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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 4

The corridor outside the pediatric ward smelled of bleach and impending grief. I found Addison near the elevator banks, adjusting the collar of a camel-hair coat my drained bank accounts had undoubtedly paid for. She held a designer latte, looking entirely out of place in a hallway where parents routinely received the worst news of their lives.

"Leaving so soon?" I asked, my thumb sliding over the volume button of my phone inside my pocket, blindly activating the voice memo shortcut.

Addison turned. The practiced, doe-eyed widow vanished, replaced by the sharp, calculating angles of a woman who had finally won. "Aviana is resting comfortably. It’s amazing what priority care can do."

"Priority care built on a lie," I said, stepping into her personal space. The scent of her expensive jasmine perfume was cloying. "I know about the Tribeca penthouse, Addison. I know about the consulting fees."

Her perfectly manicured fingers tightened around her leather handbag. "Flynn owes us. Arthur died in that fire."

"Arthur died with Flynn’s Rolex in his pocket."

A flicker of something ugly crossed her face, but she quickly smoothed it into a sneer. She took a slow sip of her coffee, leaving a ring of crimson lipstick on the plastic lid. "It doesn't matter. Flynn believes what he needs to believe. And my daughter deserves the best. If I had to make her look a little closer to death on paper to get that heart, so be it. You would have done the same if you had the spine."

My pocket vibrated softly. *Saved.*

I didn't get to reply. The overhead speakers crackled, the automated voice slicing through the heavy air. *"Code Blue, Pediatric ICU, Bed 4."*

Bed 4.

The hallway blurred. I ran, my heels skidding on the polished linoleum. When I reached the glass doors of Oaklyn's room, it was a war zone. The shrill, continuous scream of the heart monitor pierced my skull, a sound that demanded the world stop spinning.

Dr. Stephen Hughes was on the bed, his broad shoulders rising and falling as he drove his weight into Oaklyn’s fragile chest. *One, two, three, four.*

"Push one of epi!" Stephen barked, sweat beading on his forehead.

I slammed my hands against the glass, unable to breathe, watching my universe flatline. It took three agonizing minutes and a violent jolt from the defibrillator before the jagged, reluctant rhythm returned to the screen.

Stephen stepped out minutes later, stripping off his latex gloves. His hands, usually so steady, carried a faint tremor. He didn't look at me with pity; he looked at me with the terrifying gravity of a soldier reporting from the front lines.

"The mechanical pump is failing, Raya," he said, his voice a low, gravelly whisper. "Forty-eight hours. If we don't get a heart, her body won't survive another arrest."

Forty-eight hours. The ticking clock drowned out everything else. I left the hospital, the cold fuel of vengeance burning away the last remnants of the woman who had loved Flynn Young. I drove straight to the glass-and-steel monolith of Young Tech.

I bypassed Flynn’s protesting assistant, throwing open the heavy oak doors of his corner office. He was on the phone, framed by the panoramic view of the Manhattan skyline he believed he owned. He frowned, lowering the receiver.

"Raya, I am in the middle of—"

I slammed the manila envelope onto his immaculate desk. Glossy photos of Addison entering the Tribeca penthouse spilled over his quarterly projections, followed by the brittle, yellowed police report.

"Read it," I commanded, my voice eerily calm. "Your hero was looting your unconscious body, Flynn. And the grieving widow you’ve been funding? I have her on tape admitting she forged Aviana’s medical records to steal our daughter's heart."

Flynn stared at the police inventory. A muscle in his jaw ticked. He reached for his left wrist, his fingers brushing the Patek Philippe watch out of habit. The cognitive dissonance was a physical weight in the room. To accept this was to accept he had destroyed his own child for a grifter.

Instead of crumbling, his features hardened into marble. His eyes went dead.

"This is pathetic, Raya. Fabricating police reports because you can't handle the board's medical decision?" He gathered the photos and the report, tearing them methodically in half, then in quarters. He dropped the pieces into his leather wastebasket.

"Oaklyn just coded," I whispered, the words scraping my throat like glass. "She has forty-eight hours. Step down from the board. Reinstate her status. Now."

Flynn picked up his desk phone, his gaze locked on mine, unyielding and arrogant. "Security? My wife is having a breakdown. Escort her out of the building."

I didn't fight the guards. I walked out with my head high, the final tether to my marriage severing cleanly.

An hour later, I sat in the leather-upholstered booth of a dimly lit speakeasy in Midtown. Ambrose slid a glass of water across the table. Beside him sat Elena Rodriguez, the most ruthless investigative journalist at the *Times*.

"We have the audio of Addison confessing to medical fraud," Ambrose said, laying a silver flash drive on the mahogany table. "We have the original, unedited hospital charts verified by a whistleblowing physician. We have the wire transfers from Flynn’s private accounts to the mistress’s shell company. And we have the police report proving the 'hero' was a petty thief."

Elena’s dark eyes gleamed as her fingers closed over the drive. "This isn't just a scandal. This is a detonation. When do we go live?"

I pictured Flynn in his bespoke suit, tearing up the truth to protect his ego while our daughter lay dying.

"Tomorrow morning at ten," I said, the words tasting like iron and victory. "Right when he takes the stage for the Tech for Tomorrow keynote. I want his phone blowing up while the world watches him speak."

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