
His Mistress Wore My Wedding Ring
Chapter 1
My alarm hadn't even gone off yet when I felt it—that familiar wave of nausea that had been my morning companion for the past two weeks. I slipped out from under the covers, careful not to wake James, and made my silent dash to the bathroom. Our Capitol Hill apartment was still bathed in pre-dawn shadows as I knelt on the cool tile floor, my body betraying the secret I'd been harboring.
When the sickness passed, I splashed cold water on my face and caught my reflection in the mirror—eyes bright despite the early hour, cheeks flushed with a mixture of lingering nausea and barely contained excitement. My hand instinctively moved to my still-flat stomach.
A baby. Our baby.
I reached into the cabinet beneath the sink where I'd hidden the pregnancy test—three tests, actually, because I couldn't quite believe it the first two times. All positive. After five years of supporting James through his residency and early career, of putting my jewelry design dreams on hold, this felt like the universe's way of saying it was finally our time.
Back in our bedroom, James slept soundly, unaware that his world was about to change. I watched him for a moment—his dark hair tousled against the pillow, his face relaxed in sleep—and felt a surge of love so intense it nearly brought tears to my eyes. Today was the day I would tell him everything.
"Sleep well, Dr. Mitchell," I whispered, slipping the pregnancy test into my purse before heading to the kitchen to make coffee I wouldn't drink.
---
Seattle traffic was its usual snarl of impatience and brake lights. I barely noticed, rehearsing different versions of my announcement as I navigated toward Seattle General. Should I be direct? Playful? I'd stopped at a florist for a small bouquet of lilies—James's favorite—and my fingers kept returning to my purse where the test waited.
"Dr. Mitchell, you're about to get a promotion... to daddy."
No, too cheesy.
"Remember how we always said we'd start trying after your cardiology fellowship? Well, someone had other plans..."
I practiced my smile in the rearview mirror at a stoplight, imagining the look on his face. Would he cry? James wasn't usually emotional, but this—this was different. This was everything.
The hospital parking garage was crowded, but I found a spot on the third level. I checked my watch: 12:15. Perfect timing for his lunch break. We'd meet at the hospital café like we occasionally did when I surprised him, except today's surprise was bigger than any before.
My heels clicked against the polished floors as I made my way through the familiar hallways. Nurses and staff I'd come to know over the years smiled and nodded as I passed. I clutched the lilies in one hand and my purse—with its precious cargo—in the other.
The cardiology department was quieter than usual. I rounded the corner toward James's office, my heart fluttering with anticipation. Just a few more steps and—
I froze.
Through the half-open door of my husband's office, I could see them. James, his back to the door, his white coat discarded over his chair. And pressed against him, her slender arms wrapped around his neck, was a woman I recognized immediately: Chloe Stevens, the new intern who'd started a few months ago. Their lips were locked in a kiss that spoke of familiarity, of passion, of time.
My bouquet trembled in my suddenly weak grip. The sound of hushed voices behind me penetrated the ringing in my ears.
"That's his wife," a nurse whispered to another. "Poor thing."
"How long has it been going on?" the other asked.
"Months. Everyone knows except her."
I couldn't breathe. Couldn't move. Inside James's office, I heard Chloe's voice, low and intimate.
"I missed you last night," she murmured. "Your messages weren't enough."
"I know," James replied, his voice tender in a way I hadn't heard in too long. "But I'm all yours this weekend. I already told Miranda I'm covering an extra shift."
The lilies slipped from my fingers, scattering across the polished floor like the pieces of my heart. I backed away, one hand pressed against my mouth to hold in the sob that threatened to escape. The pregnancy test felt like it was burning a hole through my purse—a cruel joke from a universe I'd mistakenly believed was finally on my side.
Without confronting them, without letting them see me, I turned and fled. My vision blurred with tears as I pushed past curious onlookers, past the life I thought we were building, past the future that had shattered in an instant.
In the safety of my car, I finally let the tears come. My hand moved instinctively to my stomach again, but this time with a new emotion—fierce protection. This child would never know rejection. Would never feel second-best.
Even if that meant James would never know about them at all.
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