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After His Mistress Claimed Pregnancy, I Took Control Novel Cover

After His Mistress Claimed Pregnancy, I Took Control

The morning sun spilled across the Calcutta marble of my kitchen island, casting long, sharp shadows over the pristine surface. Ten years. A decade of my life, distilled into the slow simmer of a red wine reduction and the precise chopping of fresh rosemary. Tonight was our tenth wedding anniversary, and I was playing the role I had perfected over three thousand, six hundred and fifty days: the flawless, devoted wife. My phone buzzed against the stone. An unknown number. I wiped my hands on a linen towel and tapped the screen. The image loaded instantly in high definition. It was a photograph, deliberately framed and lit by the muted glow of a hotel bedside lamp. Dorian was asleep, his jaw relaxed, his bare chest exposed above a tangle of white sheets.
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Chapter 2

The café Hope chose was the kind of place that didn't advertise — no sign above the door, no social media presence, just a narrow room with exposed brick and the smell of dark roast that had soaked into the walls over decades. She was already there when I arrived, her hands wrapped around a ceramic mug, her jaw set in the particular way that meant she had been sitting with her anger long enough for it to compress into something dense and quiet.

I slid into the seat across from her and set the notebook on the table between us.

Hope looked at it. Then at me. "How long?"

"A year of documentation. At least a year before that of not knowing what I was looking at."

She opened the cover. I watched her eyes move across the columns — dates, amounts, hotel names, the careful shorthand that had taken me months to develop. Her knuckles whitened around the mug. When she reached the section on Azariah, the section that mapped the financial transfers and the overlapping calendar entries and the slow, meticulous proof that this was not an affair but a parallel life, she stopped reading.

She set the notebook down. She cracked her knuckles, one hand and then the other, a sound like small bones breaking.

"I'm going to his office," she said.

"No."

"Katherine —"

"Hope." I kept my voice level. "If you walk into his office, he knows we know. The moment he knows, every asset becomes a negotiation. Every account gets moved. Every lawyer he has on retainer gets a phone call before you make it back to the parking garage."

She stared at me. The muscle in her jaw worked.

"He has spent ten years believing I am decorative," I said. "That is the only advantage I have, and I am not burning it so we can watch him flinch for thirty seconds." I slid the notebook back across the table. "I want him to flinch for the rest of his life."

The silence between us stretched. Then Hope exhaled through her nose, a long, controlled breath — the kind I recognized from the footage of her fights, the reset before the next round.

"Tell me the plan," she said.

I told her about Florence Berry.

---

The charity gala had been Florence's project for three years running, and this year it was quietly unraveling. The catering firm she'd contracted had lost its executive chef to a competitor two weeks out. The PR agency handling press coordination had double-booked a larger client and was now offering apologies instead of deliverables. I knew all of this because I had made it my business to know, the same way I made it my business to know everything that mattered.

I called Florence's assistant on a Tuesday morning and offered to help. Not in the vague, social way that women in our circle offered help — I came with a specific solution. I had a contact at a Michelin-recognized catering house who owed me a favor from a dinner party I had organized for Dorian's regional director two years prior. I had a former colleague from my pre-marriage career in event communications who now ran her own boutique PR firm and had a gap in her calendar.

By Thursday, Florence's gala had a new catering team and a press strategy. By Friday, Florence called me herself.

Her voice carried the particular warmth of someone who has been genuinely surprised. "Katherine. I don't know how you did that."

"I just made a few calls," I said.

"Don't be modest. I've had three people trying to solve that catering problem for two weeks." A pause. "I'd like you to come to dinner next month. The first Thursday. Do you know the one I mean?"

I did.

---

Florence's monthly dinner occupied the private dining room of a restaurant that didn't appear on any public reservation platform. Eight women, all of them married to men whose names appeared on the company's organizational chart above Dorian's. The conversation moved like a current beneath still water — gracious on the surface, purposeful underneath.

I had been there forty minutes when the tension surfaced. Two of the senior wives — I had done enough research to know their husbands were competing for the same board appointment — began a disagreement that started as a debate about the gala's seating arrangement and became something sharper and more personal with each exchange.

I didn't intervene loudly. I simply redirected. A question to one woman about her foundation work, genuine and specific enough that she couldn't dismiss it. A compliment to the other, precise enough to land as recognition rather than flattery. The current shifted. The temperature dropped. Florence, seated at the head of the table, caught my eye.

She said nothing. She didn't need to. The slight inclination of her head told me everything I needed to know.

Driving home, I kept both hands on the wheel and let myself feel the quiet satisfaction of a foundation properly laid. Not victory — it was far too early for that. But the first stone was in place, set exactly where I needed it.

Dorian was already asleep when I got home. I stood in the doorway of our bedroom for a moment, watching the slow rise and fall of his chest in the dark.

I went to my desk. I opened the notebook. I added the date, and beneath it, two words: *Florence: confirmed.*

Then I closed it, and went to check on our son.

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