
My Husband Forced Me to Donate a Kidney to His Mistress
Chapter 3
I didn't sleep that first night. How could I? The room they gave me was tucked in the servants' wing—clean, sparse, a bed narrower than the one I'd had in prison. I lay there in the dark, listening to the house settle around me, the creaks and sighs of wealth I no longer understood.
Edith's smile replayed behind my eyelids. That slow, satisfied curl of her lips when she'd seen the recognition dawn on my face. She knew exactly what she'd done by bringing me here. This wasn't coincidence. This was theater.
At dawn, the housekeeper—Mrs. Brennan, she'd informed me curtly—knocked twice and entered without waiting for permission. "The child wakes at six-thirty. You'll prepare his bottle, change him, and keep him occupied until the Mistress requires him for photographs."
"Photographs?"
"She has a lifestyle blog." Mrs. Brennan's tone suggested what she thought of that. "Mondays and Thursdays. He needs to look pristine."
She led me to the nursery, a room decorated in shades of cream and gold that felt more like a museum exhibit than a space for a living child. And there, in a crib carved from what looked like actual mahogany, was a baby.
Kaysen.
My breath caught. He was small—maybe four months old, with a downy cap of dark hair and skin still holding that newborn translucence. He wasn't crying. He was staring up at a mobile of silver stars, his tiny fist working its way toward his mouth.
I approached slowly, my hands shaking. Mrs. Brennan thrust a bottle at me. "Warm it in the warmer. Two minutes. Not three."
She left.
I stood there, bottle forgotten, staring down at this child who was being raised by the woman who destroyed me and the man who let her. My hands gripped the crib rail. I wanted to run. I wanted to grab him and disappear into the gray morning and never stop running.
But I had forty dollars to my name and a contract that promised legal action if I broke it before the six-month term.
Kaysen made a small, querulous sound. Not quite a cry. A question.
I picked him up.
He was warm and solid and real in a way nothing had been real for a year. He smelled like baby soap and something else, something I couldn't name. He looked up at me with eyes that were still the murky blue of all infants, unfocused and searching.
I fed him. I changed him. I sang to him in a voice I didn't recognize as my own anymore, some half-remembered lullaby my father used to hum.
And over the days that followed, I began to notice things.
***
It started with his ears.
I was changing him on the third day when the light from the window hit him just right. The top of his left ear had a small, distinctive fold—a Darwin's tubercle, I remembered from some long-ago biology class. My father had one. I used to trace it with my finger when I was small, sitting on his lap while he read the paper.
I stared at Kaysen's ear until my vision blurred.
Coincidence, I told myself. Lots of people have that.
But then his eyes began to change. By the second week, the blue was giving way to something else—a warm, amber-flecked brown. My father's eyes. My eyes.
I started watching him with an intensity that bordered on obsession. The shape of his hands. The way his brow furrowed when he was concentrating on grasping a toy. The small birthmark on his right shoulder blade.
I had seen that shoulder blade before. In an ultrasound image I'd memorized during stolen moments in the prison infirmary.
My savings from the job were a joke—Edith paid minimum wage and deducted room and board—but I hoarded every dollar. I researched DNA testing labs that didn't ask questions. I found one in Jersey City that promised results in seventy-two hours for two hundred dollars.
It took me three weeks to save it.
On a Thursday, while Edith was in the city for a salon appointment and Zain was locked in his study on conference calls, I took a single hair from Kaysen's brush. My hands didn't shake. I was past shaking. I was a woman made of ice and certainty.
I mailed the sample with a strand of my own hair that same afternoon.
Seventy-two hours later, I held the envelope in my hands. I didn't open it in my room. I walked to the edge of the property, where the manicured lawn gave way to wild beach grass, and I sat down in the sand.
The paper inside was clinical, covered in numbers and terminology I barely understood. But the conclusion was in bold:
**Probability of Maternity: 99.97%**
I didn't cry. I didn't scream. I folded the paper carefully, slipped it into my pocket, and walked back to the house.
Zain was in his study. I didn't knock.
He looked up from his laptop, irritation flashing across his face. "You're supposed to be with the child."
"He's napping." My voice was calm. Steady. "I need to show you something."
I placed the DNA results on his desk.
He glanced down at them, then back at me. "What is this?"
"Proof," I said. "Kaysen is my son. The baby they told me was stillborn. Edith stole him."
For a moment—just a fraction of a second—something flickered in his eyes. Doubt, maybe. Or recognition.
Then it was gone.
He picked up the paper, scanned it, and without a word, tore it in half. Then in half again. He let the pieces flutter to the desk like snow.
"You're delusional," he said quietly. "Edith warned me you might try something like this."
The ice inside me cracked. "Look at him, Zain. Look at his eyes. His ears. He looks like my father."
"He looks like a baby." Zain stood, his full height suddenly oppressive in the small room. "You've been obsessed with us since the day you went to prison. Now you're fabricating documents to—what? Steal our child?"
"He's *my* child!"
"If you say that again," Zain said, his voice dropping to something cold and final, "I will have you arrested for harassment and fraud. You'll go back to prison, Emelia. And this time, I'll make sure you stay there."
I stared at him. At the man I had once loved so completely I thought I'd die without him. He was a stranger. No—he was worse than a stranger. He was a monument to my own stupidity.
I turned and walked out, leaving the shredded evidence of my son's existence scattered across his desk like the remnants of every promise he'd ever broken.
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