
After My Husband Chose His Mistress, Our Son Died
After My Husband Chose His Mistress, Our Son Died Chapter 1
I traced the ritual mark on my left ring finger, watching as the once-vibrant crimson had faded to a pale pink outline. Seven years ago, this mark had burned into my skin like molten fire as I bound my spiritual energy to Alexander Sterling. Now it was barely visible, like a scar determined to heal despite my reluctance to let it go.
The late afternoon sun streamed through the floor-to-ceiling windows of my penthouse study, bathing the room in golden light that did nothing to warm the chill that had settled in my bones. I'd chosen this room specifically for its view of Central Park—a small piece of nature amid Manhattan's concrete jungle, a reminder of the elements I'd once channeled freely before sacrificing my practice.
A movement below caught my eye. Two figures strolled along the winding path, their body language unmistakable even from this height. Alexander's tall frame bent slightly toward the woman beside him, his hand occasionally brushing against hers in a gesture that appeared accidental but was anything but. Isabella Rossi tossed her head back in laughter at something he said, her long dark hair catching the sunlight.
I pressed my palm against the cool glass, feeling the vibration of the city below. Seven years of protection. Seven years of sacrifice. Seven years of watching my husband fall in love with another woman while I faded into the background of his life, useful only for the spiritual shield I maintained around him.
"Give him seven years of your protection, then return to your calling."
My mentor's words echoed in my mind as clearly as the day she'd spoken them. I'd been young then, perhaps naive, believing that by saving the Sterling family from financial ruin, I might find purpose. I never expected to find love with Alexander, but I hadn't anticipated such complete indifference either.
Nor had I expected Timothy.
My beautiful boy, the unexpected miracle of our loveless union. At four years old, he was all curious eyes and endless questions, the only pure thing to emerge from this arrangement. For him alone, I would endure anything.
I closed my eyes, centering myself as I'd been taught. The ritual mark tingled slightly, a reminder that our contract was nearly complete. Soon, I could return to my mentor in the Catskills, resume my healing practice, and take Timothy with me to a life filled with peace instead of this gilded cage.
By the time dinner was served in our cavernous dining room that evening, Alexander had returned from his walk. He sat at the head of the table, scrolling through emails on his phone, barely acknowledging my presence as I took my seat. Timothy was already tucked into bed after I'd read him three stories—his standard negotiation.
"Isabella will be joining us," Alexander announced without looking up.
I nodded, having expected as much. These dinners had become a regular occurrence, each one a carefully orchestrated humiliation. I smoothed my napkin across my lap, preparing myself for another evening of being treated as an inconvenient ghost in my own home.
When Isabella swept into the room minutes later, she brought with her a cloud of expensive perfume and practiced charm. She kissed Alexander's cheek before taking the seat to his right—my place, once upon a time.
"Victoria," she acknowledged with a smile that never reached her eyes.
"Isabella," I returned evenly.
Dinner proceeded with the usual forced pleasantries until Isabella set down her wine glass with deliberate care. Something in her expression made my spiritual senses—dormant but never completely suppressed—prickle with warning.
"I have something to share," she announced, her gaze fixed on Alexander. "I've been seeing specialists in Europe. They've finally diagnosed my condition."
Alexander's attention snapped fully to her, concern etching lines around his eyes that I hadn't seen directed at me in years. "What condition? What's wrong?"
"It's a rare autoimmune disorder," Isabella explained, her voice trembling perfectly. "It affects my blood. The doctors say I need regular transfusions from someone with the same rare blood type to stabilize my condition."
"We'll find donors," Alexander said immediately. "Whatever you need."
Isabella's eyes glistened with tears. "That's just it. The blood type is extremely rare. The doctors say finding compatible donors will be nearly impossible."
I watched this performance with growing unease, sensing the calculated nature of each word, each gesture.
"What blood type?" Alexander asked.
Isabella named a rare combination. Alexander's expression changed, and I felt a chill run down my spine before he even spoke.
"That's Timothy's blood type," he said, his eyes lighting up as if he'd found the solution to a simple business problem rather than suggesting our son as a human blood bank. "He could help you."
The room seemed to tilt around me as Isabella's gaze met mine across the table, a flash of triumph in her eyes that Alexander completely missed.
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