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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 3

The manila envelope Marcus Chen slid across the mahogany desk was thin, but it hit the wood with the weight of a gavel sentence. We were in Ambrose’s library, the air thick with the scent of old paper and impending ruin. Marcus, a man who wore silence like a trench coat, didn’t blink.

"The 'Debt of Honor' has a price tag," Marcus said, his voice gravelly. "And a zip code."

I opened the file. Photographs spilled out—glossy shots of a limestone building in Tribeca. I recognized the doorman; I recognized the awning. It was the same building where Flynn’s CFO lived.

"Penthouse B," Marcus continued, pointing a calloused finger at a bank statement. "Purchased three years ago. Four million dollars, cash. Title is in a shell company, but the wire transfer came from Flynn’s private holding account."

My stomach twisted, a cold knot tightening beneath my ribs. "And who lives in Penthouse B?"

"Addison Powell."

I stared at the document. Below the property deed was a ledger of monthly transfers: fifty thousand dollars, every first of the month, labeled *Consulting Fees*.

"He isn't just paying a debt, Raya," Ambrose said from the shadows near the bookshelf, his voice slicing through the room. "He’s keeping a mistress."

The world didn't spin; it sharpened. The blurry edges of Flynn’s erratic schedules, his late nights at the office, the sudden need for privacy—it all snapped into a crystalline, nauseating focus. He hadn't sacrificed Oaklyn’s heart for honor. He had sacrificed it for *her*.

***

The crystal chandeliers of the Pierre Hotel mocked me. Their light fractured into a thousand rainbows, dancing over the diamonds and tuxedos of New York’s elite. I stood by Flynn’s side, my hand resting in the crook of his arm like a prop. He leaned in, his breath warm against my ear, smelling of expensive scotch and deceit.

"Smile, Raya," he murmured, his lips barely moving. "The board is watching. If stock prices dip because we look estranged, Oaklyn’s medical bills don't get paid."

"You mean Addison’s mortgage?" I whispered back, keeping my smile fixed, a rictus of polite torture.

Flynn’s grip on my arm tightened, his fingers digging into my flesh. "Don't start. Addison is here as a family friend. She is the widow of the man who saved my life. Show some respect."

I looked across the ballroom. Addison was holding court near the champagne tower, wearing a crimson gown that looked like a fresh wound against the sea of black and white. She wasn't acting like a widow. She was glowing.

Later, during the main course, I excused myself. I didn't go to the restroom; I followed the sound of Addison’s laughter to the terrace. She was speaking to Clarissa Vanderbilt, her back to me, unaware of the predator in the shadows.

I pulled out my phone, hitting record.

"...Flynn is just so generous," Addison was saying, her voice a purr. "He insists Aviana and I deserve the best. The Tribeca place was just a start. He says once the dust settles with his... domestic situation... we’ll be spending more time in the Hamptons."

I watched through the glass doors as Flynn approached her. He didn't see me. He reached out, his hand sliding familiarly to the small of her back—a touch so intimate, so possessive, it burned an image onto my retinas that no apology could ever erase. It wasn't the touch of a debtor to a creditor. It was the touch of a lover.

***

The next morning, the hangover of betrayal was worse than any alcohol. Marcus returned, this time with a single, yellowed document protected by a plastic sleeve.

"We dug into the archives," Marcus said, placing it on the coffee table. "The police report from the night of Flynn’s accident."

I picked it up. The paper was brittle.

"Read the inventory of personal effects found on the deceased," Marcus instructed.

My eyes scanned the typed lines. *Deceased: Arthur Powell. Location: 3 meters from vehicle. Items in possession: One wallet (ID: Flynn Young), one Rolex Daytona (engraved: F.Y.), three credit cards (Name: Flynn Young).*

"He wasn't pulling Flynn out," I whispered, the horror rising in my throat like bile. "He was robbing him."

"The crash threw Flynn clear," Marcus said. "Powell was looting the body when the fuel tank ignited. He didn't die a hero, Mrs. Young. He died a thief."

Flynn had destroyed our family, abandoned our dying daughter, and mortgaged his soul—all to honor a man who had died trying to steal his watch.

***

Rage is a cold fuel. It clarifies. I sat on the floor of my home office, surrounded by boxes of financial records. If Flynn was funding a life for Addison, I needed to know what was left for Oaklyn.

I logged into our joint investment accounts. *Zero balance.*

My heart hammered against my ribs. I checked the savings. *Drained.*

He had liquidated everything. Every safety net, every rainy-day fund—gone. I frantically pulled the physical files from the bottom drawer, the old records from five years ago, searching for the origin of the capital he used to start his firm.

My fingers brushed against a blue folder: *The Medina Trust*.

I opened it, staring at the transaction history I had hidden from him. Five years ago, when Flynn lay broken in a hospital bed, uninsured and desperate, I had liquidated my entire inheritance—generations of Medina wealth—to pay for the experimental surgeries that rebuilt his legs and saved his life. I had never told him. I didn't want him to feel indebted. I wanted him to feel loved.

I looked at the screen, then at the empty trust folder.

I had bankrupt myself to save a man who was now stealing my last dime to pamper the wife of the thief who tried to rob him.

I closed the laptop. The tears didn't come. Tears were for the grieving. I wasn't grieving anymore. I was calculating.

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