
My Husband Brought His Mistress and Secret Son Home
Chapter 1
The rain wasn’t just falling; it was punishing the pavement. New York in November felt less like a city and more like a gray, shivering beast. I adjusted the collar of my coat, the cold dampness seeping through the wool, and scanned the dismissal line. My kindergarteners were little bundles of bright yellow and red raincoats, vibrating with the energy of release.
"Mrs. Harris! Mrs. Harris!" Sarah, my co-teacher, waved a laminated sheet at me from the doorway. "Tyler’s father called. He’s running late again."
I sighed, the sound lost in the hiss of tires on wet asphalt. Cameron was always running late these days. Late for dinner, late for bed, late for life. I touched my stomach instinctively, a secret smile tugging at the corner of my mouth. I had news that would change everything. Cameron wouldn't be running late once he knew. He’d be running home.
That’s when I saw him.
Tyler Harris. My student. A quiet boy with eyes too old for his face. He wasn't waiting by the door where he belonged. He was standing at the curb, the toes of his sneakers hanging over the edge of the sidewalk. He wasn't looking at the traffic. He was looking at me.
The world narrowed down to a single, terrifying focal point. A yellow taxi, skidding on the slick oil of the road, its headlights cutting through the gloom like predatory eyes. It was moving too fast. Tyler stepped down. Not a stumble. A step.
"Tyler!" My scream tore out of my throat, raw and burning.
I didn't think. There was no time for the calculus of risk. I just moved. My boots slipped on the wet concrete, but I found traction, launching myself forward. The air smelled of exhaust and ozone. The roar of the engine was deafening, a physical weight pressing against my eardrums.
I hit him hard. My shoulder slammed into his small chest, shoving him violently back toward the safety of the sidewalk. He flew backward, a ragdoll in a raincoat.
Then, the impact.
It wasn't like the movies. There was no slow motion. Just a sudden, bone-jarring violence. The taxi’s bumper caught my hip, spinning me around before the pavement rose up to meet me. My head cracked against the asphalt with a sickening *thud*.
Pain exploded—white, hot, and all-consuming. It radiated from my abdomen, a tearing sensation that made me gasp for air that wouldn't come. The rain fell into my open eyes, blurring the gray sky.
Through the haze, I saw him. Tyler. He was standing over me, perfectly unharmed. Most children would be screaming. Most children would be crying for their mothers. Tyler just stared. His face was blank, void of fear, void of gratitude. He looked at me like I was a broken toy he had finished playing with.
Darkness rushed in from the edges of my vision, swallowing the rain, the pain, and the boy’s chilling, empty stare.
***
Beeping. Rhythmic, insistent, annoying.
The smell hit me first—antiseptic and floor wax. The universal scent of bad news. I tried to sit up, but my body felt heavy, like it was filled with lead. A sharp agony spiked in my lower belly, forcing a groan from my lips.
"Mrs. Harris?" A voice, soft but professional. A doctor in a white coat hovered over me. His face was kind, but his eyes held that practiced pity I hated.
"Cameron?" My voice was a croak.
"Your husband has been notified. He’s on his way," the doctor said, checking the IV line in my arm. He paused, his hand resting gently on the railing of the bed. "Eliza... we need to talk about your injuries."
"My hip? My head?"
"You have a concussion and severe bruising," he said, his voice dropping an octave. "But the trauma to your abdomen... it was severe."
The silence stretched, tight as a piano wire. I knew before he said it. The secret I was holding, the joy I was saving for Cameron—it was gone.
"I’m so sorry," the doctor said. "You miscarried."
The word hung in the air, sucking the oxygen out of the room. I didn't cry. I couldn't. I just felt hollowed out. Scraped clean. My hand drifted to my stomach, pressing against the hospital gown. Empty. Just empty.
"I need... I need some water," I whispered, needing him to leave. Needing to be alone with the ghost of my future.
He nodded and slipped out. I lay there for what felt like hours, staring at the ceiling tiles, counting the little dots until they blurred together. I needed Cameron. I needed him to hold me. I needed him to tell me we could try again.
The silence became suffocating. I couldn't stay in that bed. I swung my legs over the side, gritting my teeth against the soreness. There was a wheelchair by the door. I collapsed into it, my hands shaking as I wheeled myself into the hallway.
It was busy. Nurses in blue scrubs rushed past with clipboards. I scanned the faces, looking for Cameron’s messy brown hair, his broad shoulders.
Then I heard his voice.
"Is he okay? Check him again."
It was coming from down the hall, near the pediatric waiting area. Relief washed over me—he was here. He must have checked on Tyler first. That was natural. Tyler was a child.
I rolled forward, rounding the corner.
Cameron was there. But he wasn't looking for me. He was on his knees, his expensive suit pants pressed against the dirty hospital floor. He had his arms wrapped around Tyler, squeezing the boy so tight his knuckles were white.
Standing next to them, sobbing into a tissue, was Brittany Wood. The mother of my student. A woman I had seen at pick-up a dozen times. Blonde, polished, always lingering a little too long.
Cameron looked up at her, his face twisted in an anguish I had never seen him direct at me. He reached out, taking Brittany’s hand and pulling her closer, pressing a kiss to her knuckles.
"Thank God," Cameron choked out, his voice thick with emotion. "Thank God my son is okay. I don't know what I'd do if anything happened to our boy, Brittany."
*My son.*
*Our boy.*
The wheelchair stopped. The hallway stopped. My heart stopped.
The pain in my empty womb was nothing compared to the knife that just twisted in my back. I watched my husband—the man I was going to surprise with a baby—clutching another woman’s child, calling him his own. The boy who had watched me bleed on the pavement. The boy who was his.
And I was just the fool in the wheelchair, invisible and broken.
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