The Brass Key on the Table Exposed My Husband’s Perfectly Legal Second Life-QuynhTranJP

Grant’s hand stayed suspended above the table, fingers slightly curled, as if the air itself had grabbed his wrist.

For one second, nobody moved.

The rain scratched the windows. The candle nearest Patricia had burned low enough to leave a black crescent inside the glass holder. Somewhere near the front hall, the intercom speaker gave a soft static hiss after Marisol’s voice disappeared.

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Then Grant lowered his hand.

Not quickly.

Carefully.

Like a man setting down a loaded weapon in front of witnesses.

“Elaine,” he said, and his voice had lost its dinner-party polish. “Do not open that door.”

I looked at the brass key between us.

The tiny teeth of it caught the chandelier light. I had carried that key for three years without knowing it opened a house where another woman had chosen curtain colors, nursery paint, and a nameplate for a mailbox.

Patricia’s pearls shifted against her throat as she swallowed.

“You are making a private misunderstanding into a legal spectacle,” she said.

I stood.

The chair legs dragged against the floor with a rough, ugly sound. It was the first ugly sound I had made all night.

Grant stepped away from the head of the table.

“Sit down.”

I walked to the front hall.

Behind me, his shoes struck the hardwood twice, then stopped. He did not want Marisol to see him chasing me. Even now, with a signed order at the gate and his bank accounts sitting under a judge’s hand, he still cared about posture.

I opened the door.

Marisol Chen stood beneath a black umbrella, her dark hair tucked into the collar of a charcoal coat. Rain beaded on her glasses. Beside her stood a county process server with a tan folder sealed inside a plastic sleeve. Behind them, two black SUVs idled in the circular drive, their headlights white against the hedges.

Marisol’s eyes moved past my shoulder.

“Good evening, Mr. Pierce.”

Grant’s breath changed behind me.

“You had no right to come to my home.”

Marisol stepped over the threshold only after I moved aside.

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