
Framed by My Husband’s Mistress
Chapter 2
Five years. Five years since my world had shattered beneath the Gothic arches of St. Patrick's Cathedral. Five years since I'd lost my finger, my reputation, and nearly my life. Five years of hiding, healing, and hardening my heart.
Now, I was coming home.
LaGuardia Airport buzzed with activity as I guided my twins—Lily and Leo—through the terminal, their small hands clutched tightly in mine. My prosthetic finger pressed against Lily's palm, a constant reminder of everything that had been taken from me.
"Mommy, are there really tall buildings?" Leo asked, his wide eyes reflecting the same innocence I once possessed.
"The tallest," I promised, forcing a smile while scanning the exit for the car I'd arranged.
The moment we stepped through the sliding doors, camera flashes erupted like lightning. I instinctively pulled the twins closer, shielding their faces against my legs.
"Nina Sullivan! Is it true you're back for revenge?"
"Nina! Show us your hand!"
"Are those Zachary's children?"
The questions came like bullets, each one designed to wound. I kept my head high, my gaze forward, refusing to give them the satisfaction of seeing me flinch. My prosthetic finger—an elegant, custom piece Lucas had commissioned for me—gleamed in the flashing lights.
"This way," I murmured to the twins, guiding them toward the black SUV where my driver waited, door open.
Once inside, I exhaled slowly, watching Manhattan's skyline emerge through the window. The city that had witnessed my destruction would now witness my resurrection.
---
Three nights later, I stood before the mirror in my hotel suite, studying the woman I'd become. The Levinson Cancer Foundation Gala would be my first public appearance since returning. The navy blue suit I'd chosen was tailored perfectly—structured shoulders, a cinched waist, and a neckline that deliberately left visible the scar that ran from my collarbone to just below my ear.
I would hide nothing tonight.
"You look beautiful, Mommy," Lily said from where she sat on the bed, already in her pajamas.
I smiled at her reflection. "Thank you, sweetheart. Remember, if you need anything while I'm gone—"
"Call you right away," she finished, her serious little face a miniature of my own. "And don't open the door for anyone except Miss Rebecca."
I nodded, kissing both children goodnight before the nanny took over. Then, steeling myself, I headed for the elevator.
The Metropolitan Museum's Great Hall glittered with New York's elite when I arrived. Conversation faltered as I entered, a ripple of silence spreading like a stone dropped in still water. I felt the weight of every stare, heard the whispers that followed me like shadows.
"Is that really her?"
"Look at her hand..."
"I heard she's mentally unstable..."
I moved through the crowd with measured steps, accepting a champagne flute from a passing waiter. And then I saw them—Zachary and Tessa, standing beneath the grand staircase, a picture of success and betrayal.
Tessa wore a cream gown that hugged her figure, her hand possessively wrapped around Zachary's arm. When our eyes met across the room, her smile turned predatory. Zachary's face paled, his gaze dropping to my prosthetic finger before quickly looking away.
I raised my glass slightly in their direction, a silent declaration of war. The slight tremble in Tessa's hand as she clutched her champagne tighter was all the victory I needed for tonight.
Later, as I slipped away from the gala, I caught a glimpse of Tessa whispering urgently to a society columnist, her eyes darting venomously in my direction.
I knew what tomorrow would bring.
---
The headlines screamed across every tabloid the next morning:
"SULLIVAN HEIRESS RETURNS: MENTALLY UNSTABLE AND SEEKING ATTENTION"
"TESSA ELLIS CONCERNED FOR NIECE AND NEPHEW: 'NINA IS USING THOSE CHILDREN'"
I stared at Tessa's carefully crafted quotes, each word dripping with false concern and calculated cruelty. She'd wasted no time launching her smear campaign, painting me as an unfit mother, a mentally damaged woman seeking attention.
My phone vibrated with a text from an unknown number:
*Did you really think you could come back and play victim? You should have stayed gone. For the children's sake.*
I set the phone down, my hand steady despite the rage building inside me. They thought I was the same naive, trusting woman they'd destroyed five years ago.
They had no idea what I'd become.
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