She Vanished After One Kiss, Then Returned With His Hidden Sons-thuyhien

Audrey Foster did not scream when she saw her husband kissing another woman.

That was the part Julian would remember years later, long after the office had been remodeled and the mahogany table replaced by something colder and more expensive.

She had every right to scream.

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She had every right to throw the insulated dinner bag across the room, to make Chloe Vance jump, to make the entire executive floor hear what Julian Foster had done on his fifth wedding anniversary.

Instead, Audrey stood in the doorway with warm bread cooling in her hand and Chicago shining behind him through the glass.

The office smelled like lemon polish, expensive cologne, and the faint sweetness of the black cherry tart she had ordered from the little French bistro where Julian used to take her before his face started appearing on magazine covers.

Before the assistants.

Before the late meetings.

Before their marriage became a beautiful house with no one really living inside it.

Chloe stepped back first.

Her hand slid off Julian’s chest as if the fabric had burned her.

Julian did not move.

He was still standing near the conference table, jacket unbuttoned, tie loosened, looking exactly like the kind of man who could explain quarterly losses to a room of investors without blinking and suddenly could not explain one kiss to his wife.

Audrey looked at the dinner bag.

She had chosen everything carefully.

Steak tartare.

Warm bread.

His favorite black cherry tart.

A small card tucked inside that said, To another five years, and all the ones after.

She had written it at the kitchen counter that afternoon while the dishwasher hummed and her phone stayed silent beside her.

Julian had not called.

He had sent one message at 4:12 p.m.

Late meeting. Don’t wait up.

She had waited anyway.

That was the kind of woman she had been inside their marriage.

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