
My Husband Threatened My Dying Grandmother to Protect His Mistress
Chapter 2
The guest room was supposed to be my temporary retreat, but when I pushed open the door, the air already felt violated. Brielle stood by the dresser, her fingers tracing the delicate inlay of Grandmother Eleanor’s vintage music box. It was the only piece of my past I had managed to salvage from the Master Suite—a fragile wooden vessel that played *La Vie en Rose*, the song Eleanor hummed when the machines at Mount Sinai weren't beeping too loudly.
"Put it down," I said, my voice tight.
Brielle turned, the box cradled in her palms. Her smile was a razor blade wrapped in silk. "It’s lovely, Mira. A bit dusty, though. Does Kingston know you keep such old things?"
"It isn't yours." I took a step forward, hand outstretched. "Give it to me."
"You're so tense," she sighed, tilting her head. "It’s bad for the atmosphere. Bad for the baby."
She made a show of reaching out to hand it to me. But just as my fingertips grazed the wood, her hands went slack.
Time seemed to warp, stretching the moment into an agonizing eternity. I lunged, but I was too slow. The box hit the marble floor with a sickening *crack*. The wood splintered, and the tiny, gold-plated cylinder rolled free, its melody silenced forever among the scattered gears.
"No!" The scream tore from my throat before I could stop it. I dropped to my knees, gathering the broken shards, my vision blurring.
"What the hell is going on?" Kingston appeared in the doorway, his tie loosened, his presence filling the room like a storm front.
Brielle gasped, clutching her stomach and stumbling back against the dresser. "I... I was just admiring it, Kingston. She screamed at me. She startled me, and I dropped it. My heart is racing so fast..."
Kingston didn't look at the shattered heirloom. He didn't look at me, kneeling in the wreckage of my grandmother's legacy. He crossed the room in two strides and grabbed my upper arm, his fingers digging into the tender flesh hard enough to bruise.
"Are you insane?" he hissed, hauling me to my feet. "She is pregnant, Mira!"
"She threw it," I choked out, holding up a jagged piece of wood. "She destroyed Eleanor’s box on purpose!"
"It’s old junk!" Kingston roared, the veins in his neck bulging. He slapped the wood from my hand. It clattered to the floor. "Stop obsessing over garbage and start thinking about the stress you're causing the mother of my child."
I stared at him, the man I was supposed to marry, seeing only a stranger’s cruelty. "I can't stay here," I whispered. "I’m leaving."
I moved for the door, but Kingston was faster. He slammed his hand against the frame, blocking my exit. The fury in his eyes cooled into something far more dangerous: calculation.
"Go ahead," he said, his voice dropping to a terrifying calm. He reached into his jacket pocket and pulled out a folded document. He slapped it against my chest. "But read this first."
I unfolded the paper. It was a transfer order for the private care wing at Mount Sinai. Authorization to cease funding.
"Eleanor’s care costs forty thousand a month," Kingston stated, adjusting his cuffs. "If you walk out that door, or if you cause one more scene that upsets Brielle, I pull the funding. She’ll be transferred to a state facility by morning. I hear the nurse-to-patient ratio there is... unfortunate."
My blood ran cold. He wasn't just threatening me; he was holding a gun to my dying grandmother's head. "You wouldn't."
"Try me." He gestured toward Brielle, who was watching with wide, mock-terrified eyes. "Apologize to her. Now."
Every fiber of my being revolted. The scar on my chest burned. But the image of Eleanor, alone and neglected in a state ward, broke my resistance.
I turned to Brielle. She pulled out her phone, holding it up. "For posterity," she smirked.
"I'm sorry," I said, the words tasting like ash. "I shouldn't have yelled. It was an accident."
"Louder," Kingston commanded from the doorway.
"I'm sorry," I repeated, my voice cracking.
***
The humiliation didn't end at the penthouse. That evening, the Met Gala was a sea of flashbulbs and forced smiles. Kingston had insisted I attend to quell the rumors, yet he spent the entire cocktail hour with his hand on the small of Brielle’s back, guiding her through the crowd like she was porcelain.
I stood near a pillar, invisible in my white chiffon gown, clutching a glass of sparkling water.
"Oh, look, Kingston," Brielle chirped, approaching me. She held a large glass of Cabernet. "Mira looks so lonely."
Before I could step away, she stumbled. It was a practiced, theatrical trip. The red wine launched from her glass, an arc of crimson violence that splashed across the front of my white dress, soaking into the fabric like a fresh wound.
I gasped, the cold liquid seeping through to my skin. The chatter in the room died instantly.
"Oh, Mira!" Brielle cried out, her voice pitching to carry across the silent hall. "You're always so clumsy when you've had too much to drink! Look at you, you're a mess!"
A hundred eyes turned to me. I saw the whispers starting behind manicured hands. *The jilted bride. The drunk. The failure.*
"I haven't had a drop," I stammered, looking around for an ally. I found none.
Kingston was there in an instant, his grip returning to my bruised arm. "You are embarrassing me," he whispered harshly in my ear, his breath hot. "Get out."
He dragged me toward the exit, past the pitying stares of the people I had grown up with. He didn't offer me his jacket. He didn't call a car.
"Go home," he spat, shoving me through the heavy glass doors onto the sidewalk. "I have to stay and clean up your mess."
The doors swung shut, sealing the warmth and light inside. I stood on the curb, shivering in the biting New York wind, the wine stain drying into a dark, ugly scar on my chest, knowing that tonight, Kingston hadn't just stained a dress. He had tried to stain my soul.
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