Follow
Chapters
Share
My Husband Killed Our Baby to Save His Mistress Novel Cover

My Husband Killed Our Baby to Save His Mistress

The air in the Gilbert Private Sanatorium tasted like ozone and despair. I lay on the crisp, white sheets, the hum of the air filtration system the only sound in my prison. My hand drifted to the swell of my abdomen, seven months heavy, seeking a flutter, a kick—anything to remind me that life still existed in this sterile tomb. The door hissed open. Eric Gilbert walked in, the sharp click of his Italian loafers echoing against the tile. He looked immaculate in charcoal wool, a stark contrast to my hospital gown and the IV lines tethering me to the bed. He didn't look at my face. He looked at the monitors. "Rosie’s numbers are crashing," he said, his voice devoid of inflection. "We need another liter." Panic, cold and sharp, spiked in my chest.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 4

The scent of desperation is distinct. It smells like ozone and cheap perfume trying to mask the rot beneath. Standing in the shadows of the silent auction hall at the Pierre Hotel, I watched Rosie Freeman unravel, and it was the sweetest symphony I had ever heard.

My phone buzzed against my thigh. A notification from the banking alert system Justin had backdoored into the Gilbert accounts. *Transaction Declined: Hermès, Madison Avenue. Amount: $45,000.*

Across the room, Rosie was clutching her phone like a lifeline, her knuckles white against the casing. She was wearing a dress that cost more than my parents’ mortgage—paid for with blood money, quite literally. I could see the frantic movement of her lips as she hissed into the receiver.

"Eric, they cut the card in front of everyone!" Her voice carried over the low hum of the string quartet, shrill and grating. "Fix it. Now."

I swirled the sparkling water in my glass, watching Eric’s reflection in a nearby mirror. He looked haggard. The audit had started three hours ago. The wolves were at the door, and for the first time in his life, he didn't have a whip to tame them. He pinched the bridge of his nose, his posture screaming exhaustion.

"Not here, Rosie," he snapped, loud enough for the couple next to him to turn their heads. "The accounts are frozen pending the investigation. Stop spending money we can't move."

Rosie recoiled as if he had slapped her. For three years, she had been the fragile doll, the dying swan he had to protect. Now, she was just another liability. I saw her eyes dart around the room, landing on me. Dr. Katherine Stone. The woman who had tanked his stock and humiliated him on stage. Her gaze narrowed, calculating, venomous. She didn't see a rival surgeon; she saw a threat to her parasitic existence. She suspected an affair. It was so pedestrian, so Rosie.

I raised my glass to her, a micro-gesture of acknowledgement. She didn't blink.

The auctioneer tapped the microphone. "Ladies and gentlemen, Lot 42. A first edition of *De Humani Corporis Fabrica* by Vesalius. A seminal work in the history of medicine."

Eric stiffened. I knew this book. He had talked about it on our honeymoon, back when I thought his ambition was noble. He had called it the "holy grail." He wanted it to legitimize his collection, to prove he was a scholar, not just a businessman.

"Bidding starts at fifty thousand," the auctioneer announced.

Rosie’s hand shot up. She was desperate to reclaim her ground, to buy his affection back with his own money she didn't realize she didn't have. She glared at me, daring me to challenge her.

I waited.

"Sixty thousand," a man in the front row offered.

"Seventy," Rosