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After My Man Matched Answers with His Mistress Novel Cover

After My Man Matched Answers with His Mistress

Lin Ran’s world collapses on her wedding anniversary when she uncovers He Ming’s infidelity. Her husband hasn't just cheated; he has meticulously synced his stories with his mistress to keep Lin Ran in the dark. This calculated betrayal forces her to dismantle the facade of her perfect marriage. As she investigates the depth of his double life, she becomes trapped in a web of secrets and a cold conspiracy, fighting to find the truth.
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Chapter 1

I only picked up his phone to set an alarm.

It was almost midnight. Kolson was in the shower, and I could hear the water running through the wall of our apartment — the one we'd shared for three years on Capitol Hill, the one with the crooked kitchen shelf he kept promising to fix. My phone was dead on the nightstand, charger cord too short to reach the bed. His was right there, face down on the comforter.

I typed in his passcode. Same one he'd used since college — his mom's birthday. The screen opened to a text thread.

Not mine.

The name at the top said Azalea with a small red flower emoji beside it.

I should have closed it. I almost did. But the preview line caught me mid-swipe: *Can't stop thinking about last night.*

My thumb moved on its own.

The thread went back weeks. Maybe longer. I scrolled slowly, the way you walk through a house after a break-in, checking what's missing. Pet names — she called him "K," he called her "Zale." Inside jokes I didn't recognize. A voice memo I didn't play. And then a photo.

Azalea had sent it. A white ceramic bowl filled with lobster bisque, the surface a deep coral with a swirl of cream on top. Homemade. She'd written underneath: *Made this for you. Left it on your desk since you were in your meeting. Eat it while it's hot.*

His reply: *You're unreal. It was incredible.*

Three red heart emojis.

I stared at the photo until my vision blurred. Not at the bisque. At his wrist.

In the corner of the image — he must have taken a follow-up shot, the bowl half-empty, his hand holding the spoon — there was a watch on his wrist. Silver-faced, leather band, clearly expensive. I had never seen it before.

But it wasn't the watch that stopped my breathing.

It was the bisque.

Kolson doesn't eat seafood. He hasn't since he was eight years old. I knew why. I was the only person who knew why. He told me on a park bench when we were seventeen, his voice so low I had to lean in to hear it. It was the first truly private thing he ever gave me, and I held it like something breakable for twelve years. I never brought seafood into our apartment. I never ordered it in front of him. I rearranged entire restaurant plans around it without him asking, because that's what you do when someone trusts you with the worst thing that ever happened to them.

He ate it. He apparently enjoyed it.

He ate it for her.

The shower turned off. I heard the curtain slide. I sat on the edge of the bed with his phone in my hand and waited.

Kolson came out in a towel, rubbing his hair dry. He saw my face first, then the phone. His expression cycled through three things in about two seconds — surprise, calculation, and something that looked almost like annoyance.

"Why are you going through my phone?" he said.

I held it up. The screen was still on the photo. "Who is Azalea?"

"She's a coworker." He said it fast, the way you say something you've rehearsed. "Nori, come on. You can't just—"

"She made you lobster bisque."

"It was a work thing. She brought food for the whole team."

"The text says she left it on your desk. For you."

He pulled the towel off his shoulders and tossed it on the chair. "You're reading into it. She's friendly. That's how she is with everyone."

"You called her Zale."

"It's a nickname. People have nicknames."

"You ate the bisque, Kolson."

That one landed. I saw it in the way his jaw tightened, the way his eyes moved to the left — not toward me, away from me. He knew what I meant. He knew exactly what I meant, and he chose not to meet it.

"You're being paranoid," he said quietly. "This is what you do. You take something small and you spiral. I'm not doing this at midnight."

"The watch." My voice was steady. I didn't recognize it. "Where did the watch come from?"

"I bought it."

"When?"

"A few weeks ago. It's not a big deal."

"You didn't mention it."

"Because it's a watch, Nori. I don't report every purchase to you."

He was doing what he always did. Turning the frame. Making my reaction the subject instead of his behavior. I had watched him do it a hundred times over the years — with small things, forgettable things — and I had always let it work because the cost of pushing felt higher than the cost of swallowing.

Not tonight.

