cup I hadn't yet purchased.

He took the phantom cup, his mind clearly elsewhere. He didn't even notice when I walked away.

---

Somewhere over the Atlantic, I pretended to sleep. The hum of the engines couldn't drown out the memory of that message. One year. Olivia Reed had been at Massachusetts General for exactly one year. One year of canceled dinners, postponed weekends, and nine—now potentially ten—abandoned honeymoon attempts.

I felt James shift beside me, the glow of his phone illuminating his profile in the darkened cabin. His fingers moved rapidly across the screen. I kept my breathing even, my eyes nearly closed but watching.

He glanced at me, checking if I was truly asleep, then turned slightly away. The protective gesture of someone with something to hide.

Twenty minutes later, he touched my shoulder. "Emma? Emma, wake up."

I feigned grogginess. "Hmm?"

"Listen, something's come up." His voice was low, practiced in its apologetic tone. "There's an urgent case. I need to fly back as soon as we land in Rome."

The words hit like expected blows. I'd heard variations of this speech nine times before.

"What kind of case?" I asked.

He hesitated. "It's complicated. But I need to be there for Olivia's celebration tonight. You go ahead—enjoy Italy. Take those photos you wanted."

"Photos we wanted," I corrected quietly.

He didn't respond to that. "I'll take your research paper with me to review before submission. Might as well use the flight time productively."

I nodded, too numb to argue. Six months of work handed over like an afterthought.

When we landed in Rome, I watched him stride confidently toward his connecting gate, my manuscript tucked carelessly under his arm. He didn't look back once.

Standing alone in the terminal, surrounded by excited tourists and reuniting families, I finally allowed myself to acknowledge what I'd been denying for months: my marriage was a carefully maintained fiction, and I was the only one still reading from the script.

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