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After His Mistress Killed My Mother, I Destroyed Him Novel Cover

After His Mistress Killed My Mother, I Destroyed Him

I slipped into the penthouse just before dawn, my footsteps silent against the marble floor. The city lights twinkled through the floor-to-ceiling windows, casting long shadows across our home—his home, really. I'd never belonged here. The bedroom door creaked as I pushed it open, revealing the aftermath of another night. Another woman. The scent hit me first—Chanel No. 5, Victoria's signature perfume. My stomach clenched as I moved toward the rumpled bed. There they were. Bright red lipstick stains smeared across his pillow.
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Chapter 2

The first snowflake hit my cheek like a cold kiss of death. Within minutes, the gentle flutter transformed into a raging blizzard, turning Manhattan into a white wasteland. I stood at the window of our penthouse, watching the city disappear beneath nature's fury when my phone rang.

"Mrs. Stone?" The voice on the other end was clinical, detached. "This is Nurse Patel from Memorial. Your mother's condition has deteriorated significantly. The doctor needs authorization for an emergency procedure."

My heart stopped. "What happened?"

"Her oxygen levels are critically low. We need Mr. Stone's insurance approval immediately."

I fumbled for my coat, hands trembling. "I'll find him. Please, do whatever you can until then."

"We can only provide basic stabilization without approval," she replied, her voice fading as I rushed toward the elevator.

Outside, the storm had transformed Fifth Avenue into an arctic nightmare. Taxis crawled by, their yellow blurs barely visible through the swirling white. I waved frantically, my thin coat already soaked through.

"Please," I begged as one finally stopped. "I need to get to Le Bernardin."

The driver shook his head. "Lady, we're barely moving. Streets are becoming impassable."

I shoved all the cash from my wallet through the partition. "Please. My mother is dying."

Something in my voice must have reached him. He nodded grimly, and we inched forward into the white abyss.

Thirty agonizing minutes later, we'd moved just ten blocks. My phone buzzed—the hospital again. I answered with numb fingers.

"Mrs. Stone, we need that authorization now."

"I'm trying," I whispered, watching the snow pile higher around us. The taxi wasn't going to make it.

I thrust open the door, ignoring the driver's protests, and plunged into the storm. The wind cut through my clothes like knives, but I pushed forward, one step at a time. My mother's face floated before me—her gentle smile, her eyes that had grown increasingly haunted as she realized the price I was paying for her care.

By the time I reached Le Bernardin, I couldn't feel my hands or feet. Through the frosted windows, I could see the restaurant was nearly empty—only a few patrons had braved the storm for their gourmet meals. And there, in the center of the room, sat Alexander and Victoria, bathed in candlelight, sharing a bottle of wine.

I stumbled through the door, snow cascading from my hair and clothes onto the polished floor. The maître d' moved to intercept me, but I pushed past him.

"Alexander," I gasped, reaching their table. "The hospital called. My mother—"

He looked up slowly, his expression unchanged, as though I were merely interrupting with a minor inconvenience. Victoria's lips curled into a small smile.

"Can't this wait?" he asked, swirling the red wine in his glass.

"No," I said, my voice breaking. "She needs an emergency procedure. They need your authorization now."

Alexander set down his glass with deliberate care. "And you thought bursting in here, dripping all over the floor, was the appropriate response?"

"Please," I whispered, aware of the other diners watching. "She could die."

Something flickered in his eyes—not compassion, but calculation. He leaned back in his chair.

"If it's truly that important to you," he said slowly, "prove it."

"What?"

"Stand outside. Until dawn. If you're still there when the sun rises, I'll make the call."

Victoria's eyes widened with delight at his cruelty. I stared at him, unable to comprehend the monster before me.

"It's fifteen degrees out there," I said. "The blizzard—"

"Is a minor inconvenience if your mother's life truly matters to you." He picked up his fork, returning to his meal. "Your choice, Rachel."

I backed away, tears freezing on my cheeks. Through the window, I could see the snow piling higher, the wind bending trees along the sidewalk. My mother's face flashed in my mind again.

I stepped outside and took my position on the sidewalk, directly in view of their table. The cold hit me like a physical blow, stealing my breath. Through the frosted glass, I could see Alexander watching me, his left fist clenching and unclenching beneath the table.

As the hours passed, my body began to shut down. My soaked clothes froze to my skin. I couldn't feel my extremities anymore. Twice I nearly collapsed, catching myself against the building's facade. Each time I looked up, Alexander was still watching, his expression unreadable.

Victoria left sometime around midnight, casting a triumphant glance my way as she slipped into a waiting town car. Alexander remained, ordering another bottle of wine, his eyes never leaving me for long.

I lost track of time as hypothermia set in. The world narrowed to the pain, the cold, and the silhouette of the man who held my mother's life in his hands. As consciousness began to slip away, I wondered if this was how it would end—frozen to death on a Manhattan sidewalk while my husband watched.

Then, as the first pale light of dawn broke through the storm clouds, the restaurant door opened. Alexander emerged, his cashmere coat wrapped tightly around him. Without a word, he draped his second coat—a heavy wool overcoat—around my shoulders. The residual warmth from his body was the first heat I'd felt in hours.

He pulled out his phone, dialed, and spoke briefly. "This is Alexander Stone. Authorize the minimum necessary procedure for Eleanor Morgan. Nothing more." He ended the call and turned to me, his breath forming clouds in the frigid air.

"You've proven your point," he said coldly. "Don't ever interrupt my dinner again."

As he walked away, leaving me shivering in his coat, I realized something had changed inside me. The ice that had formed around my heart wasn't just from the blizzard. Something was crystallizing—a resolve as hard and sharp as the icicles hanging above us.

I didn't know then that this night would be the beginning of the end. That soon, the storm inside me would match the one that had nearly claimed my life.

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