
After My Husband Got His Assistant Pregnant, I Burned Him
Chapter 3
The ultrasound photograph sat on the mahogany table like a grenade with the pin pulled. Twelve board members stared at it, their faces cycling through shock, disgust, and the cold calculus of reputational damage control. The lead investor's jaw worked silently, his eyes cutting from the image to Callen, then to Selene.
I watched Selene's face drain of color, watched her fingers clutch the armrests of her ergonomic chair. For a single, crystalline moment, I saw the truth flicker across her features—the recognition that her carefully constructed narrative was collapsing in real time.
Then she moved.
Selene's hand flew to her throat, her breath coming in short, theatrical gasps. "I—I can't—" Her voice fractured into a high, reedy wheeze. She pushed away from the table, stumbling backward until her shoulders hit the glass wall. Her iPad clattered to the floor. "My baby—oh God, my baby—"
The performance was flawless. Her knees buckled with just enough control to look genuine, her free hand cradling her stomach in a gesture of maternal protection. The hyperventilation intensified, each breath a ragged, desperate sob.
"Someone call 911!" One of the junior board members lunged for the conference phone, his face pale with panic.
Callen exploded into motion, crossing the room in three long strides. He caught Selene before she fully collapsed, lowering her carefully to the floor. His hands—hands that had once cradled my face, that had promised me forever—now cradled her shoulders with a tenderness that carved something vital out of my chest.
"Breathe, Selene. Just breathe." His voice was soft, intimate, stripped of all the corporate polish. This was the Callen I remembered from the basement apartment, the one who used to hold me through the nightmares.
He looked up at me, and the man I'd loved for a decade was gone. In his place was something feral and vicious, his eyes burning with pure, unfiltered hatred.
"Get the fuck out," he snarled. The words hit like a physical blow. "You've done enough."
The lead investor stood, his chair scraping harshly against the floor. "Mrs. Knight, I think it's best if you—"
"I'm leaving," I said. My voice was steady, even as my pulse hammered against my ribs. I looked down at Selene, still gasping against Callen's chest, her fingers twisted in the fabric of his Tom Ford suit. Our eyes met for a fraction of a second.
She wasn't hyperventilating anymore. She was watching me, measuring my reaction with the cold precision of a chess player protecting her queen.
I turned and walked out. Behind me, the sirens were already wailing in the distance.
---
The hotel suite Haisley had booked was a mid-range corporate rental in Midtown, the kind of anonymous box designed for business travelers passing through. I sat on the edge of the stiff mattress, still wearing my coat, staring at the generic landscape print bolted to the wall.
Haisley pressed a mug of tea into my hands. I didn't drink it.
"She faked it," I said quietly. "The panic attack. She knew exactly what she was doing."
"Of course she did." Haisley sat beside me, her shoulder warm against mine. "And Callen bought it. They all did."
I nodded. The tea cooled in my palms.
The door exploded inward at eleven-forty-three.
I didn't flinch. I'd been expecting him.
Callen stood in the doorway, his tie gone, his collar open, his hair disheveled from hours of running his hands through it. He looked like a man unraveling, and the sight of it gave me no satisfaction.
"You almost killed my child today." His voice was low, shaking with barely controlled rage. He stepped into the room, letting the door slam shut behind him. "The doctors said her blood pressure spiked so high she could have miscarried. Do you understand that? You could have murdered my baby."
Haisley stood, positioning herself between us. "Get out, Callen."
He ignored her completely, his eyes locked on mine. "Three years, Oaklyn. Three years I listened to you cry about those miscarriages. I held you. I told you it wasn't your fault." His lip curled into something ugly. "But maybe it was. Maybe your body knew you weren't strong enough to carry a child and build a company at the same time."
The air left the room.
Haisley's hand shot out, but I caught her wrist. I stood slowly, setting the cold mug on the nightstand with deliberate care.
"I lost three pregnancies," I said, my voice a blade of ice, "because I was hauling a hundred-pound espresso machine through a snowstorm to pay your server bills. Because I threw myself in front of a mugger to protect your laptop. Because I worked seventy-hour weeks so you could afford to dream."
I took a step toward him. He didn't move.
"And you just turned my dead children into a weapon to protect the woman you fucked on your desk."
Callen's jaw clenched. "Selene is carrying my heir. The future of my legacy. What the hell did you ever give me but guilt and coffee?"
I smiled. It was a terrible, cold thing.
"You're about to find out."
I walked past him, my shoulder brushing his, and opened the door.
"Get out of my room, Callen. You're trespassing."
He stared at me, his chest heaving, searching for the woman who used to flinch when he raised his voice. She didn't live here anymore.
He left.
Haisley locked the door behind him and turned to me, her eyes bright with fury and pride.
"What now?"
I pulled my phone from my pocket and opened my contacts. I scrolled to a name I'd saved two years ago at a tech conference in San Francisco: Marcus Reeves.
Callen's biggest rival.
"Now," I said, pressing call, "I burn it all down."
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