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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 3

Three weeks. That was how long it took to build a case that would end a man.

I moved carefully. I always moved carefully now — that was the thing about going cold, about letting the warmth drain out and something else take its place. You stopped rushing. You stopped reacting. You became very, very patient.

Every morning I kissed Frederick's cheek and handed him his coffee and watched him leave. Every evening I was exactly where he expected me to be. And in between, I worked.

The board communications were the easiest. Frederick kept printed copies in the second drawer of his study, filed by quarter, because he didn't trust digital records for anything sensitive. He'd told me that once, almost proudly. I'd nodded and filed it away. Now I photographed each page with my personal phone, the one he didn't know about, the one I kept in the lining of my winter coat in the back of the closet.

The offshore transfers were harder. Those lived in a secondary accounting system I'd only glimpsed twice — once when Frederick left his laptop open by accident, once when I'd been asked to pull a wire confirmation and stumbled into the wrong folder. I didn't rush it. I waited until I understood the pattern, and then I copied what I needed.

The dead drops were Nicolas's design. A locker at a midtown gym I'd joined three weeks ago, paying cash for a month's membership. A specific shelf in a used bookstore on West 72nd — third row from the bottom, behind a water-damaged copy of a Steinbeck novel nobody ever touched. I never handed him anything directly. We had agreed on that in the first meeting. No visible connection. No trail.

I found I was good at this. Better than I should have been, maybe. But I had spent years learning to move through Frederick's world without disturbing it, to be present without being noticed, to exist in the margins of his attention. It turned out those were exactly the skills you needed to dismantle someone.

I pressed my thumb against my wrist and kept going.

---

The third in-person meeting was at a coffee shop in Midtown, the kind of anonymous place where nobody looked at anyone else. Nicolas was already there when I arrived, the documents spread across the table in a neat grid, his coffee half-finished.

I sat down and we got to work. That was how it always went — no preamble, no small talk. I had come to appreciate that about him. He didn't perform ease the way Frederick did. He just was what he was.

My hands were shaking. They did that sometimes now, a tremor I couldn't always control, something the fever had left behind or maybe something older than the fever. I kept them below the table when I could.

Nicolas glanced up from the transfer records. He looked at my hands for exactly one second. Then he reached across the table and slid a second coffee cup toward me — I hadn't asked for one, hadn't even looked at the counter — and went back to the documents without a word.

I looked at the cup.

It was a small thing. An absurdly small thing. But something in my chest shifted, some tight-wound piece of me that had been braced for so long it had forgotten what it was bracing against. I picked up the cup. I kept working.

Neither of us mentioned it.

---

Paulina's first message came on a Thursday.

*He'll never touch you the way you want him to, sweetheart.*

I read it twice. Then I saved it to a folder I'd labeled, with a certain dark humor, *Receipts.*

She was emboldened. I could see it — the way Frederick's protection had calcified around her, made her feel untouchable. She had watched me absorb years of quiet diminishment and she had mistaken my stillness for weakness. That was her error. I had no interest in correcting it.

The messages kept coming. Little cruelties, precisely aimed. *I heard the nursery is still empty. That must be so hard for you.* And then: *Atlas always seemed so fragile, didn't he? Some people just aren't built to last.*

That one I read standing in the kitchen, the morning light coming through the window, my coffee going cold in my hand. I felt something move through me — not grief, not rage, something older and quieter than either. I pressed Atlas's coin between my fingers until the edge bit into my palm.

Then I saved the message and put my phone away.

The family dinner was a Friday. Paulina arrived in white, as always — that deliberate, practiced innocence she wore like a costume. She touched her collarbone when she greeted me. I smiled.

She waited until the second course. A comment about how *some women* found their purpose outside of motherhood, delivered to the table at large with a soft, sympathetic tilt of her head. Her eyes found mine for just a moment — checking, measuring, looking for the flinch.

I gave her nothing. I smiled the way I had learned to smile in this house, warm and unreadable, and said something gracious about the wine.

Frederick didn't notice. He never noticed, when it came to Paulina. That was the point.

I noticed everything.

Every message. Every veiled comment. Every performance of fragility that concealed the venom underneath. I was building something, and she was helping me build it, and she had absolutely no idea.

Later that night, after Frederick fell asleep, I opened my laptop and added the dinner to my notes. Time, location, witnesses, exact wording. I was meticulous about the exact wording.

I thought about the shareholder meeting. Six weeks away. The presentation I would be asked to prepare, because I was always asked to prepare the presentations, because I was reliable and thorough and Paulina couldn't be expected to handle the details.

I thought about what I was going to put inside it.

I pressed my thumb against my wrist and smiled in the dark — not the smile I wore at dinner, not the one I'd learned to perform. A real one. Small and cold and entirely my own.

Six weeks.

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