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After My Husband Got His Assistant Pregnant, I Burned Him Novel Cover

After My Husband Got His Assistant Pregnant, I Burned Him

The water must be exactly two hundred and five degrees. Any hotter, and it burns the beans; any colder, and the extraction is weak. This is the one truth that has remained constant in my life, from the freezing Brooklyn street corners where I used to sling lattes from a rusted cart, to the sixty-story glass cage of our Manhattan penthouse. I pour the water in a slow, precise spiral over the fresh grounds. The dark, earthy bloom fills the sterile, silent kitchen. Outside the floor-to-ceiling windows, the city is just beginning to bleed gold with the dawn. Today is the day. Callen’s tech startup—our entire life’s work—is going public. He has already been at the New York Stock Exchange for hours, prepping to ring the opening bell. I wipe my hands on a linen towel, my thumb tracing the faint, stubborn callouses at the base of my fingers.
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Chapter 1

The water must be exactly two hundred and five degrees. Any hotter, and it burns the beans; any colder, and the extraction is weak. This is the one truth that has remained constant in my life, from the freezing Brooklyn street corners where I used to sling lattes from a rusted cart, to the sixty-story glass cage of our Manhattan penthouse.

I pour the water in a slow, precise spiral over the fresh grounds. The dark, earthy bloom fills the sterile, silent kitchen. Outside the floor-to-ceiling windows, the city is just beginning to bleed gold with the dawn. Today is the day. Callen’s tech startup—our entire life’s work—is going public. He has already been at the New York Stock Exchange for hours, prepping to ring the opening bell.

I wipe my hands on a linen towel, my thumb tracing the faint, stubborn callouses at the base of my fingers. Souvenirs from the years I spent hauling industrial espresso machines to pay his business school tuition.

Reaching across the cold expanse of the Calacatta marble island, I tap the screen of Callen’s iPad. I only want to double-check the itinerary for the IPO gala tonight. But Callen, in his infinite, arrogant genius, has left his iCloud drive synced.

A notification banner hangs at the top of the screen: *Selene Alvarez - Shared Folder Updated.*

Selene. His fiercely ambitious, impeccably tailored executive assistant.

My finger hovers over the glass. A strange, metallic taste floods the back of my throat. I tap the alert. The screen shifts, blindingly white, loading an image file.

It isn’t a quarterly projection. It is a scan. Black and white static, shaped into the distinct, undeniable curve of a spine. A tiny, perfect skull.

In the bottom right corner, a timestamp and a name are printed in stark digital letters: *Alvarez, Selene. Gestational Age: 16 weeks, 4 days.*

Four months.

The ceramic mug slips from my fingers. It shatters against the marble, hot coffee pooling like dark blood across the pristine white stone. The heat bites into my bare ankle, but I don't flinch. I can't breathe. A phantom, hollow ache rips through my lower abdomen—a cruel, visceral echo of the three times my own body had surrendered under the crushing weight of our shared poverty, bleeding out on hospital beds while Callen coded in the waiting room.

Four months. He has been building a family with the woman who books his flights, while I spent the last decade building him.

At ten-fifteen, the heavy oak front door swings open.

"Oaklyn!" Callen’s voice booms through the foyer, vibrating with the electric adrenaline of a newly minted billionaire. "We did it. The stock opened at eighty-five a share. We're oversubscribed by—"

He stops in the archway of the kitchen. He is wearing the bespoke Tom Ford suit I picked out for him, his hair perfectly styled for the Wall Street Journal photographers. He looks at the shattered mug on the floor, then up at me. I haven't moved. I am standing perfectly still at the island, my hands resting flat on the marble.

I don't scream. I don't cry. The woman who would have wept died thirty minutes ago.

I simply push the iPad across the island. The aluminum backing makes a harsh, grating scrape against the stone. It stops precisely at the edge, right in front of him.

Callen looks down. The screen is still awake. The ultrasound glows in the sunlit room.

I watch his face closely, waiting for the devastation. The guilt. The collapse of the man I loved. But it doesn't come. Instead, a micro-expression of annoyance flashes across his eyes, instantly smoothed over by the polished, impenetrable mask of a CEO managing a crisis.

He slowly loosens his silk tie. "You went through my private files."

Not an apology. An accusation.

"Four months," I say. My voice is a terrifying, hollow whisper. "Your assistant, Callen."

He sighs, leaning his weight against the counter. He doesn’t reach for me. "Oaklyn, let's look at this rationally. The timing is a complication, yes. But it doesn't change today. We are crossing the finish line."

"A complication?" The heat in my chest violently flares, turning my blood to ice. "I buried three of our children so you could build this company, and you call her a complication?"

Callen’s jaw tightens. He squares his shoulders, slipping seamlessly into the negotiation tactics he uses on stubborn board members. "I am prepared to offer you an additional five percent of my founder’s equity. Transferred to your private trust by the close of business today. It’s worth roughly forty million as of this morning."

I stare at him. The air in the room feels dangerously thin. "You're trying to buy me off."

"I am compensating you for the inconvenience," he corrects smoothly. "All you have to do is put on the Oscar de la Renta gown, smile for the cameras at the gala tonight, and play the supportive wife. We handle this quietly behind closed doors later. Everyone wins."

My knuckles turn white against the marble. "I am not one of your shareholders, Callen. You don't get to buy my silence."

"Don't be naive, Oaklyn. This is how the world works." His patience snaps, the refined Manhattan veneer cracking to reveal the ugly, defensive pride beneath. The faint trace of his old Brooklyn accent bleeds through his pristine diction. "Take the shares. Because let's not rewrite history here. Without my genius, without what I built, you'd still be a nobody slinging three-dollar lattes on a freezing street corner."

The silence that follows his words is absolute. It rings in my ears, sharp and defining.

He expects me to shatter. He expects the 'Coffee Girl' to lower her head, take the money, and be grateful for the crumbs of his empire. He has completely forgotten who hauled the espresso cart through the blizzards. He has forgotten who taught him how to survive.

I look at the man I gave my twenties to, and I feel absolutely nothing but a cold, magnificent clarity.

"You're right, Callen," I say softly, stepping back from the island. "Let's not rewrite history. Let's see exactly what your genius is worth without me."

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