
My Husband Killed Our Baby to Save His Mistress
Chapter 3
The applause from the auditorium still rang in my ears, a phantom ovation, as I slipped out the service exit of the convention center. The rain in Manhattan didn't cleanse; it just slicked the grime into a mirror. I checked my reflection in the darkened window of the waiting town car. Dr. Katherine Stone stared back—impeccable, cold, a fortress built on ruins. But beneath the ribs, Kathryn Stewart was screaming.
"He knows," I said, sliding into the backseat.
Justin Clark didn't look up from his tablet. The blue light washed over his sharp features, highlighting the tension in his jaw. "He suspects. There's a difference. Suspicions make men careless. Knowledge makes them dangerous."
"He looked at me like he was seeing a ghost," I murmured, pulling off my gloves. My hands weren't shaking. That was the training. "He’s already put a tail on me. I saw the black sedan three blocks back."
Justin finally looked at me, his eyes softening just enough to let the warmth through the steel. "Let him look. Katherine Stone’s background is watertight. Born in Zurich, educated at the Karolinska Institute, residency in London. The paper trail is perfect because it's real—we just borrowed a dead woman’s name and gave her your brilliance."
He handed me a sleek, black drive. "But we need to give him something else to look at."
We weren't going home. The car bypassed the Upper East Side and headed north, toward the rotting industrial carcass of the old Gilbert Sanatorium. It had been shuttered six months ago for 'renovations'—Eric’s code for destroying evidence. But Justin still sat on the board of the holding company.
The facility loomed in the darkness, a brutalist concrete slab against the stormy sky. My stomach twisted, a phantom kick from a child who would never be born.
"You don't have to go in," Justin said, his hand hovering near mine but not touching. He knew the boundaries.
"I do." I opened the door. The air smelled of wet leaves and ozone, just like that night. "If I don't face the monster's lair, I can't burn it down."
We moved through the service corridors by flashlight. The silence was heavy, oppressive. We reached the archives in the basement, a room filled with the smell of dust and stagnant water. Justin bypassed the electronic lock in seconds. Inside, rows of filing cabinets stood like tombstones.
"Digital records were wiped," Justin whispered, moving to a dusty terminal in the corner. "But the backup server for the automated pharmacy... Eric is too arrogant to think anyone would check the hard lines."
He typed rapidly. Lines of code scrolled down the screen, green on black. I watched his face, waiting for the flinch. It came a moment later. His fingers stopped.
"Kathryn."
I moved to his side. The screen displayed a log of prescriptions dispensed to Patient 004—me.
*Prenatal Vitamin Compound B. Authorized by: E. Gilbert.*
"Break it down," I ordered, my voice sounding hollow in the vast room.
Justin hit a key. The chemical composition expanded.
*Folic acid. Iron. Calcium.*
And at the bottom, in amounts small enough to evade standard toxicology but large enough to accumulate: *Arsenic Trioxide. Lead Acetate.*
The world tilted. I gripped the edge of the desk, my knuckles turning white. "He wasn't just using me as an incubator," I whispered, the realization tasting like copper in my mouth. "He was keeping me weak. Lethargic. Compliant. He poisoned me while I carried his son."
"Trace amounts," Justin said, his voice trembling with suppressed rage. "Just enough to cause neurological fatigue. Confusion. It’s why you couldn't fight back. It’s why you slept eighteen hours a day."
I closed my eyes, remembering the heavy, drugged sleep, the way Eric would stroke my hair and tell me I was just 'tired.' The vitriol in my veins turned to ice. "Print it. All of it."
***
Across the city, in the penthouse that used to be my prison, Eric Gilbert poured a drink. His hand shook, splashing amber liquid onto the mahogany. He stared at the dossier on his desk—the preliminary report on Dr. Katherine Stone.
*Clean,* the investigator had written. *Too clean.*
His phone buzzed. Rosie. Again.
"Eric, darling," her voice whined through the speaker, grating against his nerves like sandpaper. "The catalog for the new yacht came today. The 'Sea Goddess' model. It has a helipad. You promised."
He looked at the TV screen, paused on a freeze-frame of Dr. Stone’s presentation. The intelligence in her eyes, the fire. Then he looked at the phone. Rosie was perfectly healthy, glowing with vitality, yet she did nothing but consume.
"Not now, Rosie," he snapped, surprising himself.
"Excuse me?" Her tone sharpened. "My heart palpitations are starting again, Eric. The stress..."
"Take a pill," he said, and hung up.
He stared at the woman on the screen. The way she had looked at him—not with love, not with fear, but with the cold, clinical assessment of a butcher eyeing a carcass. It terrified him. It thrilled him.
***
The next morning, the first domino fell.
I sat in a café across from the New York Medical Board headquarters, sipping an espresso that tasted like ash. I watched as the courier bike pulled up. The envelope he carried was plain manila, unmarked. Inside were the first ten pages of the blood procurement logs we’d pulled from the server—redacted to protect my identity, but damning for the Gilbert Group.
*Illegal donor sourcing. Coerced extraction. Unlicensed storage.*
Twenty minutes later, chaos erupted. Suits began running out of the building, phones pressed to their ears. A fleet of black government vehicles pulled up to the curb—the audit team.
My phone buzzed. A text from Justin: *It’s begun. Board meeting called for 10 AM. Eric is being summoned.*
I watched the panic unfold through the glass, my reflection superimposed over the scene. Eric would be scrambling now, his investigators pulled off the hunt for Katherine Stone to save his sinking ship. He thought he was fighting a regulatory battle. He didn't know he was fighting a war against the dead.
I finished my coffee, placed a twenty-dollar bill on the table, and walked out into the sunlight. The poison he had fed me was gone from my blood, but the toxicity remained. Now, it was my turn to serve it back to him, drop by drop.
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