
After My Husband Chose His Mistress Over Our Baby
After My Husband Chose His Mistress Over Our Baby Chapter 1
The rain lashed against the floor-to-ceiling windows of our Manhattan penthouse, blurring the city lights into streaks of weeping gold. I smoothed the fabric of my dress, my fingers trembling slightly. On the marble kitchen island, the Beef Wellington—Spencer’s favorite—sat cooling, a centerpiece for a celebration that felt fragile even before it began.
I touched the velvet box in my pocket. Inside lay the positive test, a plastic stick that had turned my world into something terrifying and beautiful. A baby. A chance to fix the cracks in the foundation of our marriage.
The front door clicked open. My breath hitched.
Spencer strode in, shedding his soaked trench coat without looking at me. He didn't offer a greeting, just the sharp scent of ozone and something cloyingly floral. *Her* perfume. It clung to him like a second skin, a silent declaration of where he’d been.
"You're late," I said, my voice softer than I intended. "I made dinner."
He loosened his tie, his eyes sliding over me with the disinterest one might show a piece of furniture. "I ate."
He walked past the dining table to the liquor cabinet, pouring a amber measure of scotch. The crystal clinked, a harsh sound in the quiet room.
"Spencer, please." I stepped closer, the velvet box burning a hole in my pocket. "I have news. Important news."
He took a sip, turning to face me. His handsome face was a mask of boredom. "Go on, then. Make it quick."
I pulled the box out, my hands shaking as I opened it. "I'm pregnant."
The silence stretched, heavy and suffocating. I waited for a widening of the eyes, a smile, even a flicker of shock. Instead, Spencer threw his head back and laughed. It was a cold, dry sound that scraped against my nerves.
"Pregnant?" He swirled the liquid in his glass, staring at the vortex. "Well, that’s an inconvenient complication."
My stomach dropped. "Inconvenient? This is our child."
"It’s *your* child, Gracelyn." He took a long drink, his gaze hardening. "I was going to wait until the weekend, but since you’re pressing me... I’ve realized something. I finally understand what love is. Real, visceral love."
Hope flickered, foolish and desperate, before he snuffed it out.
"It’s Tiffany," he said, saying her name like a prayer. "Not you. Never you."
***
Two days later, the Met Gala was a cacophony of camera shutters and forced laughter. Spencer had insisted we attend to "maintain appearances," yet there she was. Tiffany Kelly. She glided through the crowd in crimson silk, a stark contrast to my pale, trembling form.
Spencer held my elbow, his grip bruising, steering me through the sea of socialites. But his eyes never left Tiffany, who was laughing with a group of investors a few feet away.
"Smile," he hissed in my ear. "You look like a funeral attendee."
A waiter passed with a tray of intricate canapés. Nauseous from the stress and the pregnancy, I took one, desperate for something to settle my stomach. I bit down. The texture was wrong—gritty, thick.
*Peanuts.*
The reaction was instantaneous. Heat flooded my chest, radiating up my neck like liquid fire. My throat constricted, turning my breath into a high-pitched wheeze. I dropped my clutch, clutching at my neck.
"Spencer," I rasped, the word barely audible.
He didn't turn. He was raising his champagne flute, catching Tiffany’s eye across the room. She smirked, raising hers in return.
"Spencer... help..." My vision blurred at the edges. The room began to spin, the chandeliers smearing into blinding streaks of light. I stumbled, grabbing his arm for support.
He shook me off, annoyed. "Stop making a scene, Gracelyn. You're embarrassing yourself."
"Can't... breathe..." I collapsed to my knees, gasping like a fish on dry land. The air was thin, unreachable.
A waiter dropped his tray, the crash of breaking glass cutting through the chatter. "She's in anaphylactic shock! Call an ambulance!"
Through the tunneling darkness, I looked up. Spencer was still seated. He hadn't moved. He was watching Tiffany, a small, satisfied smile playing on his lips as I suffocated at his feet.
***
The silence of the penthouse was different when I returned the next morning. It wasn't just quiet; it was hollow. The epi-pen bruise on my thigh throbbed with every step I took into the foyer.
The art was gone. The walls where the modern abstracts had hung were now blank, staring back at me like unblinking eyes. I walked into the bedroom, my legs feeling like lead.
Spencer was there, snapping the locks on two massive Louis Vuitton trunks. The closet behind him was decimated, his side completely bare.
He looked up, unfazed by my hospital wristband or the dark circles under my eyes. "You're back. Good. Saves me leaving a note."
"Where are you going?" My voice was a croak, raw from the swelling.
"We're taking a sabbatical," he said, checking his watch. "Tiffany and I. Europe, maybe Asia. Two years. I need to find myself, Gracelyn. I need to breathe without your suffocating neediness."
He hauled the trunks toward the door. Panic, cold and sharp, pierced through my exhaustion. "You can't just leave. I'm pregnant. You almost let me die last night."
He stopped at the door, looking back with a chilling indifference. "I’ve frozen the joint accounts. You’re smart; you’ll figure it out. Consider this a lesson in independence."
"Spencer!" I screamed, the sound tearing at my raw throat.
The elevator doors dinged open. He stepped inside, the silver doors reflecting my disheveled, broken reflection. As they slid shut, he didn't even wave. He just checked his phone, already gone before he had even left the building.
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