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My Husband Forced Me to Serve His Mistress Novel Cover

My Husband Forced Me to Serve His Mistress

All I did was refuse a toast at Ivy’s welcome banquet. The man I’d been married to pried open my mouth and forced hard liquor down my throat.
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Chapter 3

The sound of James's key in the lock made my stomach clench. I was in the kitchen, elbow-deep in soapy water, scrubbing the remnants of Ivy's afternoon tea party from delicate china cups. The laughter of her friends still echoed in my ears, their casual cruelty as they discussed my "pathetic desperation" while I served them imported pastries.

"Darling!" Ivy's voice rang out like a bell, followed by the sharp click of her heels against marble as she rushed to greet him.

I didn't turn around, but I could hear everything—the rustle of expensive fabric, the wet sound of their kiss, James's low chuckle as he murmured something I couldn't quite catch. The familiar ache settled in my chest, not from love anymore, but from the sheer weight of being erased from my own life.

"How was your day?" James's voice was warm, tender in a way I could barely remember him using with me.

"Exhausting," Ivy sighed dramatically. "I've been so anxious, darling. This whole situation with... well, you know. Having her here is just so unsettling."

Her. Not my name. Not even "your wife." Just "her," like I was a piece of unwanted furniture they hadn't gotten around to disposing of yet.

"I brought you something," James said, and I heard the crinkle of expensive wrapping paper.

Ivy's gasp was pure theater. "James! It's gorgeous! These earrings must have cost—"

"Nothing's too expensive for you," he interrupted, his voice thick with affection. "You deserve everything beautiful in this world."

My hands stilled in the dishwater. Those words—he'd said them to me once, on our wedding night, as he fastened a necklace around my throat. The same necklace I'd seen Ivy wearing to her champagne brunch yesterday.

I dried my hands and slipped out of the kitchen through the service entrance, hoping to reach the utility room without being seen. But Ivy's sharp voice stopped me in the hallway.

"Oh, there you are." Her tone was saccharine, but her eyes glittered with malice. "James and I are having dinner in the dining room tonight. Something special to celebrate his promotion."

The dining room. Where James and I had celebrated our first anniversary, where he'd promised me we'd grow old together, where I'd once felt like the luckiest woman alive.

"Set the table with the good china," Ivy continued, examining her new earrings in the hallway mirror. "The Waterford crystal, the silver candlesticks. Make it romantic."

James appeared behind her, his arms sliding around her waist possessively. His eyes passed over me without the slightest flicker of recognition, as if I were a shadow on the wall.

"And wear the black uniform," Ivy added with a cruel smile. "The one with the white apron. I want the full service experience."

An hour later, I stood at the edge of the dining room, watching them feast on the meal I'd prepared. The Beef Wellington was perfectly golden, the wine James had selected from our—his—cellar was breathing in a crystal decanter. Candlelight danced across their faces as they fed each other bites of dessert, their laughter intimate and excluding.

"Remember our first date?" James murmured, his thumb brushing chocolate mousse from the corner of Ivy's mouth. "You wore that red dress, and I knew I'd never seen anything more beautiful."

"You were so nervous," Ivy giggled, leaning into him. "Your hands were shaking when you tried to light my cigarette."

They spoke as if they were the ones with history, as if the five years James and I had shared were nothing more than an inconvenient intermission in their grand love story. I stood there in my black uniform, invisible and forgotten, watching my husband rewrite our past to exclude me entirely.

"I have something to tell you," James said, his voice dropping to that husky tone that once made my heart race. "The board approved the merger. We're expanding into three new markets."

Ivy's eyes lit up. "Does that mean—?"

"It means we can finally move forward with our plans," he said, taking her hand and pressing it to his lips. "No more waiting, no more obstacles. Just us."

"What about—" Ivy's gaze flicked toward me, then back to James.

"What about what?" His tone was dismissive, final. "There's nothing to consider anymore. Nothing that matters."

The words hit me like physical blows. I was nothing. I mattered nothing. The woman who had loved him, who had sacrificed everything for him, who had nearly died because of him—I was nothing.

"Clear the table," Ivy commanded without looking at me. "And don't disturb us for the rest of the evening. We have... plans."

I began collecting their plates with mechanical precision, my hands steady despite the storm raging inside me. As I reached for James's wine glass, his fingers brushed mine—the first physical contact we'd had in weeks. But there was no recognition in the touch, no acknowledgment of what we'd once been. I was just another piece of serving equipment.

They didn't wait for me to finish clearing before James swept Ivy into his arms, carrying her toward the staircase that led to what had once been our bedroom. Their laughter echoed off the walls as they disappeared upstairs, leaving me alone with the remnants of their perfect evening.

I finished cleaning in silence, each clink of crystal against china marking another second of my erasure. When the last dish was washed and put away, I retreated to the utility room, my small cot wedged between the washing machine and the water heater.

But sleep wouldn't come. The sounds from upstairs were impossible to ignore—Ivy's theatrical moans, James's deep groans, the rhythmic creaking of the bed where I'd once slept beside him. Each sound was a knife twist, not because I still loved him, but because of how completely he'd discarded me.

Sometime after midnight, their voices drifted down through the thin walls. I pressed my ear to the ceiling, straining to hear.

"...can't keep this up forever," James was saying, his voice muffled but clear enough.

"Why not?" Ivy's response was sharper, more focused. "She's completely broken. Look at her—she's like a ghost haunting her own life."

"It's not about her," James said, irritation creeping into his tone. "It's about appearances. People are starting to ask questions. My mother called yesterday, wondering why my wife wasn't at the charity luncheon."

"So we accelerate the timeline." Ivy's voice took on a calculating edge. "Once my position at the company is secured—really secured, not just this consultant nonsense—we can get rid of the dead weight permanently."

My blood turned to ice. Get rid of the dead weight.

"How?" James asked, and I could hear the interest in his voice.

"Simple." Ivy's laugh was cold, predatory. "We frame her for theft. A few missing pieces of jewelry, some cash from your safe. She's already mentally unstable—everyone saw that at the party. Who would question it when she finally snaps and steals from her own husband?"

"The prenup would protect everything," James mused. "And if she's convicted of a felony..."

"Exactly. No alimony, no claims to property, nothing. She'd be completely cut off, and we'd be free to live our lives without this constant reminder of your... past mistake."

Past mistake. That's what I was to him now. Not his wife, not the woman who'd loved him desperately, not the mother of the child I'd lost because of his cruelty. Just a mistake to be erased.

I lay in the darkness, my heart pounding so hard I was sure they could hear it upstairs. They were planning to destroy me completely, to take away not just my marriage and my home, but my freedom, my future, everything.

The small flame of anger I'd been nursing suddenly roared to life, burning away the last of my fear. They thought I was broken, thought I was nothing more than a convenient victim for their schemes.

They were about to learn how wrong they were.

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