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My Groom’s Mistress Claimed She Was Carrying His Baby Novel Cover

My Groom’s Mistress Claimed She Was Carrying His Baby

The mirror in the Plaza Hotel’s bridal suite was an antique, the glass slightly warped at the edges, distorting my reflection just enough to make me look like a ghost. I smoothed the lace of my bodice for the hundredth time. My fingers were trembling. Not with excitement, but with a cold, creeping dread that had settled in my stomach three months ago and refused to leave. "Stop fidgeting, Oaklynn," my mother said, her voice tight as she adjusted my veil. She didn't look at me, only at the image of the Palmer daughter she was about to sell. "You look perfect. The Richardsons will be pleased." *Duty.* That was the word etched into my bones. I was the bridge between the fading elegance of the Palmer name and the raw, staggering wealth of the Richardson empire. I took a shallow breath, the corset biting into my ribs.
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Chapter 1

The mirror in the Plaza Hotel’s bridal suite was an antique, the glass slightly warped at the edges, distorting my reflection just enough to make me look like a ghost. I smoothed the lace of my bodice for the hundredth time. My fingers were trembling. Not with excitement, but with a cold, creeping dread that had settled in my stomach three months ago and refused to leave.

"Stop fidgeting, Oaklynn," my mother said, her voice tight as she adjusted my veil. She didn't look at me, only at the image of the Palmer daughter she was about to sell. "You look perfect. The Richardsons will be pleased."

*Duty.* That was the word etched into my bones. I was the bridge between the fading elegance of the Palmer name and the raw, staggering wealth of the Richardson empire. I took a shallow breath, the corset biting into my ribs. I tried to conjure an image of Colton—his smile, the way he’d held my hand at the engagement party—but all my mind supplied was the smell of bourbon on his breath during the rehearsal dinner and the way his eyes constantly darted over my shoulder, looking for someone more interesting.

"I just want to be happy, Mother," I whispered, the words feeling childish as soon as they left my lips.

She paused, her hands freezing on my shoulders. "Happiness is a byproduct of security, darling. Colton is a Richardson. He is the future. You do your duty, and you will be secure."

Somewhere down the hall, in the groom's suite, the future of the Richardson dynasty was likely nursing a hangover. I imagined Colton laughing with his groomsmen, making crude jokes about the 'old ball and chain' before the ink was even dry on the license. He treated this wedding like a merger acquisition he hadn't bothered to read the briefing for.

The ceremony began in a blur of white flowers and hushed whispers. The ballroom was suffocating, packed with New York’s elite, every eye a judgment, every smile a calculation. As I walked down the aisle, the heavy organ music vibrated in my chest. Colton stood at the altar. He looked handsome in his tuxedo, I’ll give him that, but his posture was loose, arrogant. He wasn't looking at me with love; he was looking at me like I was a prize he’d already won and grown bored with.

The priest began to speak, droning on about sanctity and eternal bonds. I stared at Colton’s hands. He was picking at a loose thread on his cuff.

Then, the heavy double doors at the back of the ballroom slammed open. The sound was like a gunshot.

Heads turned. A collective gasp sucked the air out of the room. Standing there, framed by the hallway light, was a woman in a crimson dress so tight it looked painted on. Ruby Barnes. I recognized her from the tabloids—a B-list actress with hungry eyes.

"Stop!" she shrieked, strutting down the aisle, one hand cradling a small, barely-there bump on her stomach. "You can't do this, Colton! You can't marry her when you’re carrying my baby!"

The silence that followed was absolute. It was the silence of a bomb counting down.

I froze. My blood turned to ice. I looked at Colton, expecting denial, expecting rage. Instead, his face broke into a relief that made me nauseous. He didn't look at me. He stepped off the altar, bypassing me entirely to meet her halfway down the aisle.

"Ruby," he said, his voice amplified by the lapel mic he’d forgotten to mute. "I told you to wait in the car."

"I couldn't let you do it, baby," she sobbed, throwing her arms around his neck, burying her face in his shoulder while casting a triumphant smirk directly at me. "Our child deserves a father."

Colton pulled back, keeping an arm around her waist. He turned to the crowd, to his grandfather, to me. He didn't look ashamed. He looked defiant. Emboldened.

"I can't lie anymore," Colton announced, his voice booming through the speakers. "I love Ruby. She’s carrying the true Richardson heir. The first great-grandchild."

He finally looked at me. His eyes were cold, empty of anything resembling remorse. "Oaklynn, look, we’re adults. The merger still needs to happen. You can still be Mrs. Richardson. But Ruby moves into the penthouse. She’s the mother of my child. We’ll have an... open arrangement. You get the title; she gets me."

The humiliation hit me like a physical blow. The whispers of the crowd rose into a roar. *Poor Oaklynn. How pathetic. She’ll take it, of course. She has no choice.*

My mother was in the front row, clutching her pearls, face pale. My father looked ready to pass out. They were paralyzed.

But as I looked at Colton—so smug, so sure that I was nothing more than a piece of furniture to be rearranged—something inside me snapped. The dutiful daughter died in that moment. The fear evaporated, burned away by a white-hot clarity.

*He thinks I am weak.*

I scanned the front row. There, sitting apart from the rest of the family, was Axton Richardson. The uncle. The exile. The man who actually ran the empire while Colton played pretend. He was watching the scene with a look of utter boredom, swirling a glass of scotch he must have smuggled in. His dark eyes met mine, and for a second, I saw a flicker of curiosity.

I didn't cry. I didn't run. I reached out and snatched the microphone from the stand.

The feedback screeched, silencing the room instantly.

"Colton," I said. My voice was steady. It didn't sound like my own. "You assume that being a Richardson makes you a king. But right now, you look like a boy playing dress-up."

Colton’s jaw dropped. Ruby’s smirk faltered.

"I do not share," I continued, my voice hardening, cutting through the air like a blade. "And I certainly do not marry little boys who need their mistresses to crash their weddings to feel important. The engagement is off."

A collective gasp, louder this time. I turned my back on him. I faced the crowd. I faced the power.

I walked to the edge of the altar, directly in front of Axton. He looked up, one eyebrow raised, his face an impassive mask of sharp angles and cold intelligence.

"Mr. Richardson," I said, my voice ringing out. "The Palmer family promised a merger today. We promised stability for your stock prices, which are undoubtedly plummeting as your nephew makes a fool of himself on a livestream."

I took a breath. This was insanity. This was suicide. This was the only way out.

"I propose a new alliance. One that actually brings value to your table. Marry me instead. Merge our assets. Save your company’s face, and punish the boy who just tried to destroy it."

The silence stretched, agonizing and thick. Colton shouted something incoherent behind me, but I didn't turn. I held Axton’s gaze. I saw the calculation behind his eyes. He wasn't looking at a victim anymore. He was looking at a player.

Slowly, gracefully, Axton Richardson stood up. He buttoned his jacket. He walked up the three steps to the altar, towering over me. He smelled of expensive tobacco and rain. He looked at his nephew, then down at me, a dark, dangerous smile touching the corners of his lips.

"Miss Palmer," he said, his voice a low rumble that vibrated through the floorboards. "That is the most sensible thing anyone has said all day."

He extended a hand. "I accept."

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