
My Husband Drugged Me to Protect His Mistress
Chapter 2
The crystal chandeliers of the Pierre Hotel ballroom fractured the light into a thousand dizzying prisms, but the real spectacle was happening at the top of the grand staircase. The murmurs of New York’s elite started as a ripple and swelled into a tidal wave of hushed scandal. Beside me, Hudson’s grip on his champagne flute tightened until his knuckles turned the color of bone.
I followed his gaze, and the air left my lungs in a sharp, silent rush.
Lila Collins stood framed by the gilded archway. She wasn't just attending; she was declaring war. She wore a custom emerald silk gown—backless, with a plunging neckline and a train that pooled like liquid envy around her feet. It was a stunning dress. I knew this because I was wearing the exact same one.
My designer had sworn it was a one-of-a-kind commission. The realization hit me with the precision of a scalpel: Hudson must have bought the design for her. I was the mannequin; she was the muse.
"Hudson," I whispered, the name tasting like ash. I reached for his arm, a reflex, a plea for him to anchor me against the humiliation washing over the room.
He didn't even blink. He stepped away from my touch as if my skin were scorched earth. Without a word to me, he crossed the ballroom floor. The crowd parted for him, their eyes darting between the two of us—the wife in emerald, and the mistress in the mirror image.
"Lila," I heard him say, his voice carrying a reverence he had never offered me in three years of marriage. He extended a hand.
She took it, her smile trembling and fragile, a perfectly curated performance of vulnerability. As the orchestra swelled into a waltz, Hudson swept her onto the floor. He held her close, his forehead resting against hers, oblivious to the hundreds of eyes watching his wife stand alone at the edge of the room, a discarded prop in his tragic romance.
I didn't run. I didn't cry. I stood with my spine steel-straight, tapping my fingers against the cool glass of my flute—*tap, tap, tap*—calculating the probability of my marriage surviving the night. The odds were dropping to zero.
***
The humiliation didn't end with the sunrise.
The following afternoon, the heavy oak doors of the Knight estate swung open to reveal Lila standing on the limestone porch. A chauffeur was already unloading a stack of Louis Vuitton trunks behind her. She clutched a designer handbag to her chest, her eyes wide and glistening with unshed tears.
"I didn't know where else to go," she sobbed, her voice hitching. "My apartment... a pipe burst. Everything is ruined. The water, the mold... I was terrified."
I stood in the foyer, my arms crossed over my chest, blocking the entrance. "There are five-star hotels on every block in Manhattan, Lila. I’m sure Hudson’s credit card can cover them."
"Eliza." Hudson’s voice cracked like a whip from behind me.
I turned. He was descending the stairs, buttoning his cuffs, his expression thunderous. He didn't look at the sobbing woman with suspicion; he looked at her with a desperate need to save her.
"She stays," Hudson commanded, walking past me to usher Lila inside. He placed a protective hand on the small of her back, guiding her away from the draft as if she were made of spun sugar. "Prepare the guest suite in the east wing. And have the staff bring her tea. Chamomile."
He remembered her tea order. He still couldn't remember my birthday.
"This is our home, Hudson," I said, my voice low, fighting to keep the tremor out of it. "You're moving your mistress into the room next to ours?"
He finally looked at me, his eyes cold and dead. "Don't be dramatic, Eliza. It’s a temporary arrangement for a friend in crisis. Try to have a heart. It might suit you better than that jealousy you wear so poorly."
***
Breakfast the next morning was a study in suffocation. The silence in the dining room was broken only by the scrape of silver against china. Lila sat to Hudson's right, wearing a silk robe that was a little too sheer, a little too loose.
Hudson’s phone buzzed against the mahogany table. He glanced at the screen—a call from the board.
"I have to take this," he muttered, standing up. He squeezed Lila’s shoulder briefly before exiting to the terrace, sliding the glass door shut behind him.
The moment the latch clicked, the atmosphere in the room shifted. The fragile, teary-eyed victim vanished. Lila straightened in her chair, picking up a strawberry and biting into it with slow, deliberate relish. She looked at me, her eyes hard and mocking.
"It must be exhausting," she said, her voice dropping the breathless falsetto she used around Hudson. "Pretending you belong here."
I didn't look up from my coffee. "I'm his wife, Lila. I don't have to pretend."
She laughed, a sharp, cruel sound. "You're a placeholder, Eliza. A boring, ordinary housewife he picked out of a catalogue because he couldn't have me. Do you really think he sees you when he looks at you? Or does he just see a faded copy of the real thing?"
My hand tightened around the handle of my mug. The urge to shatter the ceramic against the table was overwhelming, but I forced my pulse to slow. I looked her dead in the eye.
"If I'm such a faded copy," I said, my voice clinical and detached, "why did you feel the need to copy my dress last night? In my field, we call that insecurity."
Lila’s face twisted. Her mouth opened to snap back, but her eyes flicked to the terrace door. Hudson was coming back.
Instantly, her posture slumped. She dropped her fork, the metal clattering loudly against the plate, and buried her face in her hands. A sob, loud and theatrical, ripped from her throat.
Hudson slid the door open, rushing to her side. "Lila? What happened?"
She pointed a trembling finger at me. "I... I was just trying to make conversation. She said... she said I was trash. That I didn't belong here."
Hudson turned to me. The disgust in his gaze was visceral, a physical blow.
"I expected you to be unhappy," he said, his voice low and dangerous. "But I didn't think you were cruel. Apologize to her."
"I didn't say that," I stated, refusing to cower. "She's lying, Hudson."
"Enough!" He slammed his hand on the table, rattling the fine china. "I won't have this pettiness in my house. If you can't be hospitable, Eliza, then leave the room. I’m tired of your insecurity poisoning everything."
I looked at the man I had spent three years trying to save. Then I looked at the woman smirking behind her hands. I stood up, smoothing my skirt with shaking hands.
"Enjoy your breakfast," I said softly. "I’ve lost my appetite."
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