
My Husband Killed Our Baby to Save His Mistress
Chapter 2
Pain was a sculptor, and I was its clay.
In a sterile clinic in Zurich, I watched the bandages fall away. The mirror reflected a stranger—my jawline sharper, the burn scarring on my left cheek smoothed into porcelain by skin grafts, my nose slightly altered. The woman who stared back didn't look like the trembling wife who had begged for her child’s life. She looked like a weapon.
"It’s done," Justin said softly from the doorway. He didn't ask how I felt. He knew. He had been the anchor through two years of hell—through the night terrors where I woke up screaming for a baby that wasn't there, and the days spent relearning how to breathe without the weight of Eric’s suffocating control.
"Not yet," I replied, my voice devoid of the tremor that used to define it. "Now we sharpen the blade."
For twenty-four months, I didn't live; I trained. While Eric Gilbert played billionaire in Manhattan, I recertified under the alias Katherine Stone. I replaced sleep with study, dissecting the latest advancements in robotic surgery until my hands moved with the precision of a machine. My grief, once a drowning ocean, hardened into a glacier. I spent my nights in therapy, dissecting my trauma with the same clinical detachment I used on cadavers. I wasn't healing to move on. I was healing to move in for the kill.
***
New York City hadn't changed, but the woman stepping out of the limousine in front of the Metropolitan Museum of Art certainly had.
The flashbulbs of the paparazzi erupted like a firing squad. I didn't flinch. I wore crimson silk—a deliberate choice. To the fashion critics, it was bold. To me, it was the color of the blood Eric had stolen from my veins, the life he had drained from our child.
Inside the Great Hall, the air smelled of expensive perfume and old money. I spotted him immediately. Eric stood near the Temple of Dendur, a glass of scotch in hand, looking every inch the king of the medical world. He was laughing at something a board member said, that easy, arrogant tilt of his head that used to make my heart race. Now, it just made my pulse steady.
I walked past him. I didn't look away. I let my gaze—cold, assessing, predatory—lock onto his.
Eric froze. His laughter died in his throat. He stared at me, his eyes widening as they traced the familiar curve of my eyes, the arch of my brow. For a second, he saw a ghost. He saw the wife he thought had burned to ash on Route 9.
But Kathryn Gilbert cowered. Dr. Katherine Stone did not. I held his gaze until he was the one who blinked, unsettled, his hand instinctively checking the Patek Philippe on his wrist—a nervous tic I remembered all too well. I offered him a thin, razor-sharp smile and turned away, leaving him haunted.
***
The real incision came three days later at the Global Medical Technology Conference.
I stood in the wings of the stage, watching Eric present the Gilbert Medical Group’s "revolutionary" new pacemaker. He was charismatic, persuasive, speaking of saving lives while I knew he only cared about the bottom line.
"This device represents the pinnacle of cardiac care," Eric announced, basking in the polite applause. "A solution for the next decade."
He exited stage left. I entered stage right.
The room quieted. I didn't use charisma. I used facts. Behind me, the massive screen illuminated with the schematics of my proprietary design—non-invasive cardiovascular nanobots capable of repairing arterial damage without a single incision.
"The era of cutting open the human heart is over," I said, my voice amplified and crystal clear. "Why manage a condition with a pacemaker when you can cure it with precision?"
A murmur ripped through the crowd. Phones lit up. I saw the whispers, the frantic typing. By the time I finished my fifteen-minute demonstration, Gilbert Medical stock had plummeted fifteen percent. I had just rendered Eric’s flagship product obsolete before it even hit the market.
I walked offstage, the adrenaline cold in my veins. Eric was waiting for me in the corridor, his face flushed with a mixture of rage and confusion. He blocked my path, his large frame looming over me. In the past, I would have shrunk back. Today, I stood my ground.
"Who are you?" he demanded, his voice low and dangerous. He was searching my face again, looking for the cracks, looking for the girl he had broken. "You sabotaged my launch. You look..."
He couldn't finish the sentence. He couldn't admit that the woman destroying his legacy looked exactly like the woman he had murdered by proxy.
"I am Dr. Katherine Stone," I said, my tone clipped and professional. "And I didn't sabotage your launch, Mr. Gilbert. I just evolved past it."
He took a step closer, invading my personal space, the scent of peppermint and cruelty washing over me. "I don't like being upstaged. Especially by a ghost."
"Then you should get used to it," I replied, stepping around him as if he were nothing more than a piece of furniture. "Because I'm not going anywhere. And neither is the future."
I felt his eyes burning into my back as I walked away, the click of my heels sounding like a countdown.
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