She Froze Every Card Before He Learned The Penthouse Was Hers-hihehu

From the mezzanine, the gallery looked almost peaceful.

The polished concrete floor gleamed under white track lights.

The paintings hung with too much space around them, the way expensive things do when they expect people to lean back and whisper.

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Somewhere below me, a glass clinked against another glass.

The air smelled like floor wax, citrus perfume, and the cold bite of champagne I was not drinking.

I had sparkling water in my hand because I needed something steady to hold.

The bubbles hit my tongue like tiny sparks.

Below me, my mother-in-law, Lisa, was standing at the sales counter as if she owned not only the card in her hand, but the room, the building, and every person who had the misfortune of waiting on her.

She wore cream silk and pearls.

She always wore pearls when she wanted strangers to assume she was gentle.

Beside her stood Isabella, my husband’s mistress, though of course Lisa would never use that word in public.

Not girlfriend.

Not affair partner.

Not the woman Brandon had been taking calls from in the garage while telling me he was checking on work.

Lisa would have called her a friend.

Brandon had already done that.

A friend.

I watched Isabella point toward the painting.

It was an abstract piece, angry blue and gray strokes over a bruised purple center, the kind of thing people call bold when they do not know what else to say.

The price was $5,400.

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