Chapter 1
I was three months pregnant when I found out my husband had been cheating with the cousin I had kindly taken in.
My son said he wanted her to be his mom, then shoved me down the stairs and caused me to miscarry.
The day I lost the baby, my husband sat beside my bed. His voice was gentle, soft enough to lull someone to sleep.
“Relax,” he said. “You’ll forget all this pain.”
I closed my eyes and let him plant layer after layer of hypnotic commands in my ear.
“When you wake up, you’ll be an obedient wife.”
Now I watch them living happily ever after as a family of three.
They think I’m nothing but an empty shell.
They have no idea that I’ve already posted this plea for help online:
[HELP] My cousin is wearing my sexy nightgown to seduce my husband, I caught them cheating, and my son calls her “Mom.” But I just feel numb. What am I supposed to do?
What do you get after eight years of giving up a top-tier architecture career to be tied to the stove and washing machine?
It’s 6 a.m. I stand at the kitchen island, a hand resting on my slightly rounded belly—our second baby, three months along, mine and Jack’s.
Today’s our eighth wedding anniversary.
For the perfect dinner tonight, I hit three imported grocery stores just to get premium A5 Wagyu and live Boston lobster. Since our 8-year-old son Tom is deathly allergic to nuts, I skipped all pre-made mixes and baked a nut-free chocolate cake from scratch.
The early pregnancy backache and exhaustion nag at me, but I glance at our spotless, sprawling living room and feel content. I thought this was what happiness looked like.
Until 3 p.m.
I spot Jack’s custom black flash drive on the entryway bar. He has a big meeting this afternoon, so I grab my keys and drive straight to his upscale psychology clinic downtown.
I walk down the soft-carpeted hallway to his corner office. The door’s cracked open. I’m about to knock when I hear Jack’s voice inside.
It’s a tone I’ve never heard—giddy, soft, almost giddy.
“I don’t wanna go home for dinner tonight…” he chuckles, thick with affection. “Wanna hit that French place you’ve been begging to try? Then head back to that rooftop hotel we went to last time? That bed was insane, babe. You’re so addictive, I can’t get enough of you.”
“Holy shit—you’re gonna wear a thong? Don’t do that to me. I swear I’ll take you right there in the parking lot before we even make it upstairs.”
My hand freezes mid-knock on the door handle.
Then a young woman’s giggle comes through the phone. It sounds eerily familiar, but my head’s spinning too hard to place it.
Jack keeps going, that indulgent tone he almost never uses with me: “How about I take you to the beach for a whole month next month? Sound good?”
The woman asks something, and Jack brushes it off like it’s nothing: “Don’t worry. I’ll tell her I’m taking Tom to a summer camp program. Our son’ll cover for me—we’ve got this thing down, we always do. No issues.”
In that second, all the blood drains from my body. The hallway AC chills me straight to the bone.
Our son? Covering for him? We always do?
I take a shaky breath, dig my nails into my palm to steady my hand, and knock hard.
“Come in.”
I push the door open. Jack slips his phone casually into his suit pocket, then looks up and flashes that perfect, doting-husband smile. “Grace? Honey, what are you doing here?”
I hold out the flash drive, my nails cutting into my palm. “You forgot this.”
“Thank god, I was looking everywhere for it.” He walks over and kisses my forehead like it’s the most natural thing in the world. “Hey, actually—bad news. I’ve got a last-minute work thing I can’t get out of tonight. I can’t make dinner. But perfect timing, I was gonna tell you—”
He pauses, eyes so sincere it makes me sick. “I got Tom into this elite summer camp in Europe. I’m gonna take him for a whole month next month. It’ll look amazing for his private school applications. What do you think?”
Looking at his flawless, lying face, my stomach twists so hard I almost throw up.
But I don’t call him out. “Oh,” I hear my own voice, dry and hollow. “I’ll ask Tom what he thinks.”
I make it to my car before I dry-heave for ten minutes straight.
Jack’s cheating on me. That’s a bombshell. But the part that makes me feel like I’m drowning in ice water?
Our son will cover for me.
Tom’s only eight. I gave up my career for him, carried him for nine months, sat up with him through every fever and nightmare. He’s my flesh and blood.
I refuse to believe my son would lie to me.
I wipe my pale face, slam the gas, and peel out for Tom’s fancy private elementary school.
I park in the pickup zone and storm toward the gates.
But through the crowd of parents, I stop dead in my tracks, frozen to the sidewalk.
There’s my son, Tom.
He’s holding a fancy ice cream cone, clinging to a woman’s hand like it’s the most natural thing in the world.
She’s wearing a limited-edition trench coat, her big wavy hair glowing in the sun.
It’s Lyra.
My distant cousin—homeless, desperate, the one I’d taken in out of pity, who’s been living in our guest room ever since.
“See you tomorrow, Tom!” A classmate walks past, backpack slung over his shoulder, and stares at the pretty young woman. “Who’s that? Your aunt?”
I start to step forward, but I hear Tom yell, loud and proud for everyone to hear:
“Aunt? No! This is my mom, Lyra!”
The kid blinks, confused. “But… the lady who came to parent-teacher conferences last time—”
Tom takes a bite of ice cream and rolls his eyes so hard it’s almost dramatic, his voice thick with disgust.
“Dude, you got it wrong. That lady? She’s just our nanny.”
