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Wife Rejects Cheating Husband Novel Cover

Wife Rejects Cheating Husband

The rain hammered against our living room windows with relentless fury, each droplet seeming to echo the unease that had settled in my chest since Timothy's phone rang an hour ago. I watched from the kitchen doorway as he paced near the fireplace, his jaw tight with concern. "She has nowhere else to go, Cassidy," he said, running his hand through his dark hair—a gesture I'd learned to recognize as his tell when he was trying to convince himself as much as me. "Evangeline's landlord kicked her out tonight. Some dispute over lease violations. She's sitting in her car in this storm." I set down my coffee mug with deliberate care, studying my husband's face. Timothy had always been a rescuer, drawn to wounded birds and lost causes. It was one of the things I'd fallen in love with in college—his instinct to protect, to shelter. But something about this situation felt different. Wrong.
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Chapter 1

The rain hammered against our living room windows with relentless fury, each droplet seeming to echo the unease that had settled in my chest since Timothy's phone rang an hour ago. I watched from the kitchen doorway as he paced near the fireplace, his jaw tight with concern.

"She has nowhere else to go, Cassidy," he said, running his hand through his dark hair—a gesture I'd learned to recognize as his tell when he was trying to convince himself as much as me. "Evangeline's landlord kicked her out tonight. Some dispute over lease violations. She's sitting in her car in this storm."

I set down my coffee mug with deliberate care, studying my husband's face. Timothy had always been a rescuer, drawn to wounded birds and lost causes. It was one of the things I'd fallen in love with in college—his instinct to protect, to shelter. But something about this situation felt different. Wrong.

"How convenient," I murmured, then immediately regretted the sharpness in my tone when Timothy's eyes flashed.

"What's that supposed to mean?"

"Nothing. I just think it's odd that she called you instead of any of her other friends. Or her family."

Timothy's shoulders tensed. "She doesn't have family here, and her friends... look, she's going through a rough patch. We have the guest room. It's just for a few days until she finds something else."

The guest room. Our sanctuary that we'd decorated together, choosing soft blues and whites to create a peaceful retreat for visiting family. Now it would house Evangeline West, Timothy's college acquaintance who'd somehow remained on the periphery of our lives despite my subtle attempts to maintain distance.

Before I could voice another objection, the doorbell rang. Timothy was already moving toward the front door, leaving me standing in the kitchen with my unfinished protests.

I heard her voice before I saw her—soft, tremulous, perfectly pitched to trigger every protective instinct Timothy possessed. "Oh, Timothy, thank you so much. I don't know what I would have done..."

When I finally joined them in the foyer, Evangeline was already in Timothy's arms, her petite frame seeming to disappear against his chest. Her auburn hair was damp from the rain, and she wore a thin white blouse that had become slightly transparent in the downpour. She looked up at him with wide, grateful eyes before noticing my presence.

"Cassidy," she breathed, stepping back from Timothy with what appeared to be embarrassment. "I'm so sorry to impose like this. I promise it's just temporary."

I forced a smile, noting how her hand lingered on Timothy's forearm. "Of course. We're happy to help."

The lie tasted bitter on my tongue.

Over the next two days, I watched Evangeline settle into our home with the ease of someone claiming territory. She had a way of appearing whenever Timothy was around—emerging from the guest room just as he came downstairs for his morning coffee, materializing in the kitchen when he returned from work, always with some small need or question that required his attention.

"Timothy, could you help me reach something in the top cabinet?"

"Timothy, I think there's something wrong with the shower pressure."

"Timothy, would you mind looking at my laptop? It's acting strange."

Each request was delivered with a helpless smile and accompanied by casual touches—her fingers brushing his hand when he passed her a mug, her palm resting on his shoulder as she leaned over to show him something on her phone screen. I began to feel like a stranger in my own home, watching from the sidelines as this woman wove herself into the fabric of our daily routine.

But it was the laughter that bothered me most. Evangeline had a way of throwing her head back when Timothy made even the mildest joke, her eyes sparkling with an intimacy that made my stomach clench. She would lean closer to him during these moments, her hand finding his arm as if she needed the physical connection to contain her amusement.

"You're so funny," she would murmur, her voice dropping to a tone I recognized—the same one I'd once used with Timothy during our college courtship.

I tried to dismiss my growing discomfort as jealousy, but there was something calculated about Evangeline's behavior. The way she positioned herself between Timothy and me during conversations, how she always seemed to need his help when I was present, as if marking her territory.

On the third morning, I came downstairs to find them in the kitchen together. Evangeline was wearing one of my aprons—the yellow one with small sunflowers that Timothy had bought me for our first anniversary—as she attempted to make pancakes. Timothy stood behind her, his hands guiding hers as he showed her how to flip them properly.

The scene was so domestic, so intimate, that I felt like an intruder witnessing something I shouldn't see.

"Good morning," I said, my voice carefully neutral.

They sprang apart as if caught, and I caught the flash of satisfaction in Evangeline's eyes before she arranged her features into an apologetic smile.

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