
Losing Baby to His Mistress
Chapter 3
Danny's face shifted from shock to something harder, colder. He straightened his tie with deliberate slowness, his jaw setting in that familiar way that meant he was about to turn this around on me somehow.
"How long what?" His voice carried no shame, no remorse—only irritation at being interrupted. "How long have you been spying on me?"
The audacity of his response hit me like a physical blow. "Spying? I came to see my husband at his office and found him with his tongue down his secretary's throat!"
Luciana stepped out from behind the desk, her fingers working to button her blouse with maddening composure. She didn't look embarrassed or guilty—she looked triumphant, like she'd finally won some game I didn't even know we were playing.
"Danny, maybe you should handle this," she said, her voice dripping with false concern. "Ashley seems... upset."
Upset. As if I were having some irrational emotional outburst instead of catching my husband in the act of adultery.
"Don't you dare speak to me," I snapped, my voice shaking with a rage I'd never felt before. "Don't you dare pretend this is about me being upset."
Danny moved between us, but not to protect me—to protect her. "Ashley, you're making a scene. Let's discuss this at home."
"No." The word came out stronger than I'd expected. "We're discussing this now. How long, Danny? How long have you been sleeping with her while I've been—" I stopped myself before mentioning the cancer, the pregnancy, the choice I'd made alone.
"While you've been what?" His eyes narrowed. "Sitting at home feeling sorry for yourself? Luciana understands what I'm trying to build here. She supports my ambitions instead of constantly needing attention."
Each word was a knife, precise and cruel. Behind him, Luciana smoothed her hair and adjusted her skirt, watching me with barely concealed satisfaction.
"I want a divorce," I said, the words tumbling out before I could stop them.
Danny laughed—actually laughed. "Right. And go where, Ashley? Do what? You have no job, no money of your own, no skills beyond arranging flowers and making small talk at company parties."
The dismissal in his voice, the casual cruelty of reducing five years of marriage to my inadequacies, made my hands shake. But it was Luciana's soft chuckle that pushed me over the edge.
"Honestly, Ashley," she said, her tone syrupy sweet, "you should be grateful Danny stayed with you as long as he did. I mean, what exactly do you bring to the table?"
"Luciana," Danny warned, but there was no real censure in his voice.
"No, let her talk," I said, my voice deadly quiet. "Let her explain what she brings to the table besides spreading her legs in your office."
Luciana's mask slipped for just a moment, revealing something vicious underneath. "At least I don't bore him to tears every night. At least I don't cling to him like some pathetic housewife who peaked in college."
She stepped closer, emboldened by Danny's silence. "Do you want to know what he really thinks about you, Ashley? How he complains about your neediness, your constant attempts to get his attention? How he rolls his eyes when you try to be sexy, how he wishes you'd just disappear sometimes?"
Each word was calculated, designed to wound. And they hit their mark. I felt something inside me crumble, the last remnants of hope I'd been clinging to.
"He told me about your little attempts at romance," she continued, her voice dropping to a whisper that somehow felt more intimate than shouting. "The pathetic lingerie, the way you wait up for him like a puppy. It's embarrassing, really."
I looked at Danny, waiting for him to deny it, to defend me, to show some shred of the man I'd married. But he stood there in silence, his face impassive, letting his mistress destroy what was left of my dignity.
That silence hurt more than the affair itself.
I turned and walked toward the door, my legs unsteady but my resolve crystallizing into something hard and unbreakable. Behind me, I heard Luciana's heels clicking on the marble floor.
"Ashley, wait," she called, her voice following me into the hallway. "We're not finished talking."
I kept walking toward the stairwell, desperate to escape, to get away from the poison she was spilling. But she grabbed my arm, her manicured nails digging into my skin.
"You need to understand something," she hissed, her mask completely gone now. "Danny is mine. He has been for months. You're just too pathetic to see it."
I tried to pull away, but her grip tightened. "He laughs about you, Ashley. About how you tried so hard to be the perfect wife while he was falling in love with someone else. Someone who actually matters."
"Let go of me," I said, but she stepped closer instead, backing me toward the stairs.
"You want to know the truth? He's been planning to leave you anyway. I just made it easier for him to see what he really wants."
I yanked my arm free, stumbling backward. For a moment, we stared at each other on the landing, her face twisted with triumph and something darker.
Then her hands shot out, shoving me hard in the chest.
Time slowed as I fell backward, my feet tangling as I tried to catch myself. The marble stairs rose up to meet me, each edge sharp and unforgiving. I hit the third step with my shoulder, the fourth with my ribs, the impact driving the air from my lungs. My head cracked against the metal railing on the fifth step, stars exploding behind my eyes.
I came to rest on the landing below, my body a symphony of pain. Above me, I heard Luciana's voice, high and concerned: "Oh my God! Someone help! She tripped!"
Footsteps echoed in the stairwell as people rushed to help. Through the ringing in my ears, I heard Danny's voice, but he wasn't asking if I was okay. He was asking Luciana what happened.
"She just lost her balance," Luciana was saying, her voice shaking with false distress. "She was so upset, she wasn't watching where she was going."
As hands helped me sit up, as voices asked if I could move, if I needed an ambulance, I stared up at the woman who had just tried to eliminate me entirely. She stood beside my husband, her hand on his arm in a gesture of comfort, her face a perfect mask of concern.
And I finally understood exactly how far she was willing to go to win.
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