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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.
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Chapter 3

Eleanor arrived at eight in the morning, before the city had fully committed to waking up. She brought her personal lawyer—a silver-haired woman named Patricia who carried a leather briefcase and spoke in precise, unhurried sentences—and she brought a cardboard box of jasmine and bergamot tea. She set the box on my kitchen counter without asking, filled my kettle, and waited for the water to boil as though she had always lived here.

I sat at the kitchen table wrapped in a cardigan that belonged to someone I used to be, my hands curled around air. The previous night's cramping had dulled to a hollow ache that lived somewhere beneath my ribs now, somewhere nameless.

Patricia set the document on the table in front of me. Clean pages. Deliberate language. A postnuptial agreement drafted with surgical precision.

"I have been keeping records," Eleanor said simply. She placed two cups on the table and sat across from me, touching the wedding ring at her throat—a brief, grounding gesture. "Every instance. Dates, amounts, witnesses. Three years' worth."

I stared at the document. "You never told me."

"I was hoping I wouldn't need to." The warmth in her voice was steady, unshaking, the kind that doesn't apologize for itself. "I was wrong to wait. I'm sorry for that, Grace."

Patricia walked me through it clause by clause. The penthouse. My portion of the joint accounts. The art collection I'd quietly curated over a decade, piece by piece, with money that was technically mine. Eleanor had catalogued everything—every gift that was genuinely mine, every asset Dante might try to argue was communal. She had built a legal wall around me while I hadn't even known I was standing in rubble.

I picked up the pen. My hand was steadier than it had any right to be.

I signed.

Eleanor covered my hand with hers for just a moment—warm, dry, certain. "Good girl," she said quietly. Not condescending. A benediction.

---

A week passed the way gray weeks do. Slowly, and all at once.

The knock at my apartment door came on a Tuesday afternoon, sharp and impatient, the kind of knock that doesn't expect to be ignored. I opened it to find Dante filling the doorframe, already running a hand through his hair, already somewhere between frustrated and decided.

"The sapphire necklace." He didn't bother with hello. "Ember wants it for the maternity shoot. I need it today."

The air in the hallway felt suddenly thin. I kept my hand on the doorframe. "That necklace belongs to me. Eleanor gave it to me personally. It was never a Bradley family loan."

"Grace." His jaw tightened. The muscle beneath his cheek pulsed. "Don't make this difficult."

"I'm not." My voice came out quieter than I intended, but quieter sometimes carries further. "I'm just telling you the truth. It's mine. I'm keeping it."

He didn't wait for anything else. He moved past me into the apartment, and I stepped back—not from deference, but from the cold recognition of who he had always been under pressure. I heard him in the bedroom. Drawers opening. The soft violence of fabric being pushed aside, containers scraped across the dresser surface.

I stood in the hallway between rooms and pressed two fingers to the scar at my temple. I breathed.

I hadn't noticed Ember until I heard the soft click of her heels on my hardwood. She had come in behind him, quiet as a held breath, and she was standing in my living room now with her eyes moving across the shelves like she was taking inventory.

Her gaze settled on the mantle.

On my mother's urn.

It was pale ceramic, hand-painted with small blue flowers. I had picked it out alone, standing in a funeral home at seventeen with no one beside me, and I had chosen it because my mother had loved blue. I had carried it across three apartments and a decade and set it in every new place I lived like planting a flag.

Ember's hand moved with the casualness of someone reaching past a vase of grocery store flowers.

The urn hit the hardwood and exploded.

The sound was enormous. The silence after it was worse.

"Oh—" Ember's hand flew to her mouth. Her eyes went wide and glassy with practiced horror. "Dante! Dante, I'm so sorry, it was right on the edge, I didn't—I barely touched it—"

Dante appeared in the bedroom doorway, and I was already on my knees.

The ash was gray and fine against the dark wood. Pale ceramic shards. Blue painted flowers, broken into four pieces, into seven, into too many to count.

I pressed my palms flat to the floor on either side of the wreckage and I did not make a sound.

That was the worst part. That I didn't make a sound. That I had learned, somewhere in ten years, to grieve quietly enough not to inconvenience anyone.

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