He Told His Children To Call His Mistress Mum In His Wife’s Home-Teptep

Devon believed the mansion had finally learned his name.

By seven o’clock, every polished surface seemed to answer him, from the marble hall to the mirrored drinks cabinet to the sweep of the staircase where guests paused for photographs.

Champagne sat in crystal flutes on silver trays, chilled so hard the stems misted under people’s fingers.

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Live jazz carried from the ballroom and rolled through the house in a smooth, expensive pulse.

Outside, the evening had turned damp in that ordinary British way, leaving coats dark at the shoulders and umbrellas dripping by the front door, but inside the air was warm with perfume, candle wax, and Devon’s satisfaction.

It was his fortieth birthday.

He wore a dinner jacket that had been altered twice, and he kept smoothing the lapel as if the fabric itself might confirm what he wanted everyone to believe.

That he had arrived.

That this house, this party, these flowers, these guests, and even the silence around his private life were all proof of his greatness.

At the edge of the dining room, near the kitchen door, Simone watched him accept praise as though he had earned every brick.

She wore a plain black dress, the sort of dress chosen by a woman who knew she would be seen only when something had gone wrong.

There was a crease across the waist where Jamal had clung to her before the guests arrived.

Her hair was pinned back in a neat knot, and one hand rested from time to time on the small gold brooch fixed at her throat.

No one asked about the brooch.

No one asked much about Simone at all.

Since sunrise, she had carried the party on her back with the quiet efficiency that had made Devon mistake her for someone small.

She had arranged the white roses when the florist’s box arrived slightly crushed.

She had checked the guest list against the place cards because Devon hated empty chairs more than bad manners.

She had knelt on the carpet to fix Brianna’s sash after the ribbon split in her hands.

She had found Jamal’s painted shoe under a side table, one little heel smudged with blue from the craft paint he adored.

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