Follow
Chapters
Share
After My Husband Made Me Apologize to His Pregnant Mistress Novel Cover

After My Husband Made Me Apologize to His Pregnant Mistress

The fluorescent lights of the Manhattan family court hummed with a sterile, indifferent energy. The scent of industrial floor wax and stale coffee hung thick in the air, a pathetic perfume for the graveyard of a ten-year marriage. Across the scarred wooden table, Dante paced. His Italian leather shoes beat a relentless, rhythmic tattoo against the linoleum. He ran a hand through his perfectly styled dark hair, his gaze dropping to the phone illuminated in his palm for the fourth time in two minutes. A soft, unconscious smile played at the corners of his mouth—an expression he hadn’t directed at me in years. Ember. She was probably texting him about the baby. I stared down at the preliminary divorce filing. A decade of sacrifice, of molding myself into the perfect, quiet wife, reduced to twelve pages of Times New Roman.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

The Bradley estate smelled of roasted turkey, sage, and old money. Crystal chandeliers cast warm, amber light across the mahogany dining table, but the glow did nothing to soften the arctic chill in the air. I sat rigid in my chair, my spine screaming with every breath, my hands folded carefully in my lap to hide their trembling.

Eleanor presided at the head of the table like a queen surveying her court. She'd positioned me directly at her right hand—a deliberate choice that placed me above Dante in the family hierarchy. Across from me, Ember perched on the edge of her seat, her manicured fingers drumming against the table's polished surface. Dante sat beside her, checking his phone beneath the table with the furtive guilt of a teenager.

"Grace, darling," Eleanor said, her voice slicing through the oppressive silence. She lifted a delicate porcelain teapot—the one she kept exclusively for special occasions. "I had Mrs. Chen prepare your favorite blend. The jasmine and bergamot you loved so much during your first Thanksgiving with us."

The scent hit me before the liquid touched my cup. Ten years ago, I'd sat in this same chair, newly married and desperately in love, believing I'd found a family to replace the one I'd lost. The memory tasted like ash.

"Thank you, Eleanor," I whispered.

Ember's gaze tracked the exchange with predatory focus. "How thoughtful. I'd love to try some as well."

Eleanor didn't even glance in her direction. "I'm afraid I only prepared enough for Grace. Perhaps you'd prefer water?"

The muscle in Dante's jaw twitched. He set his phone down with more force than necessary, the sharp crack of glass against wood making me flinch. The small scar on my temple began to throb—a phantom echo of crushed metal and shattered windshields.

We made it through the first course in suffocating silence. I pushed glazed carrots around my plate, each swallow of food sitting like concrete in my stomach. My back pain had escalated from a dull ache to vicious, clawing spasms that radiated down my legs. I pressed my spine against the chair, willing myself to remain upright.

Then, midway through the turkey, Ember placed her hand on her belly.

The gesture was deliberate, theatrical. Her fingers splayed across the silk fabric of her dress, and her lips curved into a smile so saccharine it could rot teeth. "I suppose now is as good a time as any to share our wonderful news." Her voice dripped false sweetness. "Dante and I are expecting. I'm pregnant."

The room tilted.

The chandelier's light warped into the spinning red and blue of police sirens. The scent of sage twisted into burning rubber. My mother's scream—high and terrible and cut short—echoed in my skull. I couldn't breathe. The air had turned to water, filling my lungs, drowning me from the inside.

My chair scraped backward. I didn't remember standing. My legs moved on autopilot, carrying me away from the table, down the hallway, into the guest bathroom. I slammed the door and collapsed against the cold marble tiles.

Then the pain hit.

Not the familiar chronic ache, but something catastrophic. A tearing, ripping agony that originated deep in my abdomen and exploded outward. I doubled over, my forehead pressed against the floor, a strangled gasp trapped behind my teeth. Heat bloomed between my thighs—wet and terrible and wrong.

No. No, no, no.

I hadn't told anyone. I'd only taken the test three days ago, staring at the positive result in the harsh fluorescent light of a CVS bathroom. I'd been carrying this secret like a fragile, impossible hope—a reason to believe something beautiful could still grow in the wasteland of my marriage.

