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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 2

The chandelier above the ballroom floor was a crystalline monster, dripping light onto the sea of black tuxedos and designer gowns. I sat on the periphery of the Fox Corp Charity Gala, my knuckles white against the armrests of my wheelchair. The air smelled of expensive perfume and the metallic tang of chilled champagne, a scent that always made my stomach turn.

"Smile, Claire," Colson murmured, his hand resting briefly on my shoulder. It wasn't a caress; it was a warning. "Grandfather is watching from the balcony. And the Andrews Foundation needs its quarterly grant, doesn't it?"

My spine stiffened. He knew exactly where to slide the knife. The Foundation was the only thing I had left—my work, my legacy, the only place where I was Dr. Andrews, not just the crippled wife of the Fox heir.

"I am smiling," I said through gritted teeth, though my lips felt numb.

"Barely." He straightened his cuffs, his gaze already drifting over my head to a group of debutantes near the bar. "Stay here. Try not to look so... tragic."

He walked away without looking back. I watched him slip into the crowd, his charm turning on like a switch. He laughed with a redhead in emerald silk, his hand resting easily on the small of her back—a casual intimacy he hadn't offered me in two years. I was a statue in the corner, an object of pity for the passing socialites who offered tight, sympathetic smiles before averting their eyes.

Suddenly, the room tilted.

The orchestra’s swelling violin crescendo warped into a high-pitched screech. The lights of the chandelier smeared into long, blinding streaks, like comets crashing into my retinas. I gripped the wheels of my chair, gasping as the floor seemed to drop out from under me.

*Stress,* I told myself, squeezing my eyes shut until spots of color danced behind my lids. *Just stress. Breathe.*

When I opened my eyes, the world had steadied, but a dull throb had taken root at the base of my skull. I didn't know it then, but the clock had already started ticking.

***

Three weeks later, the silence of the penthouse was shattered not by a crash, but by the click of heels on marble.

It was raining again—a relentless November downpour that battered the glass walls. I was in the living room, reviewing patient files, when the elevator doors slid open. Colson stepped out, but he wasn't alone.

The woman beside him was a ghost.

She had the same raven hair, the same arch to her brow, the same fragile, doe-eyed look that Regina had possessed. For a moment, my heart hammered against my ribs, a primitive fear seizing my throat. But Regina was dead. This was a copy. A cruel, breathing replica.

"Mrs. Herrera," Colson called out, his voice echoing off the high ceilings. "Gather the staff."

Elena hurried in from the kitchen, wiping her hands on her apron. Her eyes widened when she saw the woman, then darted to me. I sat frozen, my lap blanket slipping unnoticed to the floor.

Colson placed a hand on the woman’s lower back, guiding her forward. "This is Jordyn Sanders. She will be staying in the guest suite."

Jordyn smiled, a small, shy thing that didn't reach her eyes. She wore a coat that looked too expensive for the wet weather, her hands resting protectively over her flat stomach.

"Guest suite?" I asked, my voice barely a whisper. "Colson, that room connects to ours."

"She needs to be close," Colson said, his tone devoid of room for argument. He looked at me, his eyes hard and flat. "Jordyn is carrying my child. My heir."

The air left the room. It was as if he had reached into my chest and crushed my lungs. A baby. The one thing my paralyzed body and our broken marriage had made impossible.

"You're bringing your mistress into our home?" I asked, my voice rising, trembling.

"I am bringing the mother of my child into my house," he corrected sharply. "You have a choice, Claire. You can accept this arrangement and maintain your lifestyle and your Foundation. Or you can leave. But if you roll out that door, the funding stops. The Foundation closes. You’ll be on the street with nothing but your pride."

I looked at Jordyn. She wasn't looking at me; she was looking at the penthouse, her gaze hungry, calculating. She knew exactly what she was doing.

"I'll have the guest room prepared," Mrs. Herrera said softly, her voice thick with unshed tears as she looked at me.

***

The occupation was swift and brutal.

Within days, the scent of gardenias—Jordyn’s cloying perfume—suffocated the scent of my lavender candles. But it was the physical erasure that hurt the most.

I came home from the clinic a week later to find the portable ramp over the sunken living room steps gone. In its place was a sleek, decorative vase filled with white lilies.

"Where is the ramp?" I asked, staring at the three steps that now formed an impassable canyon between me and the master bedroom.

Jordyn emerged from the hallway. She was wearing a silk robe—*my* silk robe, the vintage one Colson had bought for Regina years ago, which I had kept in the back of the closet.

"Oh, that metal thing?" She waved a hand dismissively. "It was hideous, Claire. It completely ruined the feng shui of the foyer. I had it moved to storage. The aesthetic is much cleaner now, don't you think?"

She smiled, sipping herbal tea from my favorite mug. " besides, Colson said you spend too much time in your room anyway."

My hands shook as I gripped my wheels. I was trapped in the foyer of my own home.

Before I could respond, the front door opened. Colson walked in, shaking rain from his umbrella. He didn't look at me, stranded at the top of the steps. He looked straight at Jordyn.

"How are you feeling?" he asked, his voice dropping an octave, softening into something warm and unrecognizable.

"The baby is kicking," Jordyn lied—it was too early for that, but Colson didn't care.

He walked past me, brushing against my wheel without acknowledging my presence, and went to her. He placed his large hand over her stomach, his face transforming. The cold, hard mask he wore for me melted into awe. He looked hopeful. He looked... happy.

I sat there, paralyzed in every sense of the word, watching my husband fall in love with a ghost and a lie, while the pressure in my head began to throb again, harder this time, like a drum beating a funeral march.

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