
After My Husband Left Me for His Pregnant Mistress
After My Husband Left Me for His Pregnant Mistress Chapter 1
The false wall in my home office slides shut with a whisper, concealing a decade of secrets behind mahogany paneling. Wilson Gray's grainy surveillance photos disappear into darkness—the hitman's face frozen mid-transaction in a Mexico City cantina, finally captured after ten years of hunting. My father's signet ring catches the lamplight as I press the hidden latch, cold metal against my skin, a weight I've carried since the day they murdered him.
The penthouse is silent except for the ambient hum of Manhattan twenty-three floors below. It's 11:47 PM when my phone shatters the stillness.
"Mrs. Ross?" The voice is clinical, rehearsed. "This is New York-Presbyterian Hospital. Your husband has been involved in a serious motor vehicle accident on the Long Island Expressway."
The words register without impact. I don't ask if he's alive. I don't gasp or cry. Instead, I calculate—the LIE at this hour means he was heading east, toward the Hamptons. Toward something worth speeding for.
"I'll be there in twenty minutes."
I pull on a black Burberry coat, the fabric settling around my shoulders like armor. The mirror reflects a woman composed of sharp angles and controlled breathing. No tears. No trembling hands. Just the familiar stranger I've become over twenty years of marriage to Landon Ross.
The trauma center smells of antiseptic and fear. Fluorescent lights bleach the corridors white, turning everyone into ghosts. A nurse with exhausted eyes directs me to the surgical wing, where machines beep their monotonous symphony of crisis. Through observation windows, I see my husband—unconscious, intubated, his body violated by tubes and monitors.
"Ruptured spleen, possible spinal involvement, significant internal bleeding," a doctor reports, his voice flat with professional detachment. "We're assessing surgical options now."
I nod, filing away the medical terminology like evidence in a case I've been building for years.
"Mrs. Ross?"
Gerald Marsh materializes beside me, Landon's attorney, his silver hair disheveled and his tie askew. He looks like a man who's been dragged from sleep to deliver news he'd rather swallow than speak. His briefcase trembles slightly in his grip.
"We need to talk. Privately."
He leads me to a corridor near the cardiac wing, away from the nurses' station. The fluorescent bulbs flicker overhead, casting unstable shadows across his guilty face.
"Landon amended his will three weeks ago." Gerald won't meet my eyes. "I advised against it, but he insisted. I'm legally obligated to inform you as his spouse."
He hands me a document, the pages still warm from his briefcase. I scan the legalese with practiced efficiency, my vision narrowing to the relevant clauses:
*Primary Beneficiary: Kensley Fox*
*Controlling shares of Ross Holdings: Kensley Fox*
*Penthouse, Hamptons estate, investment portfolio: Kensley Fox*
My name appears only in the section titled "Spousal Minimum Required by Law"—a calculated insult wrapped in legal compliance. Fifty thousand dollars and my personal jewelry. Twenty years of building his empire, reduced to a rounding error.
"Kensley Fox," I say, testing the name on my tongue. "His executive assistant."
Gerald's silence confirms everything.
The affair I suspected. The betrayal I anticipated. But this—this financial execution—reveals something darker. This is the Ross family playbook: eliminate obstacles, take what you want, leave nothing behind. Just like they did to my father.
"Thank you, Gerald." My voice is crystalline, sharp enough to cut. "This is very illuminating."
I'm folding the document when chaos erupts in the waiting room.
"Where is he? Oh God, where's Landon?"
Kensley Fox crashes through the VIP entrance like a theater actress hitting her mark. Twenty-four, blonde, beautiful in that manufactured Instagram way—highlighter catching the harsh hospital lights, mascara already strategically smudged. Her Hermès bag swings from her shoulder, the price tag equivalent to most people's annual salary.
But it's her hand that tells the real story. She clutches her stomach with protective desperation, fingers splayed across fabric that might, if you're looking for it, show the slightest curve.
Pregnant.
Of course she is.
"I need to see him!" Kensley's voice breaks on a practiced sob. "He was coming to me—it's my birthday—he promised—"
The pieces align with brutal clarity. Landon speeding toward the Hamptons. Toward her. Toward the life he planned to build on the ashes of our marriage.
A surgeon approaches, blue scrubs still crisp, his face professionally neutral. "Mrs. Ross? We need your authorization for emergency surgery. Your husband's condition is critical. Without intervention, he won't survive the next two hours."
He extends a clipboard, consent forms clipped and waiting.
I take the pen—my father's Mont Blanc, the last gift he gave me before the Ross family orchestrated his murder. Kensley watches me with red-rimmed eyes, her performance faltering as she realizes I hold Landon's life in my hand.
The surgeon shifts, uncomfortable with my silence. "Mrs. Ross?"
Death would be mercy. A clean escape from consequences. The Ross family would absorb the scandal, Kensley would fade into obscurity, and I would be left with nothing but ghosts and fifty thousand dollars.
No.
Landon doesn't get to die a martyr. He doesn't get to escape what's coming.
I sign the consent form with steady strokes, the pen scratching across paper like a judge's gavel.
"Save him," I say, meeting the surgeon's eyes. "Do whatever it takes."
Because death is too easy. And I've spent ten years learning that revenge, like justice, requires the guilty to be alive to witness their ruin.
After My Husband Left Me for His Pregnant Mistress of Contents
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