
My Husband Forced Me to Serve His Mistress
Chapter 4
The storm outside matched the tempest brewing in my chest as I stood at the kitchen stove, stirring the congee Ivy had demanded for her "delicate stomach." Rain lashed against the penthouse windows, and thunder rolled across the Manhattan skyline like an omen.
"This is taking forever," Ivy complained from her perch on the marble countertop, swinging her legs like a petulant child. She wore one of James's shirts—my husband's shirt—the white cotton falling to her mid-thigh in a way that was both casual and deliberately provocative.
I kept my eyes on the pot, watching the rice slowly break down into the creamy texture she'd specifically requested. "It needs to simmer slowly," I said quietly. "Another few minutes."
"I'm starving now," she whined, sliding off the counter with theatrical weakness. "This anxiety is just eating me alive. I can barely keep anything down."
The irony wasn't lost on me. She'd managed to keep down an entire bottle of champagne with her friends earlier, along with imported chocolates and caviar canapés. But I said nothing, just continued stirring.
The pot was nearly ready when Ivy moved closer, ostensibly to peer at the contents. I should have seen it coming—the calculating glint in her eyes, the way she positioned herself just so. But exhaustion had dulled my reflexes, and I was focused on not burning the congee.
"It smells divine," she purred, reaching across me as if to inhale the aroma.
That's when she struck.
Her elbow connected with the pot handle with perfect precision, sending the entire vessel of boiling liquid cascading toward the floor. But instead of jumping back to safety, Ivy did something that froze my blood—she stepped directly into the path of the scalding water, letting it splash across her bare legs.
Her scream was immediate and ear-piercing, a sound of pure agony that echoed off the kitchen walls. "She tried to burn me!" she shrieked, collapsing to the floor in a heap of writhing limbs and James's now-soaked shirt. "She attacked me with boiling water!"
"What? No, I—" I started, but Ivy's performance was already in full swing.
"Help me!" she sobbed, her face contorting with pain that was at least partially real—the water had been genuinely hot, and red welts were already forming on her skin where it had splashed. "She snapped! She tried to hurt me!"
The sound of James's study door slamming open reverberated through the penthouse like a gunshot. His footsteps thundered across the marble floors, and within seconds he was in the kitchen doorway, his face a mask of fury.
"What the hell happened?" he roared, taking in the scene—Ivy crumpled on the floor, crying hysterically, and me standing over her with the empty pot still in my hands.
"James," I began, my voice barely above a whisper. "It was an accident—"
"She attacked me!" Ivy's voice cracked with tears, her body shaking as she pointed an accusing finger at me. "I was just trying to help, and she—she threw boiling water at me!"
James's eyes went black with rage. I'd seen that look before, but never directed at me with such pure hatred. "You psychotic bitch," he snarled, advancing on me with predatory intent.
"James, please listen—" I backed against the counter, the pot clattering to the floor.
"Listen to what? More of your lies?" His hand shot out, gripping my shoulder with bruising force. "I knew you were unstable, but this—attacking an innocent woman—"
"I didn't attack anyone!" The words burst out of me, louder than I'd spoken in weeks. "She knocked over the pot herself—"
The slap came so fast I didn't see it coming. My head snapped to the side, stars exploding behind my eyes, the taste of blood flooding my mouth. But that was just the beginning.
James's hands found my shoulders, his grip like iron as he shook me violently. "Don't you dare blame her for your insanity," he hissed through gritted teeth. Then, with a force that knocked the air from my lungs, he shoved me backward.
Time seemed to slow as I fell. I saw the sharp corner of the stair railing rushing toward me, felt the sickening impact as my lower back connected with the unforgiving marble edge. The pain was immediate and excruciating, a white-hot spike that shot through my abdomen and down my legs.
I hit the floor hard, my vision blurring as agony consumed me. Something warm and wet was spreading between my legs, soaking through my thin nightgown. When I looked down, my hands came away red.
"Oh God," I whispered, staring at my blood-stained fingers. "James, something's wrong—"
But he wasn't looking at me. He was kneeling beside Ivy, who had conveniently chosen that moment to "faint" from the trauma, her body going limp in his arms with perfect timing.
"Ivy, sweetheart, wake up," he murmured, his voice tender and concerned in a way that made my heart break all over again. "It's okay, you're safe now."
"James," I gasped, trying to sit up as more blood pooled beneath me. "Please, I need help—"
"Shut up," he snapped without even glancing in my direction. "Haven't you done enough damage?"
Ivy's eyelids fluttered open with theatrical precision. "James?" she whispered weakly, her voice barely audible. "Is she... is she going to hurt me again?"
"No, baby," he soothed, gathering her into his arms. "I won't let her near you."
As he carried her toward the stairs, Ivy's eyes met mine over his shoulder. For just a moment, her mask slipped, and I saw the cold satisfaction there, the triumph of a predator who had successfully eliminated her prey.
Then they were gone, disappearing into the bedroom that had once been mine, leaving me bleeding on the cold marble floor.
I lay there for what felt like hours, watching my blood spread in a dark pool around me. The pain in my abdomen was getting worse, cramping and twisting in a way that filled me with a terror I couldn't name. With trembling fingers, I managed to reach my phone, which had fallen from my pocket during the struggle.
911. The numbers blurred through my tears as I dialed.
"911, what's your emergency?"
"I'm bleeding," I whispered into the phone. "I think... I think something's really wrong."
The paramedics found me unconscious in a pool of my own blood. Later, in the sterile brightness of the emergency room, a doctor with kind eyes and gentle hands delivered the news that shattered what remained of my world.
"I'm so sorry, Mrs. Smith," she said softly. "You were pregnant, but you've miscarried. The trauma to your abdomen caused significant damage. We've stopped the bleeding, but..."
The rest of her words faded into white noise. Pregnant. I had been carrying James's child—a child I hadn't even known existed until it was gone. The baby I'd lost in that first allergic reaction hadn't been the only one. There had been another chance, another tiny life growing inside me, and now it too was dead.
"The damage to your uterus is extensive," the doctor continued, her voice seeming to come from very far away. "Future pregnancies will be... extremely difficult, if not impossible."
I stared at the ceiling tiles, counting the small holes in each square, focusing on anything but the hollow ache where my heart used to be. James's child was gone. My last connection to him, the final thread that might have bound us together, had been severed by his own violent hands.
In that sterile hospital room, surrounded by the beeping of machines and the antiseptic smell of death and rebirth, something inside me died too. Not just hope—I'd lost that long ago. This was deeper, more fundamental. The part of me that had loved James Smith, that had believed in redemption and second chances and the power of devotion to change a man's heart, breathed its last breath and went still.
What remained was something harder, colder, and infinitely more dangerous than the broken woman who had entered that kitchen hours before.
I was done being their victim.
It was time to leave them behind.
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