He Chose An Heiress For An Heir, Then Found My Son In Hospital-heuh

My husband did not leave me in the middle of an argument.

He left me at a dining table polished so brightly I could see the chandelier reflected between the plates.

That was the Calloway way.

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Nothing ugly was ever allowed to look ugly.

It had to arrive in cream envelopes, over expensive beef, with a view of Manhattan glittering behind the glass.

Diane Calloway had arranged the evening with the care of a woman preparing a trap she believed was too civilised to be called one.

The candles were low.

The snow beyond the windows was soft.

The napkins were folded into sharp white triangles, and the wine had been poured before I sat down, as though even my hands were not trusted to choose for themselves.

Nathan sat opposite me with a glass of scotch he did not drink.

He looked thinner than he had in the summer, but not in a way that made me pity him.

There was a hollowness in him that had nothing to do with work and everything to do with secrecy.

For months, he had been coming home later and later.

Some nights I heard the lift doors open after one in the morning, followed by the quiet click of his key and the careful removal of his shoes.

He always believed silence made betrayal smaller.

It did not.

It only made a wife listen harder.

The first time I smelt the perfume on his coat, I told myself I was tired.

The second time, I recognised the roses beneath the cold air and whisky.

The third time, I knew the scent had become part of him, carried home like evidence he was too arrogant to hide properly.

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