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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 5

The interrogation room smelled of stale coffee and fear. It was a scent I knew intimately, though usually, it was mixed with cigar smoke and lemon polish. Here, under the buzzing fluorescent lights, I was just a number again. A problem to be processed.

Detective Morgan sat across from me, her posture rigid. The plastic bag of white powder sat between us like a loaded gun.

"It’s a lot of product for personal use, Ms. Barnes," she said, her voice flat. "And the corporate files? Embezzlement isn't a good look for a grieving widow."

"I didn't take them," I said, my voice trembling despite my best efforts to channel the woman who had stormed the gala. The handcuffs bit into the healing bruises on my wrists, a cruel reminder of how quickly power could be stripped away. "A woman bumped into me. She put them there."

"Convenient." Morgan leaned forward. "Look, we know about the West family drama. Maybe you thought you were owed something?"

The heavy metal door groaned open before I could answer. The air in the room changed instantly—charged, electric, dangerous.

Conrad Rivera didn't walk in; he invaded.

He was flanked by a man in a sharp charcoal suit who carried a briefcase like a weapon. Conrad’s eyes found mine immediately. They were dark pools of contained violence, scanning me for injury. When he saw the cuffs, a muscle in his jaw jumped.

"Uncuff her," Conrad said. It wasn't a request. It was a command that sucked the oxygen out of the room.

Morgan stood up, bristling. "Mr. Rivera, this is an active investigation—"

"This is a farce," the man in the charcoal suit interrupted, slamming a tablet onto the metal table. "Marcus Chen, representing Ms. Barnes. And this is security footage from the clinic's hallway, timestamped forty-five minutes ago."

On the screen, grainy but undeniable, was the moment. The woman in the heavy coat—Lilah’s favorite cashmere trench—colliding with me. Her hand moving with practiced sleight, slipping the envelope and bag into my open purse.

"That is Lilah Moreno," Marcus said, his tone clinically bored. "Assault, planting evidence, filing a false police report. Unless you want my client to add 'unlawful detainment' to the lawsuit we're filing against the city, I suggest you release her. Now."

Morgan watched the video twice. Her face paled. She looked from the screen to Conrad, who looked ready to dismantle the precinct brick by brick.

"Get the keys," Morgan muttered to the officer at the door.

The moment the metal clicked open, I was up. My legs felt like water. I stumbled, and Conrad was there, his arm a steel band around my waist. He didn't speak to the police. He just turned and walked me out, shielding me from the precinct's chaos like I was something precious and breakable.

Once we were inside the back of his limousine, the adrenaline crashed. The silence of the car, the plush leather, the scent of cedar—it was too much contrast. I started to shake. Violent, racking tremors that chattered my teeth.

"I'm sorry," I gasped, pressing my hands to my face. "I'm sorry, I just—"

"Don't," Conrad growled softly. He pulled me into his lap, burying his face in the crook of my neck. "You have nothing to be sorry for. I should have been there."

I clung to him, gripping the lapels of his jacket. He was warm. He was real. "I was so scared, Con. I thought I was going back to a cage."

He pulled back just enough to look at me. His thumb traced the line of my jaw, wiping away a tear I hadn't felt fall. The intensity in his gaze burned. "Never again. I swear it."

Then he kissed me.

It wasn't tentative. It was a desperate, claiming thing. It tasted of relief and storm clouds. For a moment, the precinct, the Wests, the fear—it all dissolved. There was only the heat of his mouth and the frantic beat of his heart against my chest.

***

Across the city, in a hotel suite that cost more per night than I used to make in a year, Nathaniel West was pacing. I saw the aftermath later in the tabloids, but I could imagine the scene perfectly. He was watching the news—footage of me leaving the station, Conrad’s protective arm around me, looking every inch the billionaire savior.

Nathaniel, stripped of his "Lewis" accounts and facing a federal inquiry, was desperate. But Nathaniel didn't do desperation well; he did delusion.

He looked at the screen, at the way the wind caught my hair, at the strength in my posture. He didn't see a woman who hated him. He saw a possession he had misplaced.

"She looks good," he muttered to the empty room. Lilah was gone, kicked out the moment the accounts froze. She was a liability now. But me? In his twisted mind, I was the solution. The public loved a reconciliation story. If he could just get me back, the fraud charges, the identity theft—it would all be framed as a romantic tragedy.

He picked up his phone and dialed a florist. "Three dozen white roses," he ordered, his voice cracking with manic optimism. "Send them to the Rivera penthouse. The card should read: *'For the only woman who ever truly knew me. Let's start over.'*"

When the delivery arrived an hour later, Conrad intercepted it in the lobby. He didn't bring them up. He took the card, read it once, and walked the arrangement to the massive fireplace in the lobby. He tossed the bouquet into the flames, plastic wrap and all. He watched the white petals curl and blacken, his expression stone cold.

***

While flowers burned in Manhattan, a smaller, quieter tragedy was unfolding in the rotting heart of the West estate.

The house was dark. The electricity had been cut to the lower floors to save money. Upstairs, Mr. West was shouting into a phone, trying to liquidate assets that the IRS had already flagged. Mrs. West was in her room, popping sedatives and staring at her jewelry box, calculating what she could sell without the neighbors noticing.

Down the hall, a small door was closed.

Inside, five-year-old Alex lay tangled in sweaty sheets. His face was flushed a dangerous crimson, his breathing ragged and wet. The fever had started two days ago, but in the chaos of lawyers and panic, no one had checked on him.

"Sophia..." he whined, his voice a scratchy whisper. He didn't know I was gone. He didn't know I wasn't his mother. He only knew that the hands that usually brought him cool water and soup were missing.

He kicked the blankets off, shivering violently. "Mommy? Sophia?"

His door handle rattled, but it was locked from the outside.

"Quiet down in there!" Mr. West roared from the hallway, his footsteps thumping past. "Stop that whining, or I'll give you something to cry about!"

Alex curled into a ball, the heat radiating off his small body like a furnace. He squeezed his eyes shut, waiting for the cool hand that would never come, as the darkness in the room grew heavier, and his breaths grew shallow and short.

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