
After My Husband Stole My Magic for His Mistress
Chapter 2
The cold hit me like a thousand knives as I stumbled out of the Plaza. My legs barely supported me, my body still trembling from the humiliation of being forced to kneel. The snow-covered sidewalk seemed to stretch endlessly before me, each step more difficult than the last.
"Just a little further," I whispered to myself, though I had no destination in mind.
My vision blurred, the streetlights melting into streaks of yellow against the darkness. I could feel the frost spreading through my veins—the Hundred Days of Frost curse that had nearly killed me in that Hamptons safehouse now seemed to be claiming its final victory.
"Not here," I gasped, falling to my knees in an alleyway. "Not like this."
The ground was ice-cold against my skin. I curled into myself, trying to preserve what little warmth remained in my body. My breath came in short, painful gasps.
"Kehlani!"
A familiar voice cut through the haze of pain. Elena Thorne's face appeared above me, her features tight with concern.
"Get up," she urged, pulling at my arms. "You need to get out of this cold."
"I can't," I whispered. "The frost—"
"I've got you," Elena said firmly, wrapping her coat around my shoulders. "Just hold on."
The world tilted and swayed as she half-carried me down the alleyway. I drifted in and out of consciousness, aware only of Elena's steady presence and the gradual warming of my limbs.
When I opened my eyes again, we were in a small apartment in Queens. The windows glowed with the distant lights of Manhattan, but here, the air was warm and still.
"How did you find me?" I asked, my voice hoarse.
Elena sat beside me on the couch, her eyes serious. "I followed you from the gala. I couldn't stay in there—not after what he did to you."
I nodded, unable to speak.
"There's something else," Elena continued, hesitating. "The magical wards of the city—they're acting strangely."
"What do you mean?"
"They're flickering. Pulsing." She pulled out her phone, showing me a video of the city skyline. Sure enough, the invisible barriers that protected New York—barriers I had helped strengthen years ago—seemed to be fluctuating, like a heartbeat. "Preston's hold isn't as stable as he thinks."
Before I could respond, Elena reached into her bag and pulled out a folder. "There's more. I've been doing some digging in the Council archives."
She spread several photographs before me. Each showed pages from an ancient book—the Book of Unions, the sacred registry of magical bonds and destinies.
"Look at this," Elena said, pointing to a page where my name had been burned out and replaced with Andie's in shaky, unauthorized calligraphy.
My stomach twisted as I realized what I was looking at. "He's trying to rewrite destiny itself."
"Yes," Elena confirmed grimly. "This is why he needs the annulment. He's not just moving on—he's actively trying to erase you from the magical world entirely."
I stared at the photos, my hands trembling. The magnitude of Preston's betrayal was becoming clearer with each passing moment.
Elena's hand touched my shoulder gently. "There's one more thing."
She handed me a society magazine. On the glossy cover, Andie beamed in Preston's arms, her neck adorned with a stunning diamond necklace that caught the light in impossible ways.
"The article calls it a 'unique carbon-compressed diamond,'" Elena said quietly. "Look closer, Kehlani."
I studied the necklace, my witch's instincts prickling. There was something familiar about the magical signature embedded in those diamonds—something that made my blood run cold.
"No," I whispered, the truth dawning on me with horrifying clarity. "No, no, no."
The magazine slipped from my fingers as the realization hit me full force. Those weren't ordinary diamonds. They were compressed ashes—the ashes of our unborn child.
Preston had promised to create a memorial for our baby, a way to honor what we had lost. Instead, he had transformed those sacred remains into jewelry for his mistress.
Something broke inside me then—the last fragile thread of love I had harbored for Preston snapping cleanly in two. In its place rose something cold and absolute. Not hatred—something beyond hatred. A rage so pure it felt like ice in my veins.
"He turned our child into a trophy," I said, my voice eerily calm. "He turned our grief into a fashion statement."
Elena's eyes widened at the transformation in me. "Kehlani?"
I stood slowly, my body no longer shaking with cold but with a power I hadn't felt since before I gave away my Vital Essence.
"Find me everything," I said, my voice steady and cold as winter frost. "Everything about what he's done. Everything about what he's planning. Everything about Andie Spencer."
Because now I understood what the Ancient Ones had been preparing me for all along. This wasn't just about surviving betrayal—it was about becoming something greater than I had ever been before.
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