Now it was gone.

The cramping intensified, wave after merciless wave. I bit down on my knuckles to keep from screaming, tasting copper and salt. Minutes or hours passed—I couldn't tell. The white tiles beneath me blurred into the white of hospital sheets, the white of my mother's casket lining.

A sharp knock rattled the door. "Grace?" Dante's voice, edged with irritation rather than concern. "You need to come out here."

I couldn't move. Couldn't speak. Blood soaked through my dress, warm and damning.

The door handle turned. I hadn't locked it. Dante stood in the doorway, his expression shifting from annoyance to alarm as he took in my crumpled form. But not alarm for me—alarm for the scene, the inconvenience, the disruption to his perfect evening.

"What the hell, Grace?" He didn't kneel. Didn't reach for me. "Ember is crying out there. She said you glared at her during dinner. That you threatened the baby."

A sound escaped me—half laugh, half sob. Threatened the baby. I was losing mine on his mother's bathroom floor, and he was worried about Ember's crocodile tears.

"Apologize," he demanded, his voice dropping to that cold, commanding tone he used in boardrooms. "Come back out there and apologize for ruining this dinner."

I lifted my head, my vision swimming. Through the haze of pain and shock, I saw him clearly for the first time in years. Not the boy who'd asked me to follow him to London. Not the man who'd sworn to never fail me. Just a stranger wearing my husband's face.

"I'm sorry," I whispered, the words fragmenting like broken glass.

Before he could respond, Eleanor's voice cut through the hallway like a blade. "Get out."

She appeared behind Dante, her hand clutching the wedding ring on her necklace, her eyes blazing with a fury I'd never seen. "Get that woman out of my house. Get yourself out. Now."

"Mother—"

"Now, Dante. Before I forget you're my son."

He left. And Eleanor knelt beside me on the bloodstained tiles, gathering me into her arms as I shattered completely.

