
Five Years into Marriage, His Mistress Brought Me His Child
Five Years into Marriage, His Mistress Brought Me His Child Chapter 1
The champagne flute trembled in my hand as I smiled for the cameras, the crystal catching the light from the chandeliers above.
Five years of marriage to William Fitzgerald, and here we were at the Manhattan Private Club, celebrating with New York's elite at our anniversary charity gala.
"Mrs. Fitzgerald, how does it feel to be married to Wall Street's golden boy?" The fashion magazine reporter leaned in, her recorder thrust toward my face.
I adjusted my Cartier necklace—a wedding gift from William—and delivered the practiced response I'd perfected over years of these interviews. "William and I are incredibly blessed. Marriage is about partnership, supporting each other's dreams while building something beautiful together."
The words tasted like ash in my mouth, but my smile never wavered.
Around us, the cream of Manhattan society mingled in their designer gowns and tailored tuxedos, the soft jazz from the string quartet mixing with the gentle clink of crystal and cultured laughter.
"And what's next for the Fitzgerald power couple?" Another reporter chimed in.
I felt William's hand settle on the small of my back, warm and possessive. "We're focused on giving back to the community," I said, gesturing toward the auction displays featuring pieces from my carefully curated collection. "Art has the power to heal, to inspire—"
A commotion near the entrance cut through my words like a blade. The gentle murmur of conversation shifted, heads turning toward the main doors where our security team maintained their usual discrete perimeter.
But something was wrong.
The security barrier—those velvet ropes that separated us from the outside world—suddenly buckled.
A woman burst through, her desperate strength overwhelming the startled guards.
She was nothing like the polished guests surrounding us. Her clothes were simple, worn—a faded cardigan over a plain dress that had seen better days. Her dark hair hung limp around a face etched with exhaustion and something deeper: desperation.
But it was the child that made my breath catch.
A small boy, maybe five years old, clung to her hand. His skin had that translucent pallor I'd seen in hospital charity visits—the look of serious illness. His eyes, too large for his thin face, swept the glittering crowd with a mixture of wonder and fear.
The woman's gaze locked onto something behind me, and I felt William's hand tighten against my back.
"William!" Her voice cracked like a whip across the suddenly silent room. "William Fitzgerald!"
Every camera in the room swiveled toward us. The live stream that had been broadcasting our perfect anniversary celebration to Times Square now captured something else entirely.
I turned to look at my husband, expecting to see confusion, maybe concern for what was clearly a disturbed woman who'd somehow breached our security.
Instead, I saw terror.
William's face had drained of all color, his jaw slack. The confident Wall Street titan who commanded boardrooms and closed billion-dollar deals looked like he'd seen a ghost.
"How could you?" The woman's voice rose, raw with anguish. "How could you just abandon us? He's dying, William. Your son is dying, and you won't even return my calls!"
The words hit me like physical blows. Son? William's son?
The cameras were rolling. Dozens of them. The live feed that was supposed to showcase our charitable work, our perfect marriage, our golden life—it was all broadcasting in real-time to the massive screens in Times Square.
I felt the reporter's microphone brush my arm as she leaned closer, sensing blood in the water.
"Mrs. Fitzgerald, do you have any comment on—"
But I couldn't speak. Couldn't breathe. Because William was moving.
He pushed past me—actually pushed me aside—with a force that sent me stumbling backward in my heels. I watched in horror as my husband of five years, the man I'd built my entire identity around, rushed toward this woman and her sick child.
The little boy looked up at William with recognition, with hope, and my world tilted on its axis.
William shrugged out of his custom-tailored jacket—the one I'd helped him select just hours ago—and wrapped it around the child's thin shoulders. The gesture was tender, protective, paternal.
The gesture of a father.
Flash bulbs exploded around us like fireworks. The string quartet had stopped playing. The elegant charity auction had transformed into a media circus, and at the center of it all was my husband, cradling a child who looked nothing like me.
A child who looked exactly like William had in his prep school photos.
"Please," the woman—Monica, I realized with dawning horror, recognizing her now from old photographs William thought he'd hidden—begged. "He needs the transplant. The doctors said you're the only match. Please don't let our son die because you're too proud to acknowledge him."
Our son.
The words echoed in my head as the cameras continued to roll, broadcasting our destruction to the world. I stood frozen in my designer gown, my perfect makeup, my carefully styled hair, watching my marriage disintegrate in real-time.
William finally looked back at me over the crowd, and in his eyes, I saw not apology or explanation, but calculation. He was already planning damage control, already figuring out how to spin this, how to make me complicit in whatever lie he'd been living.
But it was too late for lies. The truth was blazing across every screen in Times Square, streaming live to millions of viewers who had tuned in to watch a charity gala and instead witnessed the spectacular implosion of Manhattan's most celebrated marriage.
I felt something inside me crack—not my heart, that would come later—but something deeper. The perfect facade I'd spent five years maintaining, the identity I'd built as Mrs. William Fitzgerald, the woman who had everything.
Because standing there in that glittering ballroom, surrounded by New York's elite and the unforgiving eyes of dozens of cameras, I finally understood the truth.
I had nothing.
I had never had anything.
I had been living a lie so beautiful, so perfectly crafted, that I'd mistaken it for my life.
The reporter's voice cut through my shock: "This is unprecedented. The Fitzgerald family's charity gala has just taken a dramatic turn as allegations of a secret child surface live on air. We're witnessing what could be the scandal of the century unfolding in real-time."
My legs felt unsteady beneath me, but I forced myself to remain upright. Whatever came next, I would not give them the satisfaction of watching me fall.
Five Years into Marriage, His Mistress Brought Me His Child of Contents
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