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My Husband Gave Our Daughter’s Heart to His Mistress’s Child Novel Cover

My Husband Gave Our Daughter’s Heart to His Mistress’s Child

The rhythmic hiss of the ventilator was the only clock that mattered. It measured time not in seconds, but in breaths my seven-year-old daughter, Oaklyn, didn’t have the strength to take on her own. I sat in the plastic chair beside her bed, the vinyl sticking to my legs, watching the rise and fall of her small, pale chest. The ICU at New York-Presbyterian had become my entire world—a sterile purgatory of beeping monitors and antiseptic air that burned my throat. The glass door slid open. Dr. Stephen Hughes didn’t look at the clipboard in his hands; he looked directly at me. His eyes, usually a calm harbor in this storm, held a spark that made my own heart stutter. "Raya," he said, his voice low but vibrating with intensity. "We have a match." The air left the room.
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Chapter 2

Seven days. That was how long it had been since Flynn sentenced our daughter to wait for a miracle that had already come and gone. Oaklyn was stable, but "stable" in the ICU meant she wasn't currently dying, not that she was living. Her skin had taken on the translucence of parchment, blue veins mapping the geography of a failing system.

I needed fresh clothes. It was a mundane necessity in a world that had turned into a nightmare, but I drove back to our Hamptons estate on autopilot, the hum of the engine doing little to drown out the phantom beep of monitors.

When the iron gates swung open, I didn't find the sanctuary I expected. A white delivery truck blocked the driveway, the logo of a high-end interior design firm emblazoned on its side. Men in coveralls were hauling a plush, velvet chaise lounge toward the guest house—the sprawling, three-bedroom cottage that sat near the pool.

I parked the car askew and marched across the lawn, my heels sinking into the manicured grass. The door to the guest house was propped open. Inside, the scent of fresh lavender and expensive paint choked the air.

"Careful with that," a voice purred. "Flynn hates scratches on the hardwood."

Addison Powell stood in the center of the living room, directing two movers with the casual authority of a woman who owned the deed. She wore a silk blouse that cost more than most people's mortgage payments, and her hair was a cascade of perfect, glossy waves. She didn't look like a grieving widow. She looked like a conqueror.

"What is this?" My voice was a serrated blade.

Addison turned, her smile slow and practiced. "Raya. Flynn said you were practically living at the hospital. I didn't expect to see you."

"Why are you redecorating my guest house?"

"Flynn insisted," she said, smoothing the fabric of the chaise as the movers set it down. "He said Aviana needs a serene environment for her recovery. The old decor was a bit... stiff. We needed something softer. For the girls."

She said *we* with a familiarity that made my stomach turn.

"This is a recovery space, Addison, not a permanent residence. And you're buying furniture with whose money?"

She laughed, a light, tinkling sound that grated against my nerves. "Oh, don't worry about the logistics. Flynn handled everything. He's been so... attentive. He feels it's the least he can do, considering the sacrifice you made."

She stepped closer, invading my personal space. Up close, I saw the diamond pendant resting in the hollow of her throat—a solitaire that caught the light. I recognized the cut. It was identical to the earrings Flynn had given me for Christmas two years ago.

"Thank you, Raya," she whispered, her eyes dancing with a secret I couldn't quite read. "For giving my daughter a future. Flynn and I are both so grateful."

It wasn't gratitude. It was a territorial mark.

***

The leather armchair in the back room of the St. Regis Club smelled of cigar smoke and old secrets. Ambrose Butler sat opposite me, his posture rigid, a tumbler of scotch untouched on the mahogany table between us. My cousin was the only person in New York who terrified Flynn, mostly because Ambrose didn't care about money. He cared about lineage, and in his eyes, Flynn was a barbarian at the gate.

"He gave the heart to the mistress's child," Ambrose said, his voice devoid of temperature. It wasn't a question.

"He claims it's a debt of honor," I said, my hands trembling around my water glass. "He says her husband saved him. But Ambrose... he moved them into the estate. She's redecorating. She's wearing jewelry that looks like mine."

Ambrose’s eyes narrowed. "Flynn is many things, Raya, but he is not a philanthropist. Men like him don't destroy their own families for a ghost unless the ghost has leverage."

He pulled a sleek black phone from his jacket pocket and dialed a number. "Marcus. I have a job. High priority. The target is Addison Powell. I want financial records, phone logs, property deeds. If she's bought so much as a pack of gum in the last five years, I want to know who paid for it."

He hung up and looked at me, his expression softening just enough to show the steel beneath. "We aren't just going to sue him, Raya. We are going to dismantle him."

***

The hospital cafeteria was empty at 3:00 AM, save for the hum of the vending machines. I stared at a cup of cold coffee, the liquid black and uninviting.

"Don't look up," a voice murmured.

Dr. Stephen Hughes slid into the seat across from me, but he kept his body angled toward the exit. He looked exhausted, shadows bruising the skin beneath his eyes. He slid a manila folder across the Formica table, his hand covering it.

"If the board finds out I pulled these, I lose my license," he said quietly. "Maybe my freedom."

I looked at his hand, then his face. "What is it?"

"Aviana's pre-op charts. The real ones. Not the ones submitted to the ethics committee."

I opened the folder. The medical jargon was dense, but the numbers were clear.

"Her ejection fraction was forty percent," Stephen said, his voice tight with suppressed rage. "She was in heart failure, yes, but she was stable. She was a Status 2 candidate. Oaklyn is Status 1A. By every medical metric, that heart belonged to your daughter."

"Flynn said she was critical. He said she was dying."

"He lied," Stephen said, meeting my gaze. The kindness in his eyes had hardened into a fierce resolve. "Or someone lied to him. But these numbers don't add up, Raya. Someone altered the records to jump the list. This isn't just unethical. It's fraud."

I touched the cold paper, the evidence of my husband's betrayal sitting heavy under my fingertips. Flynn hadn't just made a hard choice. He had rigged the game.

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