
After My Husband Left Me for His Pregnant Mistress
Chapter 3
Landon's eyes opened on the third day, pupils dilated and unfocused beneath the harsh fluorescent glare. The ventilator had been removed twelve hours earlier, leaving his throat raw and his voice a ruined rasp. I sat in the chair beside his bed, my posture perfect, my hands folded in my lap like a Renaissance portrait of wifely devotion.
"Sloan." My name came out broken, barely audible over the steady beep of the heart monitor.
I leaned forward, letting my fingers brush against his bandaged hand. "I'm here. I've been here the whole time."
His face crumpled, guilt bleeding through the morphine haze. "I'm sorry. God, Sloan, I'm so sorry."
I didn't ask what he was apologizing for. The ambiguity was a weapon, and I wielded it with surgical precision. Instead, I smoothed the thin hospital blanket over his chest, my touch gentle, almost maternal.
"You've been under so much stress," I murmured, my voice soft as silk over a blade. "The board, the expansion into Asia, the pressure to perform. I should have seen it. I should have protected you better."
Landon's eyes glistened. He wanted absolution so desperately he was willing to accept my rewriting of history. "The board—are they—"
"Circling." I let the word hang in the sterile air between us. "Richard is trying to hold them off, but they smell weakness. Your accident, the rumors about instability. They're questioning your capacity to lead."
His jaw tightened, the old arrogance flickering beneath the guilt. "I built that company. They can't—"
"They can." I straightened, reaching into my leather portfolio and extracting a slim folder. "Which is why I need you to trust me. Just until you're strong enough to take back control."
I placed the documents on the rolling tray table, angling them so he could read without straining. Power of attorney. Transfer of voting shares. All temporary, all reversible, all wrapped in the language of protection and loyalty.
"This keeps your shares out of hostile hands," I explained, my tone clinical, businesslike. "If the board tries a vote of no confidence while you're incapacitated, I can block them. But only if you transfer voting authority to me. Temporarily."
Landon's gaze drifted over the legalese, his comprehension dulled by painkillers and exhaustion. "You'd do that? After everything?"
I met his eyes, letting him see exactly what he needed to see—forgiveness, devotion, the wife who had always been his foundation. "You're my husband, Landon. I'm not going to let them destroy what we built together."
The lie tasted like victory.
His hand trembled as he reached for the pen I offered—my father's Mont Blanc, the weight of it familiar and cold. His signature was shaky, barely legible, scrawled with his non-dominant hand across the designated lines. I witnessed each one with my own steady script, the ink drying into permanence.
"Thank you," he whispered, his voice cracking. "I don't deserve you."
"No," I agreed softly, sliding the documents back into my portfolio. "You don't."
I left him to sleep, the morphine drip pulling him back under. In the corridor, I allowed myself one moment—a single, controlled exhale—before my phone buzzed.
Security. Kensley Fox was in the lobby, demanding access.
I took the elevator down, my heels clicking a steady rhythm against the polished tile. Kensley stood near the reception desk, her designer maternity wear doing little to disguise the fury radiating from her like heat off asphalt. When she saw me, her carefully constructed mask of grief shattered.
"You can't keep me from him," she hissed, her voice low and venomous. "I have every right—"
"You have no rights." I stopped three feet away, close enough to see the panic flickering behind her rage. "Medical protocol restricts visitors to immediate family during recovery. You're an employee. A former employee, actually, as of this morning."
Her hand flew protectively to her stomach. "I'm carrying his child. His heir. Landon loves me."
I let my gaze drop to her belly, then back to her face, my expression as neutral as a surgeon examining a specimen. "Children are expensive, Miss Fox. Especially when their mothers are unemployed and under federal investigation."
The color drained from her face. "What are you talking about?"
"Wire fraud. Corporate espionage. The SEC is very thorough." I tilted my head, studying her like a butterfly pinned to a board. "You should hire a good attorney. You're going to need one."
I turned and walked away, leaving her frozen in the lobby, her performance finally, beautifully, over.
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