Part 2: Or had she replaced him so quickly that the house still smelled of their marriage while another man’s baby slept under its roof?
Part 2: Or had she replaced him so quickly that the house still smelled of their marriage while another man’s baby slept under its roof?
Ethan called her.
The phone rang six times and went to voicemail.
He called again.
Voicemail.
By the third call, he was already pulling on a black sweater, pants, and shoes without socks. He grabbed his keys, his coat, and the phone that now felt like evidence of a crime committed against him.
In the private elevator, the man reflected in the brushed steel doors looked nothing like the carefully photographed billionaire the world knew. Ethan Wilder, founder of Wilder Systems, owner of half the security infrastructure used by hotels, hospitals, and airports across the country, had built a public identity on calm. He could lose a hundred million dollars before breakfast and make investors thank him for the lesson.
But tonight his eyes were wild.
Tonight he was not going to a boardroom.
He was going back to the only place he had ever failed so completely that money could not rename the failure.
The drive from downtown Seattle to Mercer Island should have taken twenty minutes. Ethan made it in twelve. Rain hammered the windshield. His tires cut through standing water as he crossed the bridge, and the city lights smeared behind him like the whole world was trying to blur.
By the time he reached the old house, his anger had sharpened into accusation.

The house stood at the end of a quiet lane, white siding gleaming under the storm, cedar trees bending around it. Claire had chosen it before Ethan became truly rich. Back then, he was successful but not untouchable, ambitious but still capable of coming home before midnight. Claire had walked through the empty rooms with her shoes in one hand, smiling at the lake view as if it were a promise.
“We could be ordinary here,” she had said.
He had kissed her in the doorway and told her ordinary was the one thing he would never be.
He had thought that was romantic.
Now he realized it had been a warning.
The front gate opened to his old access code. The driveway lights came on as he pulled in. He noticed a navy sedan parked near the garage, unfamiliar. A baby seat box sat flattened beside the recycling bin.
His hands tightened on the steering wheel.
He got out without an umbrella.
By the time he reached the front door, his hair was wet, his coat soaked, and the key fob in his hand felt like a weapon.
The lock accepted him.
The door opened.
Warm air touched his face, carrying the smell of lavender detergent, baby powder, and something faintly medicinal.
Not another man’s cologne.
Not wine.
Not betrayal.
Still, Ethan stepped inside like a prosecutor entering court.
“Claire.”
His voice carried through the house.
At the top of the stairs, a light flicked on.
Claire appeared in the hallway, one hand gripping the railing. Her face went pale when she saw him.
“You can’t be here,” she said.
The steadiness of her voice only made him angrier.
“I can’t be here?”
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