

Chapter 1 of When My Husband Killed My Pet for His Lover
The silence in the penthouse was wrong. It wasn’t the peaceful hush of a well-staffed Manhattan home; it was a vacuum, heavy and suffocating.
My heels clicked sharply against the marble foyer, the sound echoing too loudly as I dropped my valise. Three days in Tokyo negotiating with tech giants, and all I wanted was the humid, earthy scent of the solarium. I needed to see Atlas. For twenty-six years, that three-hundred-year-old tortoise had been my anchor, a living, breathing connection to the Kennedy legacy that predated even the city skyline visible through the floor-to-ceiling windows.
I walked straight past the living room toward the glass-walled enclosure on the terrace level.
Empty.
The heat lamps were off. The custom-blended soil had been scoured away, replaced by pristine, lifeless white tiles. The air smelled of bleach and lemon polish, stinging my nose.
"Maria?" I called out. My voice trembled slightly. "Where is he?"
Maria, our housekeeper of five years, stepped out from the kitchen. She wouldn’t look at me. Her hands were wringing a dish towel so tight her knuckles were white. She opened her mouth, but a smooth, baritone drawl cut her off from the hallway behind me.
"You’re back early, Iris."
I spun around. Lorenzo stood there, leaning against the archway in a silk robe, swirling amber liquid in a crystal tumbler. He looked bored. Irritated, even.
"Where is Atlas?" I demanded, stepping toward him. "Why is the solarium scrubbed clean?"
Lorenzo took a slow sip of his scotch, his eyes flicking over me with a detached coolness. "I took care of it. The smell was getting unbearable. It was permeating the upholstery."
"The smell?" I felt a cold knot tighten in my stomach. "Atlas doesn't smell. The ventilation system alone cost fifty thousand dollars. Where did you move him, Lorenzo? The vet? The sanctuary in Jersey?"
He sighed, pushing off the wall and walking past me toward the living room. "Stop being dramatic. I didn't send him away. I made him… better. More suitable for the space."
I followed him, my heart hammering a frantic rhythm against my ribs. In the center of the sunken living room, on the coffee table, sat a large object draped in a heavy velvet cloth.
"Bonnie was over the other day," Lorenzo said casually, setting his drink down. "She mentioned how the apartment felt cluttered. She has such a keen eye for aesthetics. She suggested we turn the eyesore into something actually valuable."
He gripped the velvet fabric.
"Lorenzo, don't," I whispered, the blood draining from my face.
He whipped the cloth away.
I didn't scream. I couldn't. The air left my lungs in a painful rush, leaving me gasping.
It was Atlas. Or rather, it was the shell of him.
The majestic, ancient carapace that had survived three centuries of history had been hollowed out, varnished to a high, unnatural gloss, and mounted on a brass stand. Crueler still, gold filigree had been inlaid into the natural grooves of his scutes, turning a living creature into a gaudy, grotesque trinket.
"Gorgeous, isn't it?" Lorenzo admired the shell, running a finger along the gold inlay. "Taxidermy is making a comeback. Bonnie’s birthday is next week. I thought she’d appreciate the irony. A 'unique' gift, she called it."
Nausea rolled over me, hot and violent. I stumbled forward, my hand hovering over the cold, varnished shell. This wasn't just a pet. This was family. My grandfather had read to me while sitting next to this tortoise. I had cried into his rough neck when my parents died.
"You killed him," I choked out. The words felt like broken glass in my throat. "You murdered a three-hundred-year-old living being because your mistress thought he smelled?"
Lorenzo’s face hardened. He slammed his glass down on the side table. "Watch your mouth, Iris. Bonnie is a family friend. She’s my oldest friend. And frankly, I’m sick of you prioritizing a reptile over my happiness. Over the comfort of our guests."
"He was a Kennedy heirloom!" I screamed, the sound tearing from my chest.
"He was a turtle!" Lorenzo shouted back, stepping into my personal space, looming over me. "And now he’s art. Get over it. You’re hysterical, and it’s unattractive."
He turned his back on me to adjust the angle of the shell, dismissing my grief as easily as he had dismissed Atlas’s life.
Something inside me snapped. It wasn't a loud break; it was quiet, precise, and final. The love I had held for this man—the gratitude, the loyalty—evaporated, replaced by a clarity so sharp it cut.
I reached out, grabbed his half-empty glass of scotch, and hurled it against the wall.
The crash was satisfying. Shards of crystal rained down onto the hardwood. The amber liquid stained the pristine cream wallpaper.
Lorenzo flinched, spinning around, eyes wide with shock. "Are you insane?"
My voice dropped, losing its tremor. It became ice. "Get out."
"Excuse me?"
"Get out of my sight, Lorenzo. Go to the guest wing. Go to a hotel. Go to hell for all I care. But if you are standing in front of me in ten seconds, security will remove you."
He stared at me, searching for the pliable, adoring wife he had married. He didn't find her. He sneered, straightening his robe. "Fine. I'll go to Bonnie’s. At least she appreciates effort."
He stormed out, the front door slamming with a finality that echoed through the penthouse.
I stood alone in the silence, staring at the golden scars on Atlas’s shell. My hand went to the small silver turtle pendant at my throat. I didn't cry. The time for tears was over.
I pulled my phone from my pocket and dialed a number I had saved for emergencies.
"Victoria," I said the moment the line connected. My reflection in the window showed a woman I barely recognized—pale, terrifyingly calm.
"Iris? It’s late. Is everything okay?"
"No," I said, staring at the desecrated legacy on my table. "Initiate the scorched earth protocol. I want Edwards Corporation gutted. Tonight."
Read the Full Novel on

















