
My Husband Chose His Mistress Over Our Unborn Child
Chapter 1
The afternoon sun pouring into Braylen’s mahogany-paneled study felt suffocatingly heavy. I shifted in his leather desk chair, resting one hand on the strained, eight-month swell of my stomach, while my other hand navigated the trackpad of his iMac. Today was our third wedding anniversary. I was only supposed to be compiling a slideshow of our life together for the banquet tonight.
Instead, a synced iMessage notification slid across the top right corner of the screen. *Mariah.* His young, perpetually smiling secretary. *Can’t wait for tonight, baby.*
My finger froze over the mouse. A cold prickle of unease crawled up my spine. I opened the thread, my heart hammering against my ribs. It wasn't just texts. It was a digital labyrinth of betrayal. I dug deeper, finding a hidden folder tucked beneath layers of quarterly financial spreadsheets. It was labeled simply: *M & B.*
I double-clicked.
The first file was a video. The screen filled with the dim, amber lighting of a boutique hotel room. I watched, my breath caught dead in my throat, as my husband’s familiar hands moved over Mariah’s bare skin. I heard his voice—the same low, gravelly tone he used to whisper in my ear—murmuring things to her that made the blood drain from my face.
The second file was a PDF. A scan of a medical document from Mount Sinai. *Mariah Fisher. Estimated Gestational Age: 12 weeks.*
The baby kicked violently against my ribs, a sharp, physical reminder of the life I was carrying, the life Braylen had built a lie around. I didn't scream. The burning in my chest flash-froze into absolute, blinding clarity. My hands didn't shake as I dragged the video and the PDF into the anniversary slideshow folder. I deleted the photos of our honeymoon in Santorini. I deleted our first Christmas. I replaced my entire marriage with the truth.
Four hours later, the St. Regis ballroom was a sea of silk, diamonds, and the suffocating scent of expensive lilies. Martinez Corp’s elite milled about, their laughter bouncing off the crystal chandeliers. I stood near the edge of the stage, the heavy velvet curtain brushing my shoulder, the projector remote gripped so tightly in my hand that the plastic bit into my palm.
Braylen stood at the microphone. He looked devastatingly handsome in his tailored Tom Ford tuxedo, the picture of a devoted husband and visionary CEO.
"To my beautiful wife, Aurora," Braylen’s voice rolled smoothly from the surround-sound speakers, rich with practiced adoration. He raised a flute of champagne, locking eyes with me through the crowd. "Three years ago, you made me the luckiest man alive. You are my anchor, my heart, and soon, the mother of my child."
The crowd cooed. Applause rippled through the room.
I stepped forward into the harsh glare of the spotlight. I didn't smile. I didn't raise a glass. I simply pressed the button on the remote.
The massive screen behind him flickered.
Instead of our wedding dance, the ballroom was suddenly filled with the unmistakable, wet sound of tangled sheets and breathless moans. The ten-foot-tall projection of Braylen and Mariah illuminated the room in a sordid, amber glow.
The silence that slammed into the ballroom was catastrophic. A champagne flute shattered against the marble floor. Someone gasped. The elite of Martinez Corp stared in paralyzed horror at the screen, then at Braylen.
Braylen spun around. The color vanished from his face, leaving behind a waxy, hollowed-out mask of sheer panic. The charming, untouchable executive disintegrated in a millisecond.
"Turn it off!" he barked at the AV booth, his voice cracking. He stumbled off the stage, his polished shoes slipping on the marble as he scrambled toward me. "Rory—Aurora, wait. Let me explain."
I stood perfectly still, my face a mask of carved ice.
He collapsed. Right there, in front of his board of directors, his investors, his friends. Braylen Martinez dropped to his knees, utterly breaking his own curated facade.
"I'm sorry," he sobbed, the sound wet and pathetic. "It meant nothing. I swear to God, it was a mistake. I’ll sign everything over to you. The house, the company shares, my personal accounts—take it all. Just please, don't do this."
He lunged forward, his hands reaching out to grasp my bare calves.
The moment his skin made contact with mine, a violent, electrical shock of revulsion ripped through my nervous system. It wasn't just anger. It was a visceral, suffocating horror. My stomach heaved. The sensation of his fingers felt like a swarm of insects burrowing into my pores. Filth. Contamination. Disease.
"Don't touch me," I choked out, my voice dropping to a jagged, deadly whisper. I recoiled so hard I nearly lost my balance, my hands flying to my stomach to protect my child.
The urge to scrub my skin with scalding water and bleach was blinding. I looked down at the man sobbing on the floor, offering me his wealth like it could buy back my dignity. I felt nothing but absolute, paralyzing disgust.
I didn't say another word. I turned my back on his weeping, on the whispers of the crowd, on the shattered remains of my life, and walked out the heavy brass doors. The cool night air hit my face, but it wasn't enough. I needed to be clean.
You may also like





