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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 3

Florence poured the tea herself. That was the first thing I noticed — no assistant, no hovering staff, just her hands steady on the silver pot and the quiet intimacy of a woman who had decided this conversation deserved privacy.

The sitting room of her home was exactly what I had expected: understated, impeccable, the kind of space that communicated wealth through restraint rather than display. A single arrangement of white peonies on the side table. Afternoon light filtering through linen curtains. The soft tick of a mantel clock.

'You've been on my mind,' Florence said, settling back into her chair with the unhurried ease of someone who had nowhere else to be. 'Since the dinner. You handled that situation between Patricia and Diane with more grace than I've managed in three years of hosting.'

'They both needed to feel seen,' I said. 'That's usually all it takes.'

Florence studied me over the rim of her cup. 'You're good at that. Making people feel seen.' A pause, precise as a scalpel. 'Are you seen, Katherine?'

The question landed softly, but I felt its weight. I set my cup down and let a small silence open between us — not the silence of evasion, but the kind that signals something real is coming.

'I've been thinking a great deal about the future lately,' I said. 'About stability. What it actually means to build something that lasts.' I kept my eyes on the middle distance, my voice measured and unhurried. 'Dorian's career is accelerating. Which is wonderful. But acceleration creates — instability, sometimes. In the architecture of a family. I want to make sure that whatever happens professionally, whatever pressures come with that kind of advancement, our son's future is protected. Legally. Structurally.'

I looked at her then. Directly.

Florence didn't look away. She was reading me the way only a woman who had spent decades in rooms full of careful people could read someone — not just the words, but the space around them.

'A child's security should never be contingent on the volatility of ambition,' she said finally. Her voice was even, but something in it had shifted. A door, opening a precise and deliberate inch. 'I think that's a very wise thing to be thinking about.'

'I thought you might understand,' I said.

She reached forward and refilled my cup without being asked.

---

Dorian came home on a Thursday with the particular energy of a man who had been frightened and was working very hard not to show it. I recognized it immediately — the slightly over-controlled movements, the way he loosened his tie before he'd even reached the kitchen, the brightness in his voice that was calibrated two degrees too high.

'Good day?' I asked, not looking up from the cutting board.

'Productive.' He opened the refrigerator, closed it without taking anything. 'Had a conversation with Ethan this afternoon. Informal. He mentioned the Regional Manager decision is coming up faster than expected.'

'That's exciting,' I said.

'He said something about — wanting candidates with stability. A clean profile. Home life, finances, all of it.' He said it carefully, like a man testing the weight of each word before he set it down. 'He was very specific about the legal side of things. Estate planning, asset structure. Said it signals maturity to the board.'

I turned from the counter and looked at him. I let warmth move across my face — the particular warmth of a wife who has been quietly waiting for the right moment.

'Actually,' I said, 'I've been meaning to talk to you about something along those lines.'

---

I had the document prepared for two weeks. My attorney had drafted it with the precision of a surgeon — the language was clean, the framing impeccable. On its surface, it read as exactly what I told Dorian it was: an estate-planning instrument, a postnuptial agreement designed to formalize the protection of our family's assets in a trust structured around our son's future.

I presented it over dinner. Candles, his favorite wine, the deliberate warmth of a wife renewing her investment in their marriage.

'It's a gesture,' I said, sliding the folder across the table. 'Ten years. I want us to build the next ten on something solid. Something that shows the board, shows everyone, that we're not just partners in life — we're partners in everything.'

Dorian picked up the document. I watched his eyes move across the first page, then the second. I had made sure the language was dense enough to require a lawyer to fully parse, and I had made sure he believed there was no time for that — Ethan's comment had done its work beautifully.

His pen hovered.

'This is — this is a good idea,' he said, and I could hear the relief underneath it, the sound of a man who believed he was solving a problem.

He signed.

I took the folder back, aligned its edges precisely with the corner of the table, and reached for my wine glass.

'To the next ten years,' I said.

Dorian smiled at me across the candlelight, warm and entirely unguarded.

The second stone was in place.

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