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Twenty Encounters Her Husband Counted Wrong Novel Cover

Twenty Encounters Her Husband Counted Wrong

Seo-yun’s three-year marriage shatters when she uncovers Tae-ju’s dark secret. Her husband hasn't been a devoted partner; he has been a silent observer, documenting her every move with chilling precision. This psychological romance delves into the suffocating reality of a life under constant surveillance. As Tae-ju’s rigid control starts to slip, Seo-yun is forced into a high-stakes game where the boundary between love and obsession is erased.
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Chapter 1

The Thursday morning sun was thin and watery, barely doing its job of lighting the master bedroom. Ella

Whitmore stood beside Kai Donovan’s open backpack, her movements methodical, detached. It was time for its quarterly deep clean. She pulled out crumpled client notes, a protein bar wrapper, a lone pen. Then, from the inner flap of the main compartment, her fingers brushed against something stiff, folded small.

A receipt.

She unfolded it once. Twice. Three times. Four.

It was from a convenience store chain she knew, one Kai never went to. It was dated last Wednesday. The timestamp read 8:40 PM. The items were mundane: a bottle of water, a pack of gum, a single protein bar— the same brand currently in his bag.

The Wednesday he said the team meeting ran late. The Wednesday he came home at ten, smelling of office air and stale coffee. The two hours unaccounted for.

She held the paper flat against her palm, the creases sharp like little cuts. She didn’t move. The hum of the house—the distant chirp of Liam’s video game from his room, the low groan of the refrigerator downstairs— seemed to fade into a high, silent frequency. She walked out of the bedroom, the receipt in her hand.

In the kitchen, she placed the square of paper on the island counter. It sat beside Liam’s half-empty bowl of cereal, a stark white contrast to the bright colors of the cartoon characters on the box. Ella stood there, one hand resting lightly on the subtle curve of her twelve-week pregnant belly. She just stared. The numbers, the time, the store location a few blocks from his office. From her office.

She didn’t hear Kai come down the stairs. She only sensed the shift in the air, the weight of another person entering the space. She turned slowly. He was dressed for work, crisp and sharp, his tie still loose around his neck. His eyes went from her face to the counter, to the receipt. She watched his face. He saw it. He recognized it. There was a fraction of a second—less than a heartbeat—where his expression froze, a blank slate of oh.

Then the slate was wiped clean, replaced by a smooth, practiced look of casual recollection.

“Oh, that,” Kai said, reaching for his coffee mug. “That’s not mine. Marisol asked me to pick up a few things for her after the meeting last week. She was stuck on a call.”

Marisol Vega.

He said the name. Three syllables. Ma-ri-sol. They came out clean, effortless, without a single hitch in his breath or a pause to think. It was a name pulled from a ready rack, not a memory searched for.

Ella’s eyes stayed on him. She watched the way his hand wrapped around the mug, the way he took a sip, his gaze meeting hers over the rim. Confident. Unbothered.

“Right,” Ella said. Her voice was flat, a calm pond surface. “Of course.”

She didn’t ask why Marisol would need a single protein bar from a store Kai never frequented. She didn’t ask why he kept the receipt, folded so meticulously small, hidden in a flap. She didn’t ask about the two hours.

She picked up the receipt, her fingers carefully aligning the edges. She folded it. Once. Twice. Three times.

Four. Back into its original, compact square.

She walked to his backpack, which she’d brought down, and slid the paper back into the inner flap, exactly where she’d found it. She zipped the compartment shut.

“You’re all set,” she said, turning back to him.

Kai finished his coffee, set the mug down. He came around the island, heading for the front door. Ella followed. At the threshold, he paused to put on his jacket. She stepped closer. Her hands went to the collar of his shirt, then to the knot of his tie. She smoothed the fabric, her fingertips brushing against his neck. She tightened the knot, just a little. Her movements were gentle, wife-like. Perfect.

“Thanks,” he said, smiling down at her. A warm, familiar smile. It felt like a photograph from a year ago.

“Have a good day,” Ella replied.

He kissed her forehead, a dry, brief press of lips. Then he was out, the door closing behind him with a soft click.

Ella stood in the empty foyer. She counted in her head.

One.

Two.

Three.

On three, she let out a breath she hadn’t realized she was holding. The silence of the house rushed in, louder now. In that silence, other moments flashed, unbidden.

The citrusy perfume on his sweater six months ago, when he claimed it was from a client’s wife at a charity event.

The text notification on his phone that he’d swiped away too fast, saying it was a spam message he’d already deleted.

The new password lock on his phone two months back, explained as a company security policy.

Every time, she’d asked. Every time, the answer had been wrapped in concern, in gentle chiding. “You’re just tired, Ella.” “The pregnancy hormones are making you hyper-vigilant.” “It’s okay, I promise. You’re just sensitive right now.”

Sensitive. The word had become a blanket, smothering her doubts.

But this time… he said her name too smoothly.

Ella walked back to the island. She picked up her phone. She opened the camera. She went back to the backpack, unzipped the flap, and retrieved the receipt again. She laid it flat on the counter. She took a photo of the front, the details crisp. Then she flipped it, photographing the blank back, the fold lines visible.

She opened her photo gallery. She created a new album. She named it “Misc”. She saved the two images there.

She hadn’t decided what she would do with this. Or with the other things—the memories, the suspicions— she’d quietly tucked away in her mind over the past half year. But one decision was crystal clear, solidifying inside her like cooled steel.

From today, she would not ask Kai Donovan any question he could already answer.

She slid the receipt back into his bag, zipped it, and set it by the front door for the cleaner to pick up later.

Then she went to the sink and began washing Liam’s cereal bowl, the water hot on her hands.

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