You may also like

Forsaken Bride: Deceived Into Love's Second Chance Novel Cover
7.1
To marry his first love, Deanna's husband of three years faked his death. Hiding behind his twin brother's identity, he and his family ran a cruel con. Her sobbing didn't move him. To impress that woman, he even had Deanna punished. As agony lit every nerve, she chose to walk away. With a sharp flick, she sent the ring into his face and wed a comatose tycoon, brushing off her ex's belated begging. A bleak future seemed certain-until the "coma" turned out to be an act. Under cover of night, her new husband pinned her down and murmured against her ear, "Baby, why don't we go another round?"
Gilded Cage: The CEO's Unwilling Bride Novel Cover
8.4
I was the "diamond" of the Sargent Foundation, a perfect orphan polished for the cameras and high-society galas. But beneath the glittering chandeliers, I was suffocating. When the pressure finally broke me and I tried to flee the Sargent Gala, I wasn't met with comfort. I was hunted down by security and dragged into a sterile, white-hot spotlight in a room I was never allowed to enter. Adrien Sargent, the cold-blooded CEO who controlled my every move, didn't want to help me. He wanted to devour me. He presented a legal cage: sign over my voting shares for his unethical hostile takeover, or he would have my only friend—the elderly butler who raised me—killed in his nursing home bed. I became a prisoner in the East Wing, stripped of my phone and watched by hidden cameras. During a midnight storm, I tried to steal a security card to escape, but Adrien caught me in his study. Reeking of whiskey and corporate rage, he didn't just stop me. He pinned me to his desk and branded my neck with a bite so deep it bruised, treating me like a thief who deserved to be claimed. The next morning, the house turned into a battlefield of lies. His PR consultant tried to claim she was the one in his bed, but Adrien found a pearl button from my pajamas under his desk. He didn't feel guilt; he felt violated. He accused me of orchestrating the entire encounter to blackmail him, his eyes filled with a terrifying, possessive fury. When his grandmother caught us, she didn't see a victim; she saw a liability. To save the family stock price, she gave us an ultimatum: marriage. "I’ll do it," I said, looking at the massive diamond ring that felt more like a shackle. Adrien thought he had finally broken me, but he didn't know about the encrypted file I just received. The corporate crisis he’s fighting was an inside job, and the trail leads straight to his own front door. I looked at my new husband on our wedding night and let my silk dress hit the floor. He thinks he’s trapped a rabbit, but I’ve just gained total access to his world. I will sleep with the enemy, learn every dark secret he’s hiding, and then I am going to burn his empire to the ground.
My Husband Sold My Family Heirlooms to His Mistress Novel Cover
8.3
I thought my anniversary dinner was ruined when he didn't show. I had no idea my husband was busy giving my grandmother's heirloom necklace to his mistress. "The Ashford Aurora belongs on worthy necks," Grandmother always said. As I upload the incriminating video to five different cloud accounts, my hands are perfectly steady. My husband believes he married a trophy wife—a perfect, demure socialite who "barely notices anything." He's about to discover he actually married the heir to the Ashford dynasty, and I've been noticing everything.
The Billionaire's Scorned Ex-Wife is back for Revenge  Novel Cover
7.7
Nichole's perfect life crumbles when she discovers her husband, Blake Williams Hamilton, is having an affair with his childhood sweetheart. Her heartbreak turns into a nightmare when she's falsely accused of poisoning his mistress and forced to sign divorce papers while locked away. Betrayed and humiliated, Nichole realizes she's been living a lie. Just as she hits rock bottom, her ex-fiancé, Adrian Gonzalez, steps in to save her from the clutches of Blake. Now Nichole must step in as the heiress to Valmont Empires, Orion Heights' most powerful conglomerate. Determined to rise from the ashes, Nichole embraces the opportunity, stepping into a world of power, deception, and second chances. But as she works to rebuild her life and seek revenge, she must also confront the lingering question: Can she truly trust Adrian, or is his help just another trap?
The Billionaire's Wife Escapes To Antarctica Novel Cover
7.8
The anniversary candles were burning down, and the Wagyu beef had long gone cold. I waited for two hours, but Brigham never came home. Instead, a push notification shattered the silence. It was a live video from an exclusive club, showing my husband laughing with Giselle Leach—the woman he claimed was just a business acquaintance. In the footage, he pulled her into his chest to shield her from a champagne spray, his hand possessive on her hip. The humiliation stung, but the printed apology card he sent via his butler later that night was the final insult. He didn't even bother to sign it by hand. My life felt like a hollow performance, a series of lies meant to keep up appearances for a man who kept me as a placeholder while his heart belonged to someone else. I felt like an idiot, holding onto a marriage that had been dead for years. Why did I keep trying to fix something that was never mine to begin with? Then, the email arrived—a three-year research expedition in Antarctica. It required me to cut off all outside contact. I looked at the man who had treated me like a disposable accessory, then at the screen. I didn't hesitate. I typed my acceptance, ready to leave the life, the lies, and the man who never saw me behind forever.
The Dead Woman Who Stole My Husband Was Coming For Me Next Novel Cover
8.4
I found out my fiancé was in love with another woman the day she died. Not from him. From her Instagram memorial — 847 strangers grieving a stranger, and my fiancé's comment pinned at the top in a language he swore he didn't speak. "Mon trésor. Je t'attendrai." My treasure. I'll wait for you. Four years together. Four years of "you're the only one, Willow." Four years of him promising he didn't believe in emotional affairs because we "communicated everything." He met her in Aspen in December. A ski lodge. A stranger from Lyon with sad eyes and nowhere to go for Christmas. By February she was in Seattle — "for work," he said. I shook her hand in our kitchen. I saw the way she looked at him. Six days later she was dead. Fell from a lookout in the Cascades. No witnesses. And Ryker? Ryker stopped sleeping. Stopped eating. Started whispering her name in French into his phone at 3 a.m. So I did what any heartbroken fiancée would do. I packed a bag. Told him I needed space. Promised I'd be back when I could "support him through his grief." He cried. He thanked me. He called me his angel. What Ryker doesn't know? I already found her journal in his sock drawer. I already know she wasn't just some tourist. And the man whose name is written on the last page — Caspian Vance, the billionaire who owns half of Seattle — just sent a black car to my sister's house. "Miss Harper. Mr. Vance would like a word about the woman who died. He believes you and he… have the same enemy."