Every morning for eight years, Audra Sable has watched her husband leave for work. Graham kisses her forehead. He picks up his leather satchel and his thermos of dark roast. He puts on his tweed jacket - always the tweed jacket - and backs the Subaru out of the driveway. He waves. She waves. He drives to the university where he teaches Comparative Literature, and she drives to her yoga studio in West Asheville, and their life together is quiet, and structured, and good.
Then a phone call from Human Resources changes everything. There is no Graham Sable at UNC Asheville. Not in Comparative Literature. Not in any department. The man Audra has slept beside, confided in, and built a life around does not exist in the place where he goes every weekday morning. Audra is a former professional dancer - a woman trained to read bodies the way a surgeon reads scans. She can spot a misaligned shoulder from across a room, a clenched jaw from behind a window, a lie hidden in the space between a breath and a word.
But she never read her own husband. She never looked, because looking felt like a betrayal of the trust she thought they shared. Now she looks. She follows Graham across Asheville - from the university library where he reads alone every morning to a brick building on the east side of town she has never seen before. She searches his car and finds a second phone. She hires a private investigator and discovers that his real name is not Sable.
She learns about three failed job applications, a legal name change, and monthly deposits from a family trust he never mentioned. And then she discovers the truth - a truth far more complicated than an affair, far more unsettling than a crime, and far more devastating than anything she imagined. Because the secret Graham has been hiding is not something terrible. It is something extraordinary. And he buried it so deep that the only way to find it was to dismantle the entire life he built around it.
Told in alternating perspectives - Audra's razor-sharp first person and Graham's revealing third person - The Life He Built for Me is a psychological thriller about the lies we construct out of shame, the people who get trapped inside them, and the unbearable cost of being loved for someone you invented.
Every morning for eight years, Audra Sable has watched her husband leave for work. Graham kisses her forehead. He picks up his leather satchel and his thermos of dark roast. He puts on his tweed jacket - always the tweed jacket - and backs the Subaru out of the driveway. He waves. She waves. He drives to the university where he teaches Comparative Literature, and she drives to her yoga studio in West Asheville, and their life together is quiet, and structured, and good.
Then a phone call from Human Resources changes everything. There is no Graham Sable at UNC Asheville. Not in Comparative Literature. Not in any department. The man Audra has slept beside, confided in, and built a life around does not exist in the place where he goes every weekday morning. Audra is a former professional dancer - a woman trained to read bodies the way a surgeon reads scans. She can spot a misaligned shoulder from across a room, a clenched jaw from behind a window, a lie hidden in the space between a breath and a word.
But she never read her own husband. She never looked, because looking felt like a betrayal of the trust she thought they shared. Now she looks. She follows Graham across Asheville - from the university library where he reads alone every morning to a brick building on the east side of town she has never seen before. She searches his car and finds a second phone. She hires a private investigator and discovers that his real name is not Sable.
She learns about three failed job applications, a legal name change, and monthly deposits from a family trust he never mentioned. And then she discovers the truth - a truth far more complicated than an affair, far more unsettling than a crime, and far more devastating than anything she imagined. Because the secret Graham has been hiding is not something terrible. It is something extraordinary. And he buried it so deep that the only way to find it was to dismantle the entire life he built around it.
Told in alternating perspectives - Audra's razor-sharp first person and Graham's revealing third person - The Life He Built for Me is a psychological thriller about the lies we construct out of shame, the people who get trapped inside them, and the unbearable cost of being loved for someone you invented.