
After My Husband Chose His Mistress Over Our Baby
Chapter 3
The fluorescent lights of the Mount Sinai lobby hummed with a frequency that usually set my teeth on edge, but today, they felt like sunshine. Leo was currently trying to dismantle Dane’s watch, his chubby fingers working with a determination that made my chest swell. Dane didn't pull away; instead, he laughed—a low, rumbling sound that vibrated through the bench we shared.
"He's going to be an engineer," Dane said, kissing the top of Leo's head. "Or a safecracker."
"Let's hope for engineer," I replied, smoothing the collar of Leo’s coat. It was a simple moment. A mundane, Tuesday afternoon moment after a routine check-up. But compared to the suffocating silence of my life two years ago, this was a symphony.
We stood to leave, Dane hoisting Leo onto his hip with an ease that still made my knees weak. I reached for Dane’s free hand, interlacing our fingers. We were a fortress. A unit.
Then, the air changed.
The temperature didn't drop, but a chill skittered down my spine, primal and warning. The scent hit me first—cloying gardenias and expensive, musky cologne. It was a smell that belonged to cold penthouses and lonely nights.
I froze. Dane felt the tension in my grip instantly, his thumb brushing my knuckles. "Grace?"
I turned toward the revolving doors.
They looked like they had just stepped out of a magazine spread. Spencer wore a bespoke Italian suit that hugged his shoulders, his skin bronzed from two years of Mediterranean sun. Tiffany hung on his arm, looking bored, tapping away on her phone. They were ghosts, polished and terrifying, manifesting in the middle of a busy hospital lobby.
Spencer looked up, scanning the room with the imperious air of a man who owned the building. His gaze swept over the reception desk, the waiting patients, and then locked onto me.
For a second, his expression was blank. Then, recognition dawned, followed immediately by a frown of confusion. He unhooked his arm from Tiffany’s and strode toward us, ignoring the flow of foot traffic.
"Gracelyn?" His voice was the same—smooth, arrogant, expecting the world to tilt on its axis to greet him. "I went to the penthouse. The doorman said you moved out years ago. I expected you to be waiting."
The audacity stole the breath from my lungs. He spoke as if he had just run out for milk, not abandoned me to die and disappeared for two years.
"What are you doing here, Spencer?" My voice was steadier than I felt, though my heart hammered against my ribs like a trapped bird.
He stopped three feet away, his eyes narrowing. He didn't look at Dane. To Spencer, Dane was furniture. His focus shifted from my face to the toddler on Dane's hip. Leo stared back, blinking his wide, curious eyes.
Spencer did the math. I saw the gears turning behind his eyes—the timeline, the two years, the age of the boy.
"Who is that?" Spencer demanded, stepping closer. The charm evaporated, replaced by the ugly entitlement I knew too well.
"This is my family," I said, stepping slightly in front of Dane, though Dane didn't retreat an inch.
Spencer let out a sharp, incredulous laugh. "Family? You have a child?" He reached out, his hand darting toward my arm. "Is he mine? Gracelyn, look at me. Is that my son?"
I flinched as his fingers closed around my bicep—a phantom pain from a thousand past bruises flaring up. "Don't touch me."
"I have a right to know!" Spencer’s voice rose, drawing stares from a passing nurse. "You were pregnant when I left. If you kept it—"
"You left," I hissed, ripping my arm from his grasp. "You left me on the floor. You don't get to ask questions."
"I'm back now," Spencer countered, his face darkening. "And I'm not leaving without answers."
He moved to grab me again, more aggressively this time.
Suddenly, a wall of muscle shifted. Dane handed Leo to me in one fluid motion and stepped between us. He didn't shove Spencer; he just occupied the space with a menacing, protective density. Dane was taller, broader, and fueled by a quiet rage that made Spencer’s boardroom arrogance look like a child’s tantrum.
"She asked you not to touch her," Dane said. His voice was terrifyingly calm. "Take a step back. Now."
Spencer looked up at Dane, finally acknowledging his existence. He sneered. "The neighbor boy. I should have known you'd come sniffing around the scraps."
Dane didn't blink. He didn't take the bait. He just leaned in, his voice dropping to a gravelly whisper that only the three of us could hear. " touching my wife again will be the last mistake you make with that hand. Walk away."
*Wife.* The word hung in the air, a shield and a sword.
Spencer’s eyes flicked to the simple gold band on my finger. His tan seemed to pale. He looked at Tiffany, who was watching the scene with mild interest, then back at Leo, and finally at me. The realization that I hadn't paused my life for him—that I had replaced him—fractured his composure.
"This isn't over," Spencer spat, adjusting his suit jacket, trying to reclaim some shred of dignity. "If that boy is a Burke, I will take what is mine. You know I win, Gracelyn. I always win."
He turned on his heel, grabbing Tiffany’s elbow roughly and steering her toward the elevators. I watched them go, my knees finally beginning to tremble. Dane turned immediately, wrapping his arms around both me and Leo, pulling us into the safety of his chest.
"He's gone," Dane murmured into my hair, his heart beating hard against my cheek. "I've got you."
But as I buried my face in Dane’s coat, I knew Spencer was right about one thing. It wasn't over. It was just beginning.
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