
My Husband Brought His Mistress and Secret Son Home
Chapter 2
The wheels of the chair squeaked against the linoleum, a high-pitched accusation that cut through the hospital hum. I didn't stop them. I pushed harder, my palms slick with cold sweat against the rubber rims.
"Cameron."
The name left my throat like a shard of glass.
He froze. His hand, which had been stroking Brittany’s knuckles, went rigid. Slowly, he turned. His eyes met mine, but there was no warmth, no rush of relief. Instead, I saw the flicker of annoyance—the look a man gives when a waiter brings the wrong order.
"Eliza," he said, his voice flat. He didn't stand up. He stayed on his knees, anchored to them. To *her* and *him*.
"Your son," I whispered, the words tasting like ash. "You said... he's your son."
Brittany straightened, smoothing her skirt with a manicured hand. She didn't look ashamed. She looked victorious. She placed a possessive hand on Tyler's shoulder, her chin tilting up in a challenge. Tyler just watched me with those dead, shark-like eyes.
Cameron finally stood, dusting off his knees. He looked at me—really looked at me—and saw the bloodless face, the hospital gown, the emptiness where our future had been just hours ago. And he shrugged.
"It's complicated, Eliza. Not here."
"Not here?" A laugh bubbled up in my chest, hysterical and jagged. "I just lost *our* baby, Cameron. I lost our child saving *him* because I thought he was just a student. And you're telling me..."
"Keep your voice down," he hissed, stepping toward me. Not to comfort, but to contain. "You're making a scene. Tyler is traumatized."
"*Tyler* is traumatized?" My hands gripped the armrests until my knuckles turned white. "I am bleeding out in a wheelchair, and you're worried about public perception? Is he yours? Say it."
He clenched his jaw, the muscle feathering beneath the skin. "Yes. Tyler is my son. Brittany and I... we have history. He needs his father right now. He almost died today."
"But he didn't," I said, my voice trembling. "*Our* baby did."
Cameron sighed, running a hand through his hair—a gesture of impatience, not grief. "That was... unfortunate, Eliza. Truly. But let's be realistic. That was a potential life. Tyler is here. He is a living, breathing boy who needs me. He is my heir."
The word hit me harder than the taxi had. *Heir.* He wasn't talking about a child; he was talking about a legacy. I looked at Brittany. She offered a small, pitying smile that didn't reach her eyes. It was the smile of a predator who had already eaten.
"I'm going to take them home," Cameron said, checking his watch. "The driver is waiting."
"Them?" I asked, the room spinning.
"Brittany's apartment has... plumbing issues. Renovations," he said quickly, the lie smooth and practiced. "They can't stay there. Not after today. I need to keep an eye on Tyler. Ensure no delayed concussion symptoms."
"You're bringing your mistress and your secret child to *our* house? While I'm recovering from a miscarriage?"
"It's a penthouse, Eliza. It's six thousand square feet. You won't even see them," he snapped, turning back to Brittany. "Come on. The car is downstairs."
He didn't push my wheelchair. He didn't ask if I could walk. He just ushered his real family toward the elevator, leaving me alone in the hallway with the squeak of rubber wheels and the echo of my own heartbeat.
***
Two days later, the penthouse felt like a tomb.
The guest wing, usually silent, now vibrated with the sounds of intrusion. Cartoons blared from the media room. Brittany’s perfume—something heavy and floral, like funeral lilies—clung to the upholstery.
I lay in the master bedroom, staring at the ceiling. My body felt like a bruised peach, tender and aching. I reached for the bottle of painkillers on the nightstand. The doctor had been emphatic: *manage the pain before it spikes.*
I twisted the cap, shook two pills into my hand, and swallowed them dry.
An hour passed. Then two. The sharp, tearing sensation in my abdomen didn't dull; it sharpened. The throbbing in my head grew into a roar. I frowned, reaching for the bottle again. I squinted at the small white tablets. They looked right. But when I touched one to the tip of my tongue, it dissolved instantly. Sweet.
Sugar.
Someone had replaced my hydrocodone with sugar pills.
A crash from the kitchen made me jump. I wrapped my silk robe tighter around my waist, shielding my empty stomach, and shuffled down the hall.
Brittany was at the island, pouring coffee from the French press. She wore one of Cameron’s dress shirts, unbuttoned low. She looked up as I entered, feigning surprise.
"Oh! You're up. We thought you were... resting."
"Where are my pills, Brittany?" I asked, my voice rasping.
"Pills? I don't know what you mean." She picked up two mugs, steaming and dark. As she turned, her elbow knocked the second mug.
It wasn't an accident. I saw her wrist flick.
The ceramic shattered against the granite, sending a wave of scalding black liquid cascading over the edge—directly onto my bare legs.
I screamed. The heat was instantaneous, searing my skin. I stumbled back, slipping on the wet floor, gripping the counter to stay upright.
"Oh my god!" Brittany gasped, hand over her mouth. Her eyes were bright with malice. "I'm so clumsy!"
Cameron appeared in the doorway, tie undone, phone in hand. "What the hell is going on?"
"She burned me!" I cried, pointing a shaking finger at Brittany. "She threw coffee on me! And she stole my pain medication!"
Cameron looked at the shattered mug, then at Brittany, who was now dabbing at her eyes, trembling.
"Cam," she whimpered. "I was just trying to make you coffee. She came in screaming about pills... she startled me."
Cameron turned to me, his face hardening into a mask of disgust. "Eliza, look at yourself. You're hysterical."
"She replaced my medicine with sugar, Cameron! Look at the bottle!"
"Enough!" He slammed his hand on the counter. "You're grieving. I get it. You're hormonal and you're in pain. But don't take it out on Brittany. She is an innocent mother trying to care for our son in a strange house. Stop acting like a jealous ex-wife when you're still wearing my ring."
He stepped over the puddle of coffee, grabbed Brittany by the waist, and guided her away from the mess.
"Clean this up, Eliza," he threw over his shoulder. "Before the stain sets."
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