I looked at him. Really looked. Twenty-two years. Five as a couple. I knew the scar on his left knee from when he wiped out on his bike at nine. I knew he slept with one foot outside the covers. I knew the exact pitch of his laugh when something genuinely surprised him versus when he was performing for a room.

And I knew, with a clarity that felt like a window breaking, that he was never going to tell me the truth. Not because he couldn't. Because he had decided, somewhere along the way, that my feelings were a manageable inconvenience.

I set his phone on the nightstand. I pulled my key off the ring — the one he'd given me when we moved in, the one with the small dent from when I dropped it in a parking lot — and placed it on the kitchen counter.

Then I got a suitcase from the closet and started packing.

"Nori." His voice changed. "Nori, stop. You're overreacting."

I folded a sweater and placed it in the case.

"Can we just talk about this? Sit down. Please."

I zipped the suitcase and pulled it to the door.

He stepped in front of me. His eyes were wide now. "You're not serious."

"I'm going to Ellis's," I said. "Don't call me tonight."

I called my brother from the car. It was almost one in the morning. He picked up on the second ring.

"Nori?"

"I left." My hands were shaking on the steering wheel, but my voice held. "I need to get my things out tomorrow. Can you help?"

Ellis didn't ask what happened. He didn't ask if I was sure. He said, "I'll be there at seven. I'll get a truck."

He called his boss, Soren Mitchell, that same night. I didn't know that until the next morning, when I pulled up to the apartment and saw Ellis leaning against a rented pickup, and beside him, a tall man in a dark jacket I almost didn't recognize.

Soren Mitchell. My old desk-mate from high school. Quiet kid, always reading, sat to my left for an entire year of AP History. I hadn't seen him in nearly a decade. He worked with Ellis now — ran the engineering division at his company, Ellis had mentioned once or twice.

He nodded at me. "Morning." That was it. No questions, no small talk. He picked up the first box Ellis handed him and carried it to the truck.

We moved in silence, mostly. Ellis handled the bedroom. Soren took the kitchen and the books. I dismantled the life I'd built in that apartment piece by piece — the planner from my desk, the photos from the fridge, the mug I'd bought at Pike Place on our first anniversary. I left it. I didn't want it.

Kolson stood in the doorway the entire time. He didn't help. He didn't speak. He watched me carry my things past him like a man watching a house burn from the lawn.

At one point, Soren handed me a bottle of water without being asked. I took it. Our fingers didn't touch.

I didn't look back when we pulled away.

My mother called that afternoon. I was sitting on the floor of Ellis's guest room, surrounded by boxes, when her name lit up my screen.

"Nori, I heard." Martha's voice was brisk, efficient, the same tone she used to schedule dentist appointments. "Kolson called Helen, and Helen called me. What are you doing?"

"I ended it, Mom."

"Over some texts? Men are like that, Nori. You learn to live with it. You don't throw away a perfectly good man because he got a little attention from some girl at work."

I pressed my thumbnail into my palm. "It wasn't just texts."

"It's never just anything with you. You've always been dramatic about these things. Kolson is a good man. He comes from a good family. You've known him your whole life."

"That's not a reason to stay."

"It's the best reason there is."

I closed my eyes. The silence stretched. I could hear Ellis in the hallway, his footsteps stopping.

"Okay, Mom," I said. And hung up.

Ellis appeared in the doorway. His face was tight. "I heard that."

"It's fine."

"It's not fine." He pulled out his phone and called her back. I heard his voice from the kitchen, low and firm in a way I'd never heard him use with her. "You don't get to tell her that. You don't get to make this about what's convenient for you. She's your daughter, Mom. Act like it."

I sat on the floor and pressed my hands against my knees until they stopped shaking.

Two days later, I moved into my own place. A one-bedroom in Ballard, clean and spare, with a window that faced west. Ellis had found it through a friend. The rent was reasonable. The walls were white.

I unpacked slowly. Planner on the desk. Keys on the hook by the door. Towels in the bathroom. I made the bed with new sheets — not the ones from the apartment, not anything that smelled like before.

The next morning, a bouquet arrived. White roses, expensive. The card read: *I know you're hurting. I want to understand. Can we please talk? — K*

I read the first line. I didn't read the rest.

I set the flowers in the hallway outside my door and closed it. Then I sat at my desk, opened my planner, and wrote down everything I needed to do that week.

The list was long. That was good. I needed it to be long.

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