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His Mistress Tried to Kill Me Novel Cover

His Mistress Tried to Kill Me

The roar of jet engines died as our plane touched down at JFK. I gazed out the window at the familiar skyline of New York City, my fingers instinctively reaching for the wedding ring on my left hand—a habit that had become my anchor in uncertain moments. "Are you ready?" Ronan's voice was soft beside me, his hand warm as it covered mine. I nodded, though my heart hammered against my ribs. "As ready as I'll ever be." Two years ago, I'd fled this city a broken woman. Now I was returning as someone else entirely—Gabriella Mitchell, wife of Ronan Mitchell, mother to our two-year-old son Felix. The haute couture Valentino suit I wore was armor of my own choosing, nothing like the designer dresses Greyson once selected for me. "Mommy, where are we?" Felix's innocent voice pulled me from my thoughts as he pressed his face against the window. "We're in New York, sweetheart," I explained, smoothing his dark curls. "We're here to say goodbye to Grandpa." Felix's eyes—so like Ronan's—widened with confusion.
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Chapter 3

The air in the restroom was so thick with his presence I could taste it—expensive cologne, rain, and the metallic tang of my own terror. Barrett didn’t blink. He didn’t move. He simply existed in my space, a monolith of dark intent that sucked the oxygen from the room.

"Hello, Leona."

The name hit me like a physical blow. Five years of burying that girl, drowning her in the Atlantic, suffocating her under layers of French vowels and acrylic paint, and he resurrected her with two words. My knees buckled, but I locked them, refusing to slide down the marble vanity.

"I don't know who you're talking about," I whispered, though the tremor in my voice betrayed me.

Barrett’s eyes, chips of flint in the harsh fluorescent light, softened terrifyingly. It wasn't kindness. It was the look a collector gives a prized artifact that has been recovered from a fire—damaged, but still his. He reached into his jacket pocket. I flinched, expecting a weapon, a tranquilizer, something violent.

Instead, he pulled out a sleek, black burner phone and set it gently on the counter between us.

"Emily doesn't exist," he said, his voice low and smooth, like velvet wrapped around a razor blade. "Emily is a fraud with a forged passport and a stolen social security number. The French authorities take identity theft very seriously. Deportation is swift. And once you’re back on American soil... well."

He didn't finish the sentence. He didn't have to. The implication hung in the air: *You belong to me.*

"Dinner," he said. "Tomorrow night. Eight o'clock. L’Ambroisie. Private room four."

"I won't go," I choked out.

"You will," he corrected, adjusting his cufflinks—a nervous tic I remembered with sickening clarity. "Or by sunrise on Sunday, 'Emily' will be in a holding cell at Charles de Gaulle, and Leona Fisher will be headlines news again. The choice is yours, *mon amour*."

He leaned in one last time, brushing a stray hair from my forehead. His fingers were cold. "I've missed you."

Then he unlocked the door and walked out, leaving me shivering in the silence of the restroom, the black phone sitting on the marble like a grenade waiting to detonate.

***

I didn't remember the taxi ride. I only remembered the rain blurring the lights of Paris into streaks of blood and gold. By the time I hammered on Vanessa’s door, my dress was soaked through, and I was gasping for air like I was back in the ocean.

Vanessa opened the door, a mug of tea in one hand, her hair wrapped in a towel. Her smile vanished the second she saw my face.

"Emily? What the hell happened?"

I pushed past her, stumbling into the warmth of her small apartment. It smelled of sage and drying clay—safety. I collapsed onto her worn velvet sofa, my teeth chattering so hard I thought they might crack.

"He found me," I sobbed. "He found me, Ness."

She was beside me in an instant, gripping my shoulders. "Who found you? That guy from the gallery? Marcus?"

"No." I looked up at her, seeing the confusion in her kind eyes. I had to kill the lie. "My name isn't Emily."

The confession poured out of me like poison. The trailer park. The rain. The penthouse. The five years of gilded cages and psychological warfare. The yacht. The razor blade in the hem of my dress.

Vanessa listened in silence, her face paling as the horror of my reality sank in. When I finished, the room was quiet except for the drumming of rain against the windowpane.

"Barrett Stone," she whispered, testing the name. "The billionaire whose fiancée drowned three years ago. I remember seeing that on the news. They said it was a tragedy."

"It was an escape," I said, hugging my knees to my chest. "And now he wants me back."

Vanessa stood up, her jaw set. She walked to the door and engaged all three locks, then dragged a heavy chair under the handle. "He's not taking you anywhere. We'll go to the police."

"He owns the police," I said dully. "He owns everything. If I don't meet him, he'll destroy this life. He'll deport me. He'll... he might hurt you."

Vanessa turned, fierce and blazing. "Let him try. You are not going back to him, Leona. You survived drowning. You can survive a dinner."

***

L’Ambroisie was a fortress of luxury, nestled in the Place des Vosges. The private room was dim, lit only by candles that flickered against the tapestries. Barrett was already there, seated at the head of a small table set for two. He stood when I entered, his movements fluid and predatory.

I wore a high-necked black dress—armor. I didn't sit. I stood by the door, clutching my purse until my knuckles turned white.

"Sit, please," he said, gesturing to the chair.

I remained standing. "Say what you want to say, Barrett."

He sighed, a sound of immense, weary sadness that almost—*almost*—made me falter. He looked thinner in the candlelight, the shadows under his eyes speaking of sleepless nights.

"I don't want to own you, Leona," he said softly. "I never did. I wanted to protect you. The world... it's cruel to things as beautiful as you."

"You were the cruelty," I shot back.

He flinched. "Was I? Did you ever want for anything? Did I not give you a life most women would kill for? And you... you killed yourself to get away from me."

He took a step toward me, his voice cracking. "Do you know what that did to me? To wake up every morning for three years thinking I had failed you? Thinking you were cold and alone at the bottom of the sea because I hadn't loved you enough?"

The pain in his voice sounded so real. My chest tightened. A treacherous whisper rose in the back of my mind: *Maybe I broke him. Maybe he really did love me in his own twisted way.* It was the sickness talking, the Stockholm syndrome rearing its head.

"You didn't love me," I said, my voice shaking. "You collected me."

"I worshipped you!" he roared, slamming his hand on the table. The silverware rattled.

I flinched back against the door. He froze, seeing the fear in my eyes. He took a deep breath, visibly reigning in the monster. When he spoke again, his voice was a whisper.

"I just want to know you're safe. I just want to be near you. Let me prove it. No cages. No locks. Just... let me be in your life."

He looked at me with such raw, desperate hope that for a second, just a second, I forgot the cage. I forgot the fear. I only saw a man who had mourned me for three years.

And that was the most dangerous trap of all.

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