After The Storm, Her Mother’s Safe Revealed His Other Family-paupau

My husband slapped me eight times before he tied me to a terrace chair in the storm.

I remember the number because, after the fourth slap, my mind stopped acting like a wife and started acting like a witness.

One.

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My left cheek burst with heat.

Two.

My right ear rang so hard the thunder outside sounded far away.

Three.

The ivory silk of my gala dress twisted around my legs as I stumbled backward across the marble floor of our Wilshire penthouse.

Four.

Richard Foster looked at me as if I had inconvenienced him by bleeding.

He was not just my husband.

He was the kind of man society forgave before he even apologized.

He had the right last name, the right suits, and the right smile for hospital galas where everyone pretended money was proof of character.

Five came after he said, “You embarrassed her.”

Her.

Eleanor Foster.

His distant cousin.

His mistress.

The woman he had spent twenty minutes whispering to on the terrace at the Sterling Children’s Hospital Gala while I stood inside with my clutch in my hand, listening to donors laugh under chandeliers and pretending not to see my marriage humiliating me in public.

“I dropped my clutch,” I whispered, tasting blood. “The wind moved my dress. I didn’t even touch her.”

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