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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 4

The silence in Conrad’s penthouse wasn’t empty; it was heavy with things unsaid. Rain lashed against the floor-to-ceiling windows, blurring the lights of the Manhattan skyline into weeping streaks of gold and gray. I sat on the edge of a velvet sofa that cost more than the Wests had spent on my food in three years, watching a doctor pack away his stethoscope.

“Mild concussion, dehydration, extensive bruising on the wrists and shoulders,” the doctor murmured, his voice low and professional. He handed Conrad a slip of paper. “She needs rest, Mr. Rivera. And safety.”

Conrad didn’t look at the paper. His gaze was fixed on me, dark and unreadable, like the bottom of a deep well. He nodded once, dismissing the man without a word. When the door clicked shut, the room seemed to shrink, pulling us into a gravity I wasn’t sure I was ready for.

He walked over to the mahogany desk in the corner, his movements fluid but restrained, like a predator trying not to spook its prey. He picked up a thick leather folder and brought it to me.

“I didn’t just come for you tonight, Sophia,” he said, his voice rough, as if the words scraped his throat on the way out. “I’ve been watching them. For months.”

I opened the folder. My breath hitched.

Photographs. Bank statements. Emails. It was all there. Nathaniel’s frantic wire transfers to offshore accounts under the name Lewis West. Lilah’s receipts for jewelry bought with company funds. It was a roadmap of their greed, meticulously charted.

But the last document made my heart stop.

*Petition for Dissolution of Marriage.*

My name was already printed. The date was from six months ago.

“I had my legal team draft them the moment I confirmed he was alive,” Conrad said, kneeling before me so our eyes were level. He smelled of rain and expensive scotch and something uniquely *him*—woodsmoke and steel. “I couldn’t interfere until I had proof to protect you. I needed to make sure that when you left, they couldn’t touch you.”

He pulled a fountain pen from his pocket and held it out. His hand was steady; mine was trembling.

“Sign it,” he whispered. “End it.”

I looked at the paper. This wasn’t just ink; it was an exorcism. I took the pen. The scratch of the nib against the paper sounded like a scream cut short. With one final stroke, Nathaniel West was gone. I wasn’t a widow anymore. I was free.

***

Three days later, the freedom felt fragile, like glass ready to shatter. Conrad had insisted on a full medical workup at a private clinic uptown—a fortress of white walls and hushed voices. He wanted to be there, but a crisis at his firm demanded his presence for an hour.

“I’ll have security outside the door,” he’d promised, kissing my forehead before leaving.

I sat in the waiting room, clutching my purse. It was a new bag Conrad had bought me, heavy leather, empty save for my ID and a tube of lipstick. I felt exposed without him, a raw nerve in the sterile air.

A nurse called my name. As I stood, a woman in a heavy coat brushed past me, stumbling slightly. She muttered an apology, her shoulder checking mine hard enough to knock the breath out of me. Before I could react, she was gone, disappearing down the hallway.

I didn’t think anything of it. I went in, endured the poking and prodding, and walked out thirty minutes later, feeling a little stronger. The bruising on my wrists was fading to a sickly yellow.

I pushed through the clinic’s revolving doors, expecting to see Conrad’s black SUV.

Instead, I saw flashing lights.

Blue and red strobe lights bounced off the wet pavement, disorienting me. Two squad cars were parked at chaotic angles, blocking the driveway.

“Sophia Barnes?”

A woman stepped out of the lead car. She wore a detective’s badge on her belt and a look of grim satisfaction. Detective Sarah Morgan. I recognized the type—hard eyes, sharp jaw, looking for a win.

“Yes?” I took a step back, my hand instinctively going to my purse.

“Don’t reach inside the bag!” she barked, her hand dropping to her holster.

Two uniformed officers swarmed me before I could process the command. They grabbed my arms, twisting them behind my back with unnecessary force. The pain in my healing shoulder flared hot and bright.

“What are you doing?” I gasped, panic rising like bile. “I haven’t done anything!”

“We received an anonymous tip regarding the transport of narcotics and stolen corporate assets,” Morgan said, stepping closer. She ripped the bag from my shoulder and dumped its contents onto the hood of the squad car.

My lipstick rolled away. My ID landed face up.

And then, two things that weren't mine.

A thick, sealed envelope with the West Enterprises logo. And a clear plastic bag filled with white powder.

The world tilted. The woman in the hallway. The stumble.

“That’s not mine,” I choked out, the air leaving my lungs. “Someone planted that. Please, you have to listen to me!”

“Save it for the station,” Morgan said, snapping the cuffs onto my wrists. The cold metal bit into my skin, right over the bruises Nathaniel’s father had left.

As they shoved me into the back of the cruiser, I saw a black town car idling across the street. The window rolled down just an inch. I caught a glimpse of dark hair and the glint of a diamond earring. Lilah.

She wasn’t smiling. She was watching me with the cold, dead eyes of a shark that smelled blood.

The siren wailed, a mournful, terrifying sound that drowned out my screams. I was back in the dark.

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