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When His Mistress Tried to Kill Me on a Cliff Novel Cover

When His Mistress Tried to Kill Me on a Cliff

The fluorescent lights of the Social Security Administration office hummed with a headache-inducing frequency, a sound that seemed to vibrate right behind my eyes. I sat on the edge of the hard plastic chair, my hands clasped so tightly in my lap that the knuckles had turned the color of old bone. Three years. It had been three years of mourning a ghost, three years of scrubbing floors until my knees bled, three years of serving a family that treated me like a stain on their carpet. I just needed the death benefit. A pittance, really, but enough to maybe fix the leaking roof in the West estate’s attic where I slept, or perhaps buy groceries that weren’t on the clearance rack. "Mrs. West?" The clerk, a weary-looking woman named Brenda, peered over her spectacles. She didn't look at me with pity, just bureaucratic exhaustion. "Yes," I said, my voice sounding thin and brittle to my own ears.
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Chapter 1

The fluorescent lights of the Social Security Administration office hummed with a headache-inducing frequency, a sound that seemed to vibrate right behind my eyes. I sat on the edge of the hard plastic chair, my hands clasped so tightly in my lap that the knuckles had turned the color of old bone. Three years. It had been three years of mourning a ghost, three years of scrubbing floors until my knees bled, three years of serving a family that treated me like a stain on their carpet.

I just needed the death benefit. A pittance, really, but enough to maybe fix the leaking roof in the West estate’s attic where I slept, or perhaps buy groceries that weren’t on the clearance rack.

"Mrs. West?" The clerk, a weary-looking woman named Brenda, peered over her spectacles. She didn't look at me with pity, just bureaucratic exhaustion.

"Yes," I said, my voice sounding thin and brittle to my own ears. "Is everything in order? I brought the death certificate copy, the marriage license..."

Brenda frowned, tapping a manicured nail against her keyboard. The rhythm was erratic, annoying. "That's the problem, hon. The system isn't letting me process the claim."

My stomach gave a violent lurch. "What do you mean? Nathaniel died three years ago. The boating accident."

"I see the flag here for the accident," she muttered, squinting at the screen. "But the Social Security Number you provided... it’s active."

The air in the room seemed to vanish. "Active?"

"Yeah. Taxes were filed under this number last April. And the year before that." She swivelled the monitor slightly, though I couldn't read the small print. "It's flagged under a name change, though. 'Lewis West.'"

Lewis. Nathaniel’s older brother. The golden child who had died of an overdose six months *before* Nathaniel.

"That’s impossible," I whispered. "Lewis is dead. Nathaniel is dead. They’re both buried in the family plot."

Brenda shrugged, already reaching for the next file. "Look, lady, I don't know what to tell you. The computer says the number is in use. Active employment, high tax bracket. You can’t claim a survivor benefit if the government thinks your husband—or whoever is using this number—is alive and kicking in Manhattan."

I walked out of the office in a daze, the humid New York air slapping me in the face. The world tilted on its axis. *Lewis West.* The name echoed in my mind, a phantom heartbeat.

I didn't go back to the estate. I couldn't. Not yet. I had to see. Driven by a nausea that felt dangerously like hope—or perhaps horror—I took the subway into the city, clutching the address Brenda had scribbled on a sticky note.

Park Avenue. Of course.

The building was a monolith of glass and steel, reflecting the setting sun like a blade. I stood across the street, huddled in my frayed coat, feeling small and gray against the backdrop of such aggressive wealth. Doormen in livery stood guard. Limousines idled like sleek, dark sharks.

I waited. One hour. Two. The cold seeped through the soles of my shoes, but I didn't move.

Then, a black town car pulled up. The doorman rushed forward, opening the rear door with a flourish. First came a pair of red-soled heels, followed by legs that seemed to go on for miles. Lilah Moreno. I recognized her instantly from the tabloids—the socialite, the model, the woman who was supposed to be mourning Lewis West just as I mourned Nathaniel.

And then, he stepped out.

My breath hitched, a strangled sound that died in my throat. He was wearing a suit that cost more than my life was worth. His hair was cut differently, sharper, more severe. But the way he adjusted his cufflinks—that nervous tic, rolling the gold between his thumb and forefinger—was unmistakable.

Nathaniel.

He wasn't a ghost. He wasn't rotting in a casket. He was alive. He was tanned. He was smiling.

Lilah laughed at something he said, throwing her head back, her hand resting possessively on his forearm. He leaned in and kissed her, a slow, deep kiss right there on the sidewalk. It was the kind of kiss he used to give me before the 'accident.'

Something inside me shattered. It wasn't a clean break; it was a messy, jagged explosion of grief turning into something cold and hard. Iron.

He had stolen his dead brother's name. He had stolen three years of my life. He had left me to rot in his parents' house, serving them like a slave, while he played billionaire in the city with his mistress.

I turned away before I screamed. The ride back to the West estate was a blur of motion, the subway rattling like the rage vibrating in my chest.

When I walked through the service entrance, the kitchen was silent, save for the dripping faucet.

"Sophia!" Mrs. West’s voice shrilled from the dining room. "Where have you been? The silver hasn't been polished, and Mr. West is demanding his scotch!"

I walked into the dining room. Mrs. West sat at the head of the table, her pearls glowing in the dim light. Her face was a mask of pinched disapproval.

"Well?" she snapped. "Don't just stand there like a dimwit. Explain yourself."

I looked at her. Really looked at her. For three years, I had seen a grieving mother. Now, I saw the accomplice. She knew. They all knew. They had watched me mourn, watched me scrub their toilets and cook their meals, all while knowing their son was living in a penthouse across the river.

"I was delayed," I said. My voice didn't shake. It was terrifyingly calm.

"Incompetent," she spat. "Get the polish. Now."

I didn't move toward the cabinet. instead, I turned on my heel and walked toward the back stairs.

"Where are you going?" she screeched, standing up. "I didn't dismiss you!"

I kept walking. Upstairs, in the drafty attic room that smelled of dust and despair, I pulled a small duffel bag from under the cot. I packed only the essentials: my ID, the few dollars I had squirreled away, and the notebook where I kept the household accounts—evidence of their financial abuse.

I left the silver unpolished. I left the dinner uncooked.

As I zipped the bag, I caught my reflection in the cracked mirror. The woman staring back wasn't the weeping widow anymore. Her eyes were dry. Her jaw was set.

The mourning was over. The war had just begun.

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