Follow
Chapters
Share
My Husband Forced Me to Donate a Kidney to His Mistress Novel Cover

My Husband Forced Me to Donate a Kidney to His Mistress

The ticker tape on the news crawl was still burning behind my eyelids: *Foster Enterprises Declares Insolvency.* The words were a neon slash across my vision, turning the gray Manhattan skyline into a blur of vertigo and rain. My phone had been vibrating against my hip for an hour—lawyers, creditors, panic—but I didn't answer. I only had one destination. Zain. He was the only solid thing left in a world that had liquefied beneath my feet this morning. I bypassed the doorman at the Obsidian Tower, my breath hitching in my throat as the elevator surged toward the penthouse. I needed his voice. I needed him to tell me that money was just paper, that my father wasn't going to prison, that we would survive this. The penthouse door was unlatched. That should have been my first warning.
Chapters
Share

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.

You may also like

After He Chose His Mistress, I Terminated Novel Cover
9.2
On the day of the wedding, Olivia Harris's decade-long relationship with her boyfriend came to a shocking and humiliating close. In an unexpected twist, Rayan's other significant other, Catherine Cruz, who had always been a shadowy presence in their relationship, asserted her right to marry him. Wearing Olivia's wedding dress and ring, Catherine put on a show of crocodile tears, pleading: "Olivia, I'm very sick. You have your whole life to be with Rayan. Let me have this wedding, just this once." Rayan, standing by her side, added, "Olivia, you're carrying my child, and we’re already legally married. You have so much already; this ceremony hardly means anything!" Whispers and curious stares from the guests filled the air, turning Olivia into a spectacle, a bride transformed into a punchline. Yet, she maintained her composure, choosing silence over confrontation. She offered Catherine a gracious smile, the bride who didn't deserve the title. "Sure, take the wedding. I’ve wasted ten years on this sham of a relationship; I might as well give you what's left." “Olivia, why are you behaving like this?” Rayan tried to reach her, his hand still entwined with Catherine's.
Billionaire Ex-wife Vengeance Novel Cover
9.0
Vera Andres gave up everything including her inheritance and her arranged marriage in order to marry her husband Francis Coleman. And on the night of their third year anniversary, he betrays her and frames her up to get arrested. He also drops the bump of their divorce on her face, abandoning her alone in jail to face the consequences of his actions. However, she gets released the next day with the help of her arranged fiance whom she had eloped from three years ago. Now, she is bound to get revenge on Francis with the help of Raymond Anderson, her fiance, who proposes marriage immediately after her release, and offers to help her get back her inheritance from her scheming stepsister and mother.
Billionaire’s Regret: The One He Lost Novel Cover
8.8
For five years, Maxine stayed by Braxton’s side as his secretary and secret lover, bound by a debt her gambler father owed him. She fell madly in love, yet he firmly refused marriage, keeping their relationship purely physical with no future promised. Hurt by his cold attitude, she tried to end everything and test his true feelings by flirting with other men. Jealousy drove Braxton crazy, yet he still refused to admit his deep hidden affection for her. Unexpectedly, Maxine got pregnant accidentally, deciding to hide the baby and leave him quietly for good. Her ruthless father kept threatening her family for money, forcing her to compromise and stay with Braxton again. She struggles to conceal her pregnancy while balancing endless troubles and tangled emotions. Cold billionaire Braxton gradually notices her odd behaviors, starting to suspect she is hiding a huge secret from him.
Craving My Dad's Billionaire Bestfriend Novel Cover
7.4
"Will you be a good girl for Daddy?" His husky voice dripped with lust. "Yes, please fuck me hard, Daddy." I answered, breathlessly. His hands were all over my body as he pressed into me roughly and I could feel my pussy swelling in response to his hardness. "Good," he whispered against my ear, teeth nipping at my skin. "Because you'll be a damn good whore."He bit down again, pulling away from me long enough to grab one of my wrists and pin it above my head, then began fucking me hard, his hips rolling violently and slamming into mine in time with his movements. •• •• •• Camille Caldwell, tasked by her wealthy father to learn the ropes of business under the watchful eyes of a dear and trusted mentor, Gavriel found herself juggling between being a dutiful secretary and a seductive temptress at night. At first, all she wanted from him was for him to give a good report to her father of her behavior, but as she got closer to him, she couldn't resist the magnetic attraction that drew her to him. When Billionaire Gavriel Donovan agreed to take the only daughter of his friend under his wing as his secretary, he merely counted it as doing a favor for an old friend, but Camille will have him doing the unthinkable, and he'll have her pinned beneath him, screaming for more pleasure. Can their forbidden desires survive in a world where their romance is regarded as abominable? Was Gavriel willing to put his friendship and reputation on the line for a girl he was old enough to father? ***** This book unapologetically contains very dark, raw, and mature contents. Do not open unless you'd love to be stuck in a sex-filled, lusty, and romantic world.
Divorce After Deception Novel Cover
8.7
In the fifth year of my marriage to Jrue, he suddenly expressed his longing to become a father. A month later, I discovered I was pregnant. While organizing the house, I stumbled upon his secret. Jrue had an unattainable love, a "white moonlight" figure. He planned to give our first child to her, Lilian, who couldn't have children. Everything was part of Jrue's scheme. So, I went to the hospital to arrange an abortion and watched as he continued dreaming about a blissful future. When Thanksgiving arrived, he invited Lilian to join the family gathering. That was when I tossed the abortion paperwork in front of him, leaving him completely shattered. --- “Please schedule an abortion for me, as soon as possible.” The doctor was surprised, adjusting his slipping glasses.
Love Me Like Before Novel Cover
8.5
Selina Williams has spent her life as a pawn in her adoptive family's ruthless games, only to be thrown into a cold, loveless marriage with billionaire David Kane. He belongs to another, and she is nothing more than a business arrangement until a past they both were unaware of ties them together in a way they least expected.