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My Husband Brought Home His Pregnant Mistress Novel Cover

My Husband Brought Home His Pregnant Mistress

The coq au vin had turned into a congealed, purple bruise in the center of the mahogany dining table. I sat by the floor-to-ceiling window, the city lights of Manhattan blurring through the rain-streaked glass, checking my watch for the fiftieth time. Two years. Seven hundred and thirty days since I traded the sensation in my legs for a gold band on my finger. My reflection in the glass was a ghost—pale skin, dark eyes that had forgotten how to spark, and the chrome gleam of the wheelchair that had become my lower half. The private elevator chimed, a cheerful sound that sliced through the silence of the penthouse. I didn't turn immediately. I adjusted the hem of my silk dress over my knees, a reflex to hide the atrophy that no amount of therapy could reverse. Colson walked in. The air shifted, heavy with the scent of rain, aged scotch, and a cloying, floral perfume that certainly wasn't mine.
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Chapter 1

The coq au vin had turned into a congealed, purple bruise in the center of the mahogany dining table. I sat by the floor-to-ceiling window, the city lights of Manhattan blurring through the rain-streaked glass, checking my watch for the fiftieth time. Two years. Seven hundred and thirty days since I traded the sensation in my legs for a gold band on my finger.

My reflection in the glass was a ghost—pale skin, dark eyes that had forgotten how to spark, and the chrome gleam of the wheelchair that had become my lower half.

The private elevator chimed, a cheerful sound that sliced through the silence of the penthouse. I didn't turn immediately. I adjusted the hem of my silk dress over my knees, a reflex to hide the atrophy that no amount of therapy could reverse.

Colson walked in. The air shifted, heavy with the scent of rain, aged scotch, and a cloying, floral perfume that certainly wasn't mine. Gardenias.

He loosened his tie with a sharp jerk, his eyes sliding over me as if I were a piece of furniture—necessary, perhaps, but aesthetically displeasing. He didn't look at the dinner. He didn't look at the candles that had burned down to wax puddles.

"You're late," I said, my voice steady despite the tremor in my hands.

Colson walked to the liquor cabinet, pouring a drink he didn't need. "I had business."

"It's the second of November, Colson." I turned my chair to face him, the rubber tires squeaking softly on the marble. "Happy Anniversary."

He froze, the crystal tumbler halfway to his lips. Slowly, he turned, his handsome face twisted into a mask of cold amusement. The same face I had pushed out of the way of a speeding sedan. The face I had ruined my life to save.

"Anniversary?" He took a sip, the amber liquid coating his throat. "Claire, prison sentences aren't worth celebrating."

He downed the rest of the drink and walked past me toward the master suite, the door clicking shut like a lock snapping into place.

The next morning, the penthouse was filled with the gray light of a storm that refused to break. I found Colson’s jacket draped over the back of a sofa. As I reached up to hang it properly—old habits of a dutiful wife dying hard—a slip of paper fluttered to the floor.

I maneuvered my chair to retrieve it. A receipt from Van Cleef & Arpels. A diamond tennis bracelet. Forty-five thousand dollars. Dated yesterday.

My wrist was bare.

I found him in the breakfast nook, scrolling through emails on his tablet, an espresso untouched beside him. I placed the receipt on the glass table. It made a soft *shhh* sound as it slid toward him.

"Is this the business you had last night?" I asked.

Colson didn't flinch. He glanced at the paper, then back at his screen. "It’s a gift."

"For whom? Because I certainly didn't receive it."

He finally looked at me then, his gaze dropping to my legs, then back to my eyes. The cruelty in his stare was precise, surgical. "I needed warmth, Claire. I needed a woman who can stand beside me, not a constant reminder of a debt I never asked to accrue."

"I am your wife," I whispered, the air leaving my lungs.

"You are a ceremonial obligation," he corrected, his voice devoid of emotion. "Don't pretend this arrangement is anything else. Enjoy the penthouse, spend the money, but don't ask me for things I cannot give a cripple."

He stood up and left before I could scream, before I could throw the coffee in his face. I sat there, my fingernails digging into my palms until the skin broke.

By evening, the silence in the apartment had become a physical weight. I wheeled myself into his study, looking for a distraction, something to numb the humiliation burning under my skin. That’s when I saw it.

On his expansive oak desk sat a new architectural model. It was a delicate, intricate structure of a modern glass villa, surrounded by miniature trees. A note card leaned against it: *For the new start. - J.*

A new start. While I was rotting in the life he hated.

The rage hit me all at once—hot and blinding. It wasn't the affair; it was the erasure. I was the foundation he stood on, and he was building castles for someone else.

I grabbed the model. It was heavy, expensive. With a guttural cry that tore from my throat, I hurled it onto the hardwood floor.

*CRASH.*

Plastic and glass shattered, sending miniature shards skittering across the room. The villa lay in ruins at my wheels.

"What the hell are you doing?"

Colson stood in the doorway, his chest heaving, his eyes wide with shock. He looked from the destroyed model to me, his hands curling into fists. He took a step forward, aggression radiating off him in waves.

"That was—"

He stopped.

I didn't retreat. I didn't look down. I sat amidst the wreckage of his secret life, my chin held high, while silent, hot tears streamed down my face. I refused to wipe them away. I refused to apologize.

For the first time in two years, the room was silent, but the power had shifted. He looked at the broken plastic, then at the broken woman, and for a singular, terrifiying moment, he didn't have a word to say.

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