
My Husband Chose His Mistress Over Our Dying Son
Chapter 3
The silver gleams under my cloth, each pass revealing my distorted reflection. Forks, knives, spoons—an entire drawer of them, tarnished from neglect. Holly doesn't polish her own silver. That's what ghosts are for.
I work methodically, the ammonia smell burning my nostrils, my fingers pruning in the chemical solution. The dining room is empty at this hour. Christopher's at his office. Holly's at her Pilates class, the one in SoHo where she goes to be photographed by paparazzi who still think she's interesting.
The drawer sticks when I pull it fully open. Something wedged in back. I reach past the serving spoons and my fingers brush paper.
A photograph.
My breath stops.
It's us. Christopher and me on the beach in East Hampton, that golden hour before sunset turned everything amber. His arms around my waist, my head thrown back in laughter, both of us barefoot in the surf. I'm wearing the white sundress he loved, the one that made him say I looked like I was made of light.
I don't remember who took this picture. I only remember the moment after—how he'd pulled me close and whispered that he'd build me a house right there on that beach, that we'd watch every sunset for the rest of our lives.
The memory shifts without warning, violently, like a record scratching.
Ramon's study. Mahogany and cigar smoke. My father on his knees, blood trickling from his temple where Ramon's man had pistol-whipped him. My mother sobbing in the corner, her Chanel suit torn at the shoulder.
"Write it." Ramon's voice, that slow cadence he used before violence. The gun pressed to my father's skull, his finger on the trigger. "Tell your lover you've found someone richer. Someone better. Make it convincing, principessa, or I paint these walls with your father's brain."
My hand shaking so badly I could barely hold the pen. The words I forced myself to write: *Christopher, I can't do this anymore. You were a beautiful summer, but Ramon can give me the life I deserve. Don't contact me again. Arabella.*
Ramon reading over my shoulder, his breath hot on my neck. "Perfect. See how easy it is to tell the truth?"
"That photo's not yours."
Christopher's voice shatters the memory. I spin, the photograph clutched to my chest, my heart hammering against my ribs.
He stands in the doorway, still in his suit, tie loosened. His eyes lock on the picture, then on my face. Something flickers there—recognition, maybe, or the ghost of who he used to be. Then it hardens to stone.
"Give it to me."
"Christopher, please—" My voice cracks. "It's just a picture. I wasn't—"
He crosses the room in four strides, rips the photograph from my hands. The edge cuts my finger, a thin line of red blooming across my palm.
"You don't get to keep pieces of what you destroyed." He walks to the fireplace, the gas flames dancing behind the glass. "You don't get to pretend that girl existed."
"She did exist." The words escape before I can stop them. "We both existed. That was real."
He holds the photograph over the flames, his jaw that granite line of fury. "Nothing about you was ever real."
The photo curls, blackens, disintegrates. Our smiling faces consumed by fire. I watch it burn and feel something inside me burn with it—the last small piece of hope I didn't know I was still carrying.
Christopher turns away without another word, leaving me standing there with blood dripping from my finger onto Holly's polished floor.
I return to the silver. My hands move automatically, polishing, polishing, until every piece shines like a mirror I can't bear to look into.
---
The gathering starts at seven. Business partners, investors, people whose names I used to know when I was someone who mattered. Now I'm invisible, circulating with trays of champagne, my gray uniform marking me as part of the furniture.
Holly holds court in the center of the room, wearing my grandmother's vintage Dior. She's telling some story that has everyone laughing, her hand possessive on Christopher's arm. He's not laughing. He never laughs anymore.
I'm near the bar when I hear the scream.
It cuts through the conversation like a knife. I turn just in time to see Holly tumbling down the marble stairs, her body hitting each step with sickening thuds. She lands at the bottom in a heap of silk and limbs, sobbing.
"She pushed me!" Holly's voice is pure anguish, her finger pointing up the stairs. "Arabella pushed me!"
Every head turns. To Holly. To the stairs. To me.
I'm standing fifteen feet away, on the opposite side of the room, an empty tray in my hands.
"I didn't—" I start, but Christopher's already moving.
He drops to his knees beside Holly, gathering her into his arms. "Don't move. Are you hurt? Did you hit your head?"
"She was right behind me." Holly clings to him, mascara running down her cheeks. "She whispered something horrible and then I felt her hands on my back and—"
"I wasn't near the stairs." My voice sounds distant, wrong. "I was serving drinks. People saw me."
But no one speaks up. The guests avert their eyes, suddenly fascinated by their champagne.
Christopher lifts Holly like she weighs nothing, his face a mask of cold rage. "Marcus. Take Arabella downstairs. Now."
"The cameras," I say desperately. "Check the security footage. Please, Christopher, just look at—"
"I don't need cameras to know what you are." He doesn't even look at me. "Marcus."
Hands grip my arms. Marcus, his face apologetic but firm, guides me toward the back hallway. I don't resist. Resistance implies I still believe in justice.
The wine cellar door is heavy, soundproofed. The stairs descend into darkness.
"I'm sorry," Marcus murmurs as he unlocks the gate. "Orders."
The lock clicks behind me.
The cold hits immediately, seeping through my thin uniform. The wine cellar is climate-controlled for the bottles, kept at fifty-five degrees. Perfect for preservation. Less perfect for human survival.
I sink onto the concrete floor, my back against a rack of vintage Bordeaux. My breath comes out in visible puffs. The cough builds in my chest, rattling, wet. I press my sleeve to my mouth and it comes away dark.
Time dissolves in the cold. Hours, maybe. My body stops shivering, which I know is bad. Hypothermia, stage two. The fever from my illness wars with the temperature, leaving me suspended in a strange delirium.
That's when I hear it.
Crying.
A child's cry, thin and desperate.
"Mason?" My voice is a croak. I try to stand, but my legs won't cooperate. "Baby, I'm here. Mama's here."
The crying continues, echoing off the walls. Or maybe it's only in my head. Maybe it's been in my head since the day I buried him in that hard Colombian ground, alone, because Ramon wouldn't let me have a funeral and Christopher wouldn't answer my calls.
"I'm sorry." The words spill out, slurred with cold and fever. "I'm so sorry, baby. I tried. I called him. I begged. I told them you were sick, that you needed a doctor, that it was his son, his son, but he didn't believe me. He thought you were Ramon's. He thought I was lying."
The crying fades.
"Don't go. Please don't go again."
But the cellar is silent except for my ragged breathing.
I curl onto my side on the concrete, tucking my knees to my chest. The locket digs into my hip through my pocket. I pull it out with numb fingers, press it to my lips.
"Mama's coming soon," I whisper to the empty dark. "I promise. Mama's coming soon."
The cold wraps around me like a shroud, and I let it.
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