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CHAPTER 34: THE POOL RULE CONT’D

last update publish date: 2026-06-08 05:47:42
BELLA'S POV

I was going to have the conversation.

I had not planned this. The conversation had not been an item on any list I'd made between the ceilings at two and three and four in the morning. But I was here and the schedule was there and he was going to come back and the kitchen was a room in which I was a legitimate person to be in, a person who had been here since eight-fifteen drinking her coffee and reading a thing that had been placed on the kitchen counter for the household to read
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  • HER MOTHER’S HUSBAND   CHAPTER 80: SATURDAY NIGHT CONT’D

    “I thought about the worry more than the pride,” he said. “The worry interested me. Your mother worries about most things efficiently — she identifies the problem and she manages it. But the worry she described about you was different. It didn’t have a solution shape.”I looked at him.“What shape did it have?” I said.He looked at the candle.“The shape of someone who has too much interior life for the container they’re in,” he said. “The worry about a person who feels too much and thinks too much and hasn’t found the right size space yet.”The room.The candle.I looked at him across the six feet of table.“And when I arrived,” I said.“When you arrived,” he said, and stopped.“Say it,” I said.He looked at the wine.“The container you were in,” he said. “You were too much for all of it. The house and the situation and the arrival. Too much in the specific way your mother had described.” He paused. “I recognized it.”“From my father’s letter,” I said.“Yes,” he said. “And from.” He

  • HER MOTHER’S HUSBAND   CHAPTER 79: SATURDAY NIGHT

    BELLA’S POVI read the messages at five o’clock.Not because I was ready. Because the not-reading had become its own problem, the specific anxiety of an unread thing sitting in your pocket growing heavier with each hour of not-looking. I went to the upstairs bathroom, the one off the corridor, the one nobody used in the afternoons, and I locked the door and I sat on the edge of the bath and I read them.Third message, sent at eleven forty-seven.Bella I’m serious. I know this is out of nowhere but I need to talk to you. Not over text. In person. It’s about something important.Fourth message, sent at two-fifteen.I know you’ve seen these. Please.I read them twice.The quality of them.I had been right in the fourteenth floor room — there was fear in them. The specific texture of a person sending messages they would not have sent if they had any other option. The please at the end of the fourth one, which was not a Daniel Carr word. He had never said please in a message in eighteen mo

  • HER MOTHER’S HUSBAND   CHAPTER 78: SATURDAY AFTERNOON CONT’D

    I looked at the desk drawer.“She said right,” I said. “On Monday. In the kitchen. She said right like she understood something.”“I know,” he said. “She mentioned it to me this morning.”I looked at him.“She talked to you about it?” I said.“She asked me if I’d noticed anything,” he said carefully. “Between you and Dominic.”The room.My heart doing the unmanaged thing.“What did you tell her?” I said.Marcus looked at the window.“I told her that you and Dominic had obvious respect for each other,” he said. “And that it was natural given the situation.” He paused. “And then I changed the subject.”I looked at him.“Thank you,” I said.“Don’t thank me,” he said. “I bought you time. I didn’t fix anything.” He looked at me. “Bella. There’s Monday with Reeves and the police and all of that. And there’s the other thing. The two things are going to land in the same week.”“I know,” I said.“Your mother is going to need support,” he said. “When the truth about your father comes out. The r

  • HER MOTHER’S HUSBAND   CHAPTER 77: SATURDAY AFTERNOON

    BELLA’S POVMy mother had made breakfast.Not Petra — her. This was the specific domestic expression of my mother’s happiness, the cooking, the occasional Saturday morning when she decided the kitchen was hers and produced something from it with the easy confidence of a woman who had cooked well her whole life and knew it.Eggs. Toast. The good coffee. The table set with the Saturday morning quality, the fuller setting, the weekend care.She turned when I came in.“There you are,” she said. The warm version, the uncomplicated version, my mother in her kitchen on a Saturday morning with the good coffee and the eggs and no knowledge of what was under my coat.“Sorry,” I said. “Early errand.”“Dominic said.” She was already plating. “Sit down. You look cold.”I sat down.I was cold. The October morning had been the October morning and the storage unit had been the storage unit and the car had been the car and I was cold in the specific way of someone whose body had been doing something s

  • HER MOTHER’S HUSBAND   CHAPTER 76: THE BOXES CONT’D

    The close range. The storage unit. No table. No house. No architecture of distance.“When I met your mother,” he said carefully, “she told me about her daughter. She talked about you the way—” He stopped. “She was proud of you in a way that was also worried. The specific combination of a parent who thinks their child is extraordinary and is frightened for them because of it.”I said nothing.“I thought about the letter,” he said. “The daughter of a man who wrote letters like that.” He looked at his hands. “I thought you must be something.”The storage unit.The grey morning.My father’s files in my hands.“And then I arrived,” I said.“And then you arrived,” he said.The specific quality of the silence that followed. Not the library silence or the dinner table silence. The silence of two people in a contained space with the full weight of a morning between them and the ground permanently shifted underneath the house they were going to have to return to.I looked at him.He looked at m

  • HER MOTHER’S HUSBAND   CHAPTER 75: THE BOXES

    BELLA’S POVThe storage unit was in Canary Wharf.My mother had chosen it with the specific practical logic she brought to all decisions made in crisis — close to the solicitor’s office, reasonable monthly rate, ground floor access so she hadn’t needed to carry the boxes up stairs in the weeks after my father died when her arms had been doing all the carrying her body could manage and her grief had been doing the rest.I had been here twice.Once to help bring the boxes in, three weeks after the funeral, the specific terrible practicality of that day. Once six months later to retrieve a document for the probate. Both times I had moved through the unit with the efficiency of someone who needed to get in and out without staying long enough to feel the full weight of what the boxes contained.This was the third time.Dominic was beside me at the roll-up door with the key code I had remembered from two years ago, the specific combination my mother had told me and I had stored without know

  • HER MOTHER’S HUSBAND   CHAPTER 11: HARRY'S RETURN

    BELLA'S POVThe call came on a Wednesday.I know it was a Wednesday because I had been marking time in the estate the way you mark time in places you didn't choose, by small domestic landmarks rather than actual days. The Wednesday was the day Petra changed the flowers in the entrance hall from wh

  • HER MOTHER’S HUSBAND   CHAPTER 10: THE DRESS

    BELLA'S POVI looked at myself in the mirror in the yellow dress.I looked like myself. The version of myself that existed before six months of grief had pulled me slightly inward. Before the old house felt like a museum and the new house felt like a foreign country with rules I hadn't been given t

  • HER MOTHER’S HUSBAND   CHAPTER 9: THESE RULES CAN'T BE FOR ME

    BELLA'S POVHe continued as though he hadn't said it."Meals at the family table. Breakfast from seven to nine, lunch at one, dinner at seven. If you have a scheduling conflict, classes, an engagement, you let the kitchen know by ten the previous evening.""My mother mentioned that rule.""Your m

  • HER MOTHER’S HUSBAND   CHAPTER 8: THE RULES

    BELLA'S POVThe summons came through a maid.That was the first thing I noticed, not a knock on my door, not his voice in the hallway, not even a text to the number I didn't yet have for him. A maid. Petra, the quiet one who moved through the kitchen like smoke, appearing in my doorway at nine-fif

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