
My Husband Chose His Mistress Over Our Dying Son
My Husband Chose His Mistress Over Our Dying Son Chapter 1
The gunfire stopped three minutes ago. I counted each second in the dark, my spine pressed against the warehouse wall, arms locked over my head like Ramon taught me. Protect the skull. Everything else heals.
Boots crunch through broken glass. Multiple sets. Military precision. Not Ramon's men—they shuffle and curse. These move like shadows with purpose.
"Clear left."
"Clear right."
A beam of light cuts through the dust, finds my corner. I don't look up. Looking up gets you hit.
"Target acquired."
Target. The word sits wrong in my chest. Then a voice I haven't heard in three years, one that used to whisper my name like a prayer, now drops it like a stone.
"Arabella."
I lift my head. Christopher Morgan stands in the doorway, backlit by flames consuming Ramon's empire. He's broader than I remember, shoulders filling out his tactical vest, jaw sharper. Harder. His eyes—those gray eyes that once melted when they found mine across a Hamptons beach—scan me like I'm inventory.
I try to stand. My legs shake. Malnutrition, the doctors would say, if Ramon ever let doctors near me.
"Stay down." Christopher's tone could freeze water. He moves closer, and I catch the scent of gunpowder and expensive cologne. The combination makes my stomach twist. "You look like hell."
I almost laugh. Almost. "Thank you for coming."
Wrong words. His jaw ticks, that muscle jumping beneath his skin. He pulls something from his belt—handcuffs, steel catching the firelight.
"Wrists."
I stare at the cuffs. At him. "Christopher—"
"I said wrists, or I leave you here for whatever's left of Mendoza's crew." He crouches, brings his face level with mine. This close, I can see the rage simmering beneath his controlled exterior, the way his pupils contract when he looks at my hollow cheeks, my matted hair. "You made your choice three years ago. Now you live with mine."
The metal bites cold against my skin. He yanks me to my feet, and pain shoots through my ribs—two of them cracked from last week, not quite healed. I swallow the gasp. He doesn't get to see me break. Not anymore.
He drags me through the compound. Past bodies I don't look at. Past the room where Mason took his first steps. Past the kitchen where I used to hide bloody rags in the trash. The heat from the fires makes my skin prickle, or maybe that's just Christopher's grip on my arm, fingers pressing into bruises that never fully fade.
"Welcome to your new accommodations," he says as we reach the helicopter. "Trading one prison for another, but at least this one has hot water."
I don't respond. Words are wasted on men who've already decided what you are.
---
Manhattan glitters below us, a constellation of wealth and power I used to navigate like a queen. Now I'm cargo, slumped in the helicopter seat, wrists still bound, watching Christopher's profile as he stares out the window. His jaw hasn't unclenched since we took off.
The pilot lands on a private rooftop. Christopher's building—I recognize it from the skyline, that obsidian tower he built after I disappeared. After he thought I chose money over him.
The elevator ride is silent except for the mechanical hum. My reflection in the polished doors shows a ghost: sunken eyes, skin stretched over bone, hair that used to shine like spun gold now dull and lifeless. I look away.
The penthouse doors open.
And there she is.
Holly Clark stands in the foyer wearing a silk robe I bought her four years ago, the cream one from Bergdorf's. Her hair is styled in the loose waves I taught her. She's even wearing my mother's pearl earrings—the ones I left behind when Ramon's men came.
"Oh my God." Holly's hand flies to her mouth, eyes wide with manufactured shock. "Bella, you look—"
"Like Mendoza's leftovers?" Christopher finishes, removing my handcuffs with a sharp click. "She'll clean up. Eventually."
Holly rushes forward, and for one insane moment I think she might actually hug me. Instead, she stops just short, her gaze raking over my ruined body. When Christopher turns to speak with someone behind us, her expression shifts. The concern melts away, replaced by something cold and victorious. Her lips curve into a smile meant only for me.
"Welcome home," she mouths.
Christopher's hand lands on my shoulder, heavy as a judge's gavel. "You'll work off your debt here. Cleaning, cooking, whatever Holly needs. Consider it payment for the three years you spent living in luxury while I built this empire from the ashes you left."
"Christopher, maybe we should—" Holly starts, her voice dripping false sympathy.
"She'll start tomorrow." He cuts her off, already walking away. "Marcus, show her to the storage room."
A man in a dark suit—Marcus, apparently—gestures down a hallway. I follow because there's nowhere else to go. He opens a door to a space barely larger than a closet. No windows. A cot shoved against one wall. Boxes stacked everywhere, and shoes. Dozens of designer shoes I recognize because I bought most of them for Holly when she had nothing.
Marcus hands me a bundle of gray fabric. "Uniform. Bathroom's down the hall. You start at six."
The door closes. The lock clicks.
I sink onto the cot, clutching the coarse material. My hand moves automatically to my pocket, finding the one thing Ramon never found, the one thing Holly doesn't know exists. The tarnished locket, warm against my palm.
A cough builds in my chest. I press my sleeve to my mouth, and when I pull it away, there's a small red stain blooming on the fabric.
I fold the handkerchief carefully, hiding the evidence inside my sleeve.
Some prisons have bars. Some have silk sheets and the face of the man you'd die for, looking at you like you're already dead.
My Husband Chose His Mistress Over Our Dying Son of Contents
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