Her Husband Ignored Her Coffee, Then She Found The Bracelet He Bought-hihehu

Victoria Chen knew the coffee had gone cold before she touched the cup.

It sat on the granite counter beside the sink, dark roast with oat milk and no sugar, exactly the way Daniel had liked it for nine years.

The kitchen smelled like lemon polish, lilies, and the kind of expensive coffee people bought when they wanted mornings to feel intentional.

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Outside the tall windows of their Pacific Heights house, fog pressed against the glass and softened the city until everything looked gentler than it was.

Victoria stood barefoot on the cold wood floor and watched condensation slide down the window in a thin, crooked line.

Behind her, Daniel moved through the foyer with the brisk confidence of a man already somewhere else.

“I’m heading out early,” he called.

She turned from the window and saw him in front of the hallway mirror, straightening his tie with the kind of care he no longer gave to anything private.

Daniel Reed was thirty-eight, handsome in the easy, polished way that made strangers trust him too quickly.

His navy suit fit perfectly, his watch caught the morning light, and the Italian leather briefcase in his hand looked like it had always belonged there.

Victoria had given him that briefcase on their fifth anniversary after saving for months because he had once admired it in a shop window and said it was too indulgent.

That night, he had kissed her hair and told her nobody knew him the way she did.

Now he picked it up without memory.

“Your coffee’s ready,” Victoria said.

Daniel did not look toward the counter.

“No time,” he said. “Meeting with the Riverside Center clients at seven.”

His voice was not angry.

It was worse than angry.

It was absent.

“Don’t wait up tonight,” he added. “The presentation will probably run late.”

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