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Five Years into Marriage, His Mistress Brought Me His Child Novel Cover

Five Years into Marriage, His Mistress Brought Me His Child

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. 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? My husband William's son?
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Chapter 2

The private hospital room felt suffocating despite its pristine white walls and expensive furnishings. I sat in the leather chair beside William's bed, watching him stare at the ceiling with hollow eyes. Twenty-four hours had passed since our world imploded on live television, and the silence between us stretched like a chasm.

"Chloe." His voice was hoarse, broken. "We need to talk."

I didn't respond immediately. Part of me wanted to walk out, to never see his face again. But the image of that pale little boy wrapped in William's jacket haunted me. Whatever William had done to me, that child was innocent.

"Talk," I said finally, my voice flat.

William turned his head toward me, and I saw something I'd never seen before in his eyes: genuine fear. Not the calculated concern he wore during board meetings or the performative worry he displayed at charity events. This was raw, desperate terror.

"Leo is mine," he whispered. "Monica and I... we were together senior year of high school. My mother found out, threatened to cut me off completely if I didn't end it. Monica was from the wrong side of town, you know how my family is about bloodlines and reputation."

My hands clenched in my lap. "So you abandoned a pregnant seventeen-year-old girl."

"I didn't know!" The words exploded from him. "Monica never told me. She just... disappeared. I thought she'd moved on, found someone else. I never knew about Leo until she showed up at our anniversary party."

The lie came so easily to him, so smoothly. But I'd seen the recognition in his eyes when Monica burst through those security barriers. He'd known exactly who she was.

"And now?" I asked.

"Now he's dying." William's voice cracked. "Acute lymphoblastic leukemia. The doctors say without a bone marrow transplant, he has maybe three months."

I closed my eyes, feeling the weight of a child's life settling on my shoulders. "What do you need from me?"

"I need to get tested. To see if I'm a match for bone marrow donation." He sat up slowly, wincing from whatever sedatives they'd given him after his collapse. "I know this is... I know what I'm asking."

"You're asking me to stand by while you save the son you had with another woman." The words tasted bitter, but I forced them out. "You're asking me to smile for the cameras and play the supportive wife while our marriage becomes a public joke."

"Chloe, please." He reached for my hand, but I pulled away. "He's just a little boy. He didn't ask for any of this."

That was the thing about William—he always knew exactly which buttons to push. He knew I'd spent countless hours volunteering at children's hospitals, that I'd always wanted kids of our own. He knew I couldn't turn my back on a dying child, no matter how much I wanted to hurt him.

"Fine," I said. "Get tested."

Relief flooded his features. "Thank you. God, Chloe, thank you. I know this is—"

"Don't." I stood up, smoothing down my skirt. "Don't thank me. And don't mistake this for forgiveness."

Three days later, Dr. Martinez delivered the news that shattered what remained of William's composure. I sat beside him in the oncologist's office, watching my husband's face crumble as the doctor explained the test results.

"I'm sorry, Mr. Fitzgerald. You're not a compatible donor for Leo. The HLA markers don't match closely enough for a successful transplant."

William's hands shook as he gripped the arms of his chair. "But I'm his father. How is that possible?"

"Genetics can be unpredictable," Dr. Martinez said gently. "Being a biological parent doesn't guarantee compatibility. We need at least a six-antigen match for bone marrow transplantation, and you're only matching on two."

"What about other family members?" I asked, though the words felt like glass in my throat.

"We've tested Monica, but as the mother, she's also not compatible. Siblings would be the best option, but Leo is an only child." The doctor paused, consulting his notes. "There is one other possibility we could explore."

William leaned forward desperately. "Anything. Whatever it takes."

"It's called a savior sibling. We could use IVF technology to create embryos, then screen them genetically to find one that would be compatible with Leo. It's complex, and there are significant ethical considerations, but it has been successful in similar cases."

The room went dead silent. I felt the blood drain from my face as the implications hit me.

"You mean..." William's voice was barely a whisper.

"You and Monica would need to conceive another child through in vitro fertilization. We'd screen the embryos and implant only one that matches Leo's genetic markers. The umbilical cord blood from that baby could save Leo's life."

I stood up so quickly my chair scraped against the floor. "Excuse me."

I made it to the hallway before my legs gave out. Leaning against the wall, I tried to process what I'd just heard. William wanted to have another baby with his ex-girlfriend. He wanted to create a child specifically to harvest its genetic material.

The hospital corridor blurred as tears I'd been holding back for days finally spilled over. Nurses walked past, their soft-soled shoes squeaking against the linoleum, but I felt completely alone.

"Chloe." William's voice made me look up. He stood in the doorway of the doctor's office, his face pale but determined. "We need to talk about this."

"Talk about what?" I wiped my eyes with the back of my hand. "Talk about how you want to impregnate another woman to save the son you never told me about?"

"It's not like that." He moved closer, lowering his voice. "It's a medical procedure. It's about saving Leo's life."

"It's about you having another child with Monica." The name felt like poison on my tongue.

"Chloe, look at me." His hands settled on my shoulders, and I hated that part of me still found comfort in his touch. "Leo looks exactly like I did as a child. Exactly. My mother has the photos to prove it. He's a Fitzgerald, there's no question about that."

"Then why won't you do a paternity test?" The question had been burning in my mind since the night of our anniversary. "If you're so certain, if it's so obvious, why not just prove it?"

William's grip tightened, and something dark flashed in his eyes. "Because I don't need to prove anything to anyone. Least of all to my own wife."

"I'm not asking you to prove it to me," I said, trying to keep my voice steady. "I'm asking you to prove it for the medical records. For the insurance. For—"

"For what, Chloe?" His voice turned cold, the tone he used with subordinates who questioned his decisions. "So you can find some technicality to get out of helping save a child's life? So you can sleep better at night knowing you let an innocent boy die because you were too suspicious and petty to—"

"Stop." The word came out sharper than I intended. "Don't you dare turn this around on me."

"Turn what around?" He stepped back, his expression shifting into that familiar mask of righteous indignation. "I'm asking my wife to support me through the most difficult decision of my life. I'm asking you to help me save my son. And you're questioning whether he's even mine?"

The accusation hit like a slap. "William, I just think—"

"You think what? That I'm lying? That Monica is lying? That we're all conspiring to trick you into... what exactly?" His voice rose, echoing off the hospital walls. "Do you hear yourself right now? A child is dying, and you're worried about DNA tests and technicalities."

I felt the familiar shame creeping in, the way it always did when William used that tone. The way he made me feel small and selfish and wrong for having perfectly reasonable concerns.

"That's not what I—"

"It's exactly what you're doing." He turned away from me, running his hands through his hair. "I thought I married someone with compassion. Someone who would stand by me when things got difficult. But apparently, I was wrong."

The words cut deep, designed to wound. But beneath the hurt, something else stirred. A small, quiet voice that whispered this wasn't about compassion at all.

This was about control.

"I need time to think," I said finally.

William's laugh was bitter. "Time to think about whether we should save a dying child? How much time do you need, Chloe? Because Leo doesn't have much left."

I walked away before I could say something I'd regret. But as I reached the elevator, I heard him call after me.

"He's my son, Chloe. With or without your blessing, I'm going to save him."

The elevator doors closed between us, and I saw my reflection in the polished steel. The woman staring back at me looked hollow, defeated.

But for the first time in five years of marriage, she also looked like she was starting to see clearly.

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