
My Husband Funneled Our Fortune to His Pregnant Mistress
Chapter 3
I turned on my heel, my hand reaching for the heavy brass handle of the office door.
"Is that supposed to scare me?"
Dakota's voice cracked like a whip behind me, sharp and dripping with defensive venom. I paused. The vibration of his heavy footsteps echoed against the hardwood as he closed the distance between us. He wanted to loom. He needed to physically dominate the space I was calmly vacating.
"You barge in here, dripping wet, throwing around vendor names you probably skimmed off a misplaced bank statement, and you expect me to tremble?" He let out a harsh, breathless laugh. "You're a housewife, Reagan. You don't know the first thing about corporate finance. You don't know what it takes to build a legacy. You just drain it."
I turned my head slowly. The storm outside lashed against the floor-to-ceiling windows, casting jagged, watery shadows across his flushed face. The vein in his temple throbbed against his skin. He was terrified, masking his panic with cruelty.
Before I could verbally dismantle him, Tessa stepped out from the ambient shadow of the desk. She moved with a calculated languor, positioning herself deliberately in the wash of the city lights. She wore a tight, ribbed lavender dress that clung to the unmistakable, rounded swell of her stomach.
She placed both hands on the curve of her belly, her fingers stroking the fabric. The gesture was theatrical, laced with a maternal smugness that made the air in the room feel suffocatingly thick. The cloying scent of her gardenia perfume temporarily overpowered the metallic smell of Dakota's fear.
"Let her go, Dakota," Tessa purred, her eyes locking onto mine with a predatory, triumphant gleam. "She's just lashing out because she knows she's obsolete."
She took another step forward, closing ranks with him. She leaned her head against his shoulder, still rubbing the mound of her stomach in slow, deliberate circles. "A man like Dakota needs a real woman, Reagan. Someone who can actually give him a future. An heir to everything he's built."
My eyes dropped to her hands. To the perfectly spherical curve of her abdomen.
*An heir.*
The audacity of the lie was almost breathtaking. I stared at the swell of her stomach, tracing the physical impossibility of it. The math didn't add up, but the tactical play was brilliantly ruthless. She was securing the bag with biology. Or, at least, the illusion of it.
I looked back up to Dakota. His chest was puffed out, a proud, defiant father-to-be. He was looking at me with a mixture of pity and arrogant superiority, completely oblivious to the biological reality of his own body.
A laugh, dark and cold, threatened to climb my throat. I swallowed it, pressing my thumbnail hard against the side of my index finger until the sharp sting grounded me. I didn't give them the satisfaction of a reaction. No tears. No screaming. No desperate demands for the truth.
I let the silence stretch. I let it hang in the air, heavy and suffocating, until the triumphant sneer on Tessa's face began to falter, replaced by a microscopic twitch of unease. Dakota shifted his weight, his arrogant posture cracking under the weight of my absolute stillness.
I looked at Tessa's stomach one last time, my expression entirely blank. Then, without a single word, I opened the door and walked out, leaving the heavy mahogany to click shut on their delusions.
The drive home was a tunnel of smearing rain and rhythmic windshield wipers. By the time I stepped into the house, the storm had settled into a steady, freezing downpour. The silence of the foyer rushed up to meet me, no longer suffocating, but expansive. The air felt cleaner.
I bypassed the living room and headed straight for my private study at the back of the house. I flicked the brass desk lamp on. It cast a narrow pool of amber light over the mahogany desk.
I approached the wall panel, sliding away the framed map of the world to reveal the biometric safe hidden behind it. I pressed my thumb against the glass scanner. A soft beep, a mechanical whir, and the heavy steel door clicked open.
Inside, resting beneath my retired dog tags and a velvet box holding my silver oak leaves, was a single manila envelope.
I pulled it out. The paper was slightly stiff, the edges crisp.
I carried the envelope into the kitchen. The marble island was cold under my forearms as I set it down. I moved methodically, grinding the beans, tamping the grounds, letting the espresso machine hiss and spit into a ceramic mug. I took it black. No sugar. No milk. Just bitter, scalding heat.
I sat on the steel stool and slid the medical file out of the envelope.
The letterhead belonged to a fertility specialist we had consulted two years before our wedding. The text was clinical, black ink on white paper, stamped with a crimson seal of authenticity.
*Patient: Dakota Bailey.*
*Diagnosis: Non-obstructive Azoospermia. Zero sperm count. Irreversible.*
He was sterile. He had always been sterile. It was the very reason I had chosen him, believing his inability to have children would spare me the agonizing choice between motherhood and my command. I had wanted an equal partner, not a patriarch.
I took a slow sip of the coffee. My eyes remained fixed on the word *Azoospermia*.
Tessa was carrying an heir. Or, more likely, she was carrying a carefully constructed prosthetic strapped to her waist, waiting to trap a man who thought he was a king.
I left the document resting on the marble, right next to my coffee cup. I didn't touch it again for the rest of the night. It just sat there under the pale kitchen lights, a silent, lethal weapon, waiting for the dawn.
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