
My Husband Drugged Me to Protect His Mistress
My Husband Drugged Me to Protect His Mistress Chapter 1
The blue light of the laptop screen was the only warmth in the room, casting long, skeletal shadows against the silk wallpaper of the master bedroom. My eyes burned, gritty from another forty-eight-hour stretch without real sleep, but the simulation on the screen was finally stabilizing. The protein folding sequence—the key to halting the genetic decay eating away at my husband’s cells—was ninty-eight percent viable.
I tapped my pen against my knuckles, a rapid, nervous rhythm that echoed the racing of my heart. *Just a little longer, Hudson. I’m almost there.*
The heavy oak door creaked open, shattering my concentration. I slammed the laptop shut, shoving the encrypted drive under a stack of fashion magazines on the nightstand. To the world, I was Eliza Evans, the docile, socialite wife of the Knight empire. No one could know I was the Director of the Rare Disease Research Institute at Columbia. Especially not him.
Hudson Knight stood in the doorway, a silhouette cut from ice and darkness. He smelled of cold wind and aged scotch.
"You're still up," he said. His voice was a low baritone, devoid of affection. It wasn't a question, nor a concern. It was an observation of a fixture in his house.
"I couldn't sleep," I lied, my voice soft, practiced. I stood, smoothing the silk of my nightgown. "Did the board meeting go well?"
He didn't answer. He rarely did. He loosened his tie with a sharp, jerky motion, his gaze passing over me as if I were transparent. There was a tension in his jaw, a tightness around his eyes that I usually attributed to the chronic pain of his condition. I moved to help him with his jacket, my fingers brushing the rigid muscle of his arm.
He flinched.
For a second, he looked at me—really looked at me—but his eyes were glazed, unfocused. Suddenly, his hand shot out, gripping my waist. It wasn't gentle. It was desperate, possessing a hunger that felt more like grief than desire. He pulled me onto the bed, his movements frantic, lacking the rhythm of love.
I clung to him, mistaking his roughness for passion, my heart aching for a connection that had been fraying for three years. I buried my face in the crook of his neck, whispering his name, trying to anchor him.
His breathing hitched. His grip on my shoulder tightened to the point of pain. And then, right as the moment crested, he exhaled a single, breathless word against my ear.
"Lila..."
The world stopped. The air left my lungs as if I’d been punched. I froze beneath him, my blood turning to slush. He collapsed against the pillows, asleep within seconds, leaving me wide awake in a bed that suddenly felt like a tomb.
*Lila.*
The name hung in the silence, heavy and suffocating.
***
The morning sun was cruel, exposing every dust mote in the air, every crack in the facade of my perfect marriage. Hudson had left before dawn.
I stood in the center of his private study. I was never supposed to be in here—it was his sanctuary—but the ghost of that name had driven me to madness. My hands trembled as I approached the mahogany desk. I wasn't looking for business contracts. I was looking for the source of the infection.
I found it in the bottom drawer, hidden beneath a false bottom I only found because I knew how meticulous he was about security. A velvet box.
Inside lay a photograph. The woman in the picture was laughing, her head thrown back, wind catching her dark hair. She looked startlingly like me. The same jawline, the same eyes. But where I was polished and restrained, she was wild.
*Lila Collins.*
Beneath the photo was a stack of letters. My fingers felt numb as I unfolded the top one. The date was from last week.
*"My darling Hudson, being back in the city feels like destiny. I can’t wait to reclaim what we lost."*
Nausea rolled in my stomach. I wasn't his wife. I was a placeholder. A biological mirror image he kept around to keep his bed warm while he dreamed of her.
***
Two hours later, I sat in the corner of a private café in the Upper East Side, the kind of place where the silence cost more than the coffee.
Chase Evans slid into the booth opposite me. My adoptive brother looked impeccable in a charcoal suit, but his jaw was set in a line of granite. He didn't order. He simply placed a thick manila folder on the table between us.
"You were right to call me, El," Chase said, his voice clipped, professional, yet laced with a dangerous undercurrent. He reached for his cufflinks, slowly adjusting the silver clasp—a tic he only displayed when he was about to destroy someone.
I stared at the folder. "Tell me."
"Lila Collins," Chase began, opening the dossier. "She’s not just a memory. She’s his ex-fiancée. She dumped him when his diagnosis first came to light five years ago. But she’s back in New York."
He slid a photograph across the table. It was grainy, taken with a long-range lens. It showed Hudson entering a luxury penthouse downtown. A woman was waiting at the door, wearing nothing but a silk robe.
"They’ve been meeting for a month," Chase said, his eyes burning with protective fury. "He set her up in the penthouse. He’s paying her bills. It’s a full-blown affair, Eliza."
I looked at the photo, then at my reflection in the window. The woman staring back at me wasn't the brilliant Director of Research. She was a fool.
"He thinks I'm stupid," I whispered, the sorrow in my chest hardening into something sharp and cold. "He thinks I'm just a stand-in."
Chase leaned forward, covering my trembling hand with his. "Say the word, and I burn his world down."
I pulled my hand back, straightening my spine. I picked up the photo of Hudson and Lila, studying it with the clinical detachment of a surgeon assessing a tumor.
"Not yet," I said softly. "First, I need to be sure the cancer is terminal."
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