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After His Ex Called My Daughter “Her Baby” Novel Cover

After His Ex Called My Daughter “Her Baby”

A widow’s world shatters when a car accident kills her husband, leaving her to raise their daughter alone. However, mourning turns to terror as her late husband's ex-girlfriend reappears, boldly claiming the child belongs to her. To safeguard her family, the mother must navigate a labyrinth of dark secrets involving her husband's hidden past. This emotional thriller follows her desperate search for the truth before she loses her daughter forever.
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Chapter 1

I noticed her hands first.

She was unpacking the dishwasher when I came downstairs that first morning — moving through our kitchen like she'd done it a hundred times. Reached for the cabinet above the coffee maker without looking. Stacked the mugs in the right order, handles facing out, the way I'd arranged them years ago. I stood in the doorway in my robe and watched her do it, and I thought: Darren must have given her a tour.

I told myself that.

Her name was Lyla. That was all Darren gave me — Lyla, referred by a colleague, available immediately, great with kids. He'd hired her without asking me, which I didn't love, but July had been going through a clingy phase and I was pulling double shifts at the bakery before the holiday rush. I let it go. I was good at letting things go back then. I thought that was the same as being reasonable.

July stared at her that first morning. Not the way kids stare at strangers — curious, a little shy. This was different. July stood at the kitchen table with her spoon halfway to her mouth and watched Lyla move around the room with an expression I couldn't name. Something old in it. Something that didn't belong on a five-year-old's face.

"July, baby, eat your oatmeal," I said.

She looked at me. Then back at Lyla. Then she ate her oatmeal.

I wrote it off as a mood. July had moods. All kids did.

I was so good at writing things off.

For three weeks I catalogued small wrongnesses and filed them nowhere. The way Lyla knew the spare key was on the hook inside the laundry room — not the obvious hook by the front door, the other one, the one I'd put there specifically because it wasn't obvious. The way Darren's shoulders went tight whenever I mentioned her name in passing. The way she never asked where anything was. Not the good scissors, not the extra towels, not the children's Tylenol in the back of the bathroom cabinet.

I noticed. I dismissed. I went to work before dawn and came home after dinner and told myself I was tired, not suspicious.

Then it was a Tuesday night in November, and I couldn't sleep.

I came downstairs for water. The kitchen light was on — just the under-cabinet strip, the one that stays on low. I turned the corner through the doorway and stopped.

Darren had her pressed against the counter. His hand was in her hair. The kiss wasn't tentative or confused. It was the kiss of someone who knew exactly what they were doing.

Neither of them heard me.

But I heard the sound behind me — a small, soft sound, like a breath caught and held. I turned.

July was standing in the hallway in her pajamas, the ones with the little moons on them. She was holding her stuffed rabbit by one ear. Her feet were bare on the hardwood. Her eyes were fixed on the kitchen, on her father, on the woman.

She had seen everything.

I crossed the hallway in three steps and picked her up. She didn't make a sound. She just pressed her face into my neck and held on, and I carried her upstairs with my heart slamming against my ribs and my face completely still, because July was watching me from two inches away and I was not going to let her see me break.

I sat with her in her room until her breathing slowed. I tucked the rabbit in beside her. I kissed her forehead and I said, "Go back to sleep, bug. Everything's okay."

I don't know if she believed me. I didn't believe me.

Darren came upstairs twenty minutes later. I was sitting on the edge of the guest bed in the dark. I heard him pause outside the door. Then he came in, and he turned on the lamp, and he looked at me with the face of a man who had already been rehearsing.

"Ember —"

"Who is she."

Not a question. He heard that.

He sat down on the chair by the window. He put his elbows on his knees. He looked at the floor for a long moment, and I watched him decide — I actually watched him decide — how much of the truth he could afford to give me.

"Her name is Lylah Morrison," he said. "She's — she was my ex-wife. July's biological mother."

The room didn't move. I didn't move. I just sat there and let the sentence land, and felt the floor shift under everything I thought I knew.

"I know how this looks," he said. "She reached out a few months ago. She said she was in a bad situation, that her husband was — that she needed help. I didn't know what else to do. She had nowhere to go. I just felt sorry for her."

I looked at him.

I thought about July's face in the hallway. I thought about the spare key. I thought about three weeks of small wrongnesses I had filed nowhere.

"You let her bathe July," I said. My voice came out very quiet. "You let her put July to bed. You let her sit at our table and eat our food and sleep in our house. And you didn't tell me who she was."

He opened his mouth.

"Don't," I said.

He closed it.

I stood up. I went to the closet and I took my pillow and I took the extra blanket from the shelf. I set them on the guest bed. Then I turned around and looked at my husband — really looked at him, maybe for the first time in months — and I saw something I hadn't let myself see before. Not a man who had made a mistake. A man who had made a series of choices, each one deliberate, each one designed to keep me from knowing what he knew.

"I'm sleeping in here," I said. "You're not to bring her into any room where July is without me present. And tomorrow morning, we're going to talk about what happens next."

He nodded. He looked relieved, like I'd offered him something.

I hadn't offered him anything.

I waited until I heard his footsteps go down the hall. Then I sat back down on the edge of the guest bed, and I opened the notes app on my phone, and I started writing. The spare key. The cabinet above the coffee maker. The way July had stared. The way Darren's shoulders went tight. Every small wrongness I had filed nowhere.

By the time I had two pages, it was almost four in the morning.

I called Nora.

She answered on the second ring. She didn't say hello. She said, "Tell me."

So I told her.

Outside the window, Seattle was dark and wet, the street lamps blurred in the rain. Inside, the house was quiet. Down the hall, July was asleep with her rabbit. In our bedroom — his bedroom now — Darren was probably lying awake, still believing he could manage this.

I sat at the kitchen table as the sky went from black to gray, and I wrote down everything I remembered, and I did not cry, and I did not stop writing.

By the time the sun came up, I had a legal consultation scheduled for Thursday and a list that was already three pages long.

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