
My Husband Asked His Mistress to Steal Our Baby
Chapter 5
The ballroom was all crystal and gold. Chandeliers threw light across faces I recognized from magazine covers, from charity galas my mother used to drag me to. The air smelled like expensive perfume and champagne.
Atticus's hand clamped around my upper arm, his fingers digging into the bruises already there. Clara flanked my other side, her smile bright and false.
"Mrs. Vanderbilt." Atticus's voice dripped charm as he steered me toward a woman dripping in diamonds. "I'd like you to meet Clara's cousin, Delilah. She's been unwell."
The woman's eyes swept over me, taking in the midnight dress, my pale face, the way I swayed on my feet.
"Poor dear," she murmured.
"Delusions, mostly." Atticus's grip tightened. "She believes we're married. That the baby is ours together. It's quite sad, really."
Mrs. Vanderbilt's expression shifted to pity. "How terrible."
"We're having her committed after tonight," Clara added, her voice soft with false concern. "For her own safety. And the baby's."
They moved me through the crowd like a trophy. Each introduction the same. Each pitying glance another nail in my coffin. By the time we reached the bar, half of Manhattan's elite believed I was insane.
The sedative was wearing off. Sensation crept back into my limbs, sharp and unwelcome. My thoughts cleared enough to understand what they'd done. What they were still doing.
A waiter passed carrying a tray of champagne flutes. I stumbled—deliberately this time—and crashed into him. Glass shattered. Champagne pooled across marble. Voices rose around us.
Atticus's face went rigid. His fingers dug deeper into my arm, and I felt something pop. Pain shot up to my shoulder.
"Excuse us." His voice stayed smooth, but his eyes promised violence. "She needs air."
He dragged me through French doors onto a terrace. The night air hit my face, cold and sharp. The city sprawled below us, lights stretching to the horizon.
The doors closed. We were alone.
Atticus shoved me against the stone balustrade. My hip bone cracked against marble.
"You stupid—" He caught himself, smoothed his hair. "Do you have any idea what you almost cost me in there?"
I touched my locket. The metal was warm from my skin.
"They needed to see," I whispered. "They needed to know—"
His hand cracked across my face. My head snapped sideways. Blood filled my mouth.
"Know what?" He pulled something from his jacket. Photos. He fanned them out like playing cards. "These kids? The ones who jumped? The ones who couldn't handle the pressure we put on them?"
Seventeen faces stared back at me. Young. Smiling. Alive in these pictures, dead now.
"Your baby will join them," Atticus said, his voice conversational. "If you don't behave. Maybe not right away. Maybe we'll wait until he's ten. Twelve. Old enough to understand what his mother was. What she tried to do."
He leaned closer. I could smell his cologne, the same scent I'd woken up to for five years.
"We'll break him the way we broke them. Slowly. Carefully. Until he can't see any way out but down."
My hand moved to my stomach. Protective. Instinctive.
Atticus raised his hand again. I closed my eyes.
Glass exploded.
The terrace doors burst inward, shards spinning through the air like diamonds. I hit the ground, arms covering my head.
When I looked up, Hugo stood in the doorway.
He wore all black—tactical gear, not a suit. His face was the same as I remembered: hard angles, gray eyes that missed nothing. But there was something new there too. Something cold and final.
Two guards rushed him from the sides. He moved like water, like violence choreographed. One guard hit the ground, unconscious before he landed. The other followed a heartbeat later.
Hugo stepped over them. Stepped between Atticus and me.
"I'm here, Miss Collins." His voice was exactly as I remembered. Measured. Certain. "You're safe."
Atticus had gone pale. His hand still held the photos, but they trembled now.
"Blackwood." The name came out strangled. "This is a private matter—"
"No." Hugo's hand rested on something at his hip. A weapon. "This is a Collins matter. And you made it one the moment you touched her."
Behind Hugo, more figures appeared in the doorway. Men in tactical gear, moving with military precision. They fanned out across the terrace, cutting off every exit.
Atticus looked at me, then at Hugo, then at the photos still clutched in his hand. His carefully constructed world was crumbling, and I could see him trying to calculate a way out.
There wasn't one.
Hugo extended his hand toward me. "Miss Collins. It's time to go home."
I took it. His grip was steady, warm, real. He pulled me to my feet, and for the first time in five years, I felt the ground solid beneath me.
Atticus lunged. Hugo moved faster. One strike, precise and brutal, and Atticus crumpled.
"Secure him," Hugo said. Two contractors moved forward, zip ties already in hand. "And find the woman. Clara Winters. She doesn't leave this building."
He turned back to me, and something in his expression softened. Just barely. Just enough.
"I'm sorry I took so long," he said.
I touched my locket. My mother's face smiled up at me from the photo inside, and I finally understood what she'd been trying to teach me all those years ago.
Power isn't something you run from. It's something you wield.
And I was done running.
You may also like





