
My Husband Threatened My Dying Grandmother to Protect His Mistress
Chapter 3
The morning light in the guest room was grey and unforgiving, filtering through blinds that hadn't been dusted in weeks. I stood before the mirror, my silk robe pooling at my feet, inspecting the damage. The bruises on my arm from Kingston’s grip at the gala were fading into sickly yellows, but the scar on my chest remained vibrant—a jagged, raised ridge of keloid tissue that ran from my collarbone to the swell of my breast. A permanent souvenir from a basement in Queens ten years ago.
The door didn't creak. It just swung open.
I gasped, clutching the robe to my chest, but I wasn't fast enough. Brielle stood in the doorway, a mug of herbal tea steaming in her hands. She wasn't looking at my face. Her gaze was fixed on my exposed skin.
"Oh," she said, her voice dripping with faux sympathy. "I didn't realize it was so... visible."
"Get out," I snapped, tying the sash with trembling fingers.
"Kingston never mentioned it was that bad," she mused, stepping into the room uninvited. "It looks like a road map. Or a mistake."
She turned on her heel and walked out, leaving the door wide open. A warning shot.
***
Breakfast was a battlefield. The silence was thick enough to choke on. Kingston was reading the *Wall Street Journal*, ignoring the tension radiating off me. Brielle picked at a bowl of oatmeal, her eyes darting between us.
"Kingston," she said, her voice soft, innocent. "I saw Mira changing this morning."
My fork clattered against my plate. Kingston didn't look up. "And?"
"That mark on her chest," she continued, leaning forward, her eyes wide with manufactured concern. "Is that why you never touch her anymore? It must be so hard for you to look at. Like damaged goods."
The air left my lungs. I looked at Kingston, my heart hammering against the very scar she was mocking. He knew. He knew how I got it. He knew I had taken that knife because I was fighting to get back to *him*. He was the only person who had ever kissed it, told me it was a badge of survival.
"Kingston," I whispered, pleading with him to shut her down. To be the man he used to be.
He lowered the newspaper slowly. He looked at me, his hazel eyes sweeping over my high-collared blouse. There was no warmth. No memory of the nights he’d held me while I cried about the nightmares.
"It is unfortunate," he muttered, turning the page. "Pass the sugar, Brielle."
Something inside me fractured. It wasn't a loud break, just a quiet, structural failure of the soul.
***
Three days later, the rain was lashing against the penthouse windows, turning the city into a blur of grey static. It was 3:00 AM when the pounding on my door started.
"Mira! Wake up!"
I stumbled out of bed, disoriented. Brielle was in the hallway, clutching her stomach, her face twisted in agony.
"The baby," she groaned. "I need strawberries. Specifically the organic ones from Dean & DeLuca. The acidity settles my stomach."
I rubbed my eyes. "Brielle, it’s three in the morning. Dean & DeLuca is closed. Go back to sleep."
"I can't!" she shrieked. "If I don't eat, I get sick. If I get sick, the baby gets stressed! Do you want to kill Kingston's heir?"
"I am not your servant," I said, my voice hard. I turned to go back into my room.
Behind me, there was a thud and a scream. "My ankle!"
The master bedroom door flew open. Kingston emerged, shirtless and furious. He saw Brielle crumpled on the floor and me standing over her.
"What did you do?" he roared, rushing to her side.
"She wouldn't help me," Brielle sobbed into his chest. "I felt dizzy... I asked for help... she just stared at me..."
Kingston looked up at me, his face contorted with disgust. "You petty, jealous bitch. You'd let a pregnant woman fall?"
"She threw herself down!" I shouted, pointing at her. "She wants strawberries at 3 AM!"
"Then get them," Kingston snarled. He stood up, lifting Brielle into his arms. "Go. Don't come back until you have them. And walk. You need time to think about your attitude."
"It's pouring rain!"
"Go!" he bellowed.
I walked thirty blocks in the freezing rain to an all-night bodega that sold overpriced, bruised fruit. By the time I returned, soaked to the bone, the penthouse was dark. The strawberries rotted on the counter for three days before the maid threw them out.
***
The final blow came on a Tuesday. I was in the library, staring at the rain, when my phone buzzed. It was Dr. Aris from Mount Sinai.
"Miss Kennedy," his voice was grave. "Eleanor has gone into septic shock. We need to operate immediately to drain the infection, but the authorization form requires the primary benefactor's signature. The new protocols Mr. Hayes instituted... we can't proceed without his direct approval."
"Do it!" I screamed. "Just do it!"
"I can't. Legal will shut us down. I need Mr. Hayes on the line. Now."
I dialed Kingston. Straight to voicemail. I dialed again. Voicemail.
Panic, cold and sharp, flooded my veins. I called his assistant, who hesitantly told me he was at a private clinic uptown. A 4D ultrasound appointment.
I called Kingston a third time. He picked up on the first ring.
"Kingston!" I gasped. "Grandmother—she needs surgery, right now. Dr. Aris needs your—"
"For God's sake, Mira," Kingston sighed. In the background, I heard the rhythmic *whoosh-whoosh* of a fetal heartbeat monitor. "We are in the middle of seeing our son's face for the first time."
"She’s dying, Kingston! She needs a signature!"
"You always do this," he said, his voice dropping to a harsh whisper. "Every time Brielle and I have a moment, you manufacture a crisis. It’s pathetic."
"This isn't a game! Please!"
"I'll deal with it when I'm done. Don't call again."
The line went dead.
I stared at the phone, the silence of the library deafening, while across town, the machines keeping my grandmother alive waited for a permission slip from a man who didn't care if she lived or died.
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