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My Husband Tampered with My Pregnancies to Protect His Mistress Novel Cover

My Husband Tampered with My Pregnancies to Protect His Mistress

The fever hit me like a wave crashing over my head. 102°F. My skin felt like it was burning from the inside out, every inch of me radiating heat that seemed to have nowhere to go. I lay in our bed—Frederick's bed, really, since he paid for everything—and tried to remember the last time I'd felt this sick. It had been months ago, after the seventh miscarriage. The doctor had called it a stress reaction, as though my body's failure to carry a child was somehow my fault. I pressed my thumb against the inside of my wrist, that small gesture I'd developed over years of learning to contain myself, and waited for the room to stop spinning. The phone rang at 2:17 AM. I knew the exact time because the digital clock on Frederick's nightstand glowed red in the darkness, numbers sharp enough to cut. My hand shook as I reached for the device, and I could hear the weakness in my own voice when I answered.
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Chapter 2

The call came on a Tuesday.

I was in the kitchen when my father's number lit up the screen. He never called in the middle of the day. My stomach tightened as I answered.

"Arlette." His voice was warm, a little puzzled. "Did you hire someone to drive me to my appointments?"

I set down my coffee cup. "What?"

"A young man. Very polite. He was waiting outside this morning with a car. Said he was arranged by a friend of yours." A pause. "He knew my doctor's name, sweetheart. And the address."

I kept my voice easy. "That's good, Dad. Let him drive you."

After I hung up, I stood at the kitchen window for a moment. Then I picked up the burner phone.

Nicolas answered on the second ring.

"My father called me," I said.

"I know."

"You didn't tell me."

"It's already done."

The line was quiet. I looked out at the city below, all that glass and steel catching the morning light.

"Okay," I said, and ended the call.

I didn't thank him. There was nothing to say. He had moved a piece on the board without asking, and the piece was my father, and it was the right move. That was all.

I pressed my thumb against the inside of my wrist and went back to my coffee.

---

Frederick came home that Friday with peonies.

Pink ones, my favorite. He knew that. He had always known that, filed it away somewhere in that precise mind of his alongside everything else he'd catalogued about me — the things that would keep me soft, keep me grateful, keep me exactly where he needed me.

"Happy anniversary," he said, and kissed my temple.

I smiled up at him. "You remembered."

"I always remember." He set the flowers on the counter and loosened his tie, and for a moment he looked almost human — tired in a way that had nothing to do with performance. "It's been a long week."

"Sit down," I said. "I'll get you a drink."

I poured his Scotch and watched him settle into the chair by the window, the city spread out behind him like a backdrop. He looked at home there. He always looked at home everywhere, which was one of the first things I'd loved about him — that ease, that certainty. I used to think it meant he was safe.

I brought him the glass and sat across from him, and we talked about nothing. His meetings. A gallery opening next week. Whether we should go to the Hamptons in August. I said the right things at the right moments. I laughed when he was dry and quiet when he was tired. I had been doing this for years. I was very good at it.

Inside, I was writing it all down.

Not literally. But somewhere behind my eyes, in the part of me that had gone cold and clear the night I sat in his study with a fever and a tablet and the truth, I was cataloguing every gesture. The way he touched my hand across the table. The specific warmth he performed when he looked at me. The flowers, still in their paper on the counter, already beginning to drink up the water I'd put them in.

Evidence. All of it. Not of love. Of craft.

---

Three nights later, I woke up screaming.

It was Atlas. It was always Atlas in those dreams — his face, his hands, the particular way he used to press a coin between his fingers when he was scared. In the dream he was in a hospital bed and I was on the other side of a glass wall and I couldn't get to him no matter how hard I hit the glass.

Frederick was there before I'd fully surfaced. His arms came around me, solid and warm, and his voice was low against my hair. "I've got you. You're here. You're safe."

I let myself shake against him. I let him hold me. I pressed my face into his shoulder and breathed through it, and he stroked my back in slow circles the way he always did, and said, "He's at peace, Arlette. He's not in pain anymore."

I nodded into his shirt.

He kissed the top of my head. "You're the only stability I have," he murmured. "You know that."

I closed my eyes.

You accelerated his death. You tampered with his care. You made sure he would not recover because a grieving sister is easier to control than one with a living brother watching over her.

I said nothing. I let Frederick hold me until my breathing steadied, and then I lay back down, and he tucked the blanket around me with a gentleness that was so practiced it was almost beautiful.

I pressed my thumb against my wrist in the dark and waited for him to fall asleep.

---

The call came the following Wednesday. I heard Frederick's phone buzz twice in the other room, and then his voice dropped — that particular drop, the one I'd learned to recognize over years of not letting myself recognize it.

He appeared in the doorway of the dining room twenty minutes before our reservation. "I have to cancel tonight."

I looked up from the table I'd already set. Two plates. The good candles. A bottle of the Burgundy he liked.

"Is everything alright?" I asked.

"Paulina received a threatening letter." His jaw was tight. "I need to go to her."

"Of course," I said.

He was already reaching for his jacket. "Don't wait up."

The door closed. I sat at the table for a long moment, looking at the two plates, the two glasses, the candles I hadn't lit yet.

Then I lit them.

I served myself and I ate, slowly, in the quiet of the penthouse. The food was good. I had made it carefully. Outside, the city hummed its indifferent hum, and the candles threw small warm circles of light across the tablecloth.

I let myself feel it. All of it. The full shape of what had been done to me — not just tonight, not just the canceled dinner and the woman he'd run to, but all of it. Nine pregnancies. Atlas's face behind the glass. Years of a marriage that was never a marriage, built on a certificate that was never real, held together by my love and his calculation.

I pressed Atlas's coin between my fingers until my knuckles went white.

I sat with it until the candles burned low.

Then I blew them out, opened my laptop, and spent the next two hours copying financial records — transfers, shell accounts, the quiet architecture of everything Frederick had built and everything he stood to lose.

I sent the files to Nicolas at midnight.

He acknowledged receipt with a single word: *Good.*

I closed the laptop and went to bed. I slept without dreaming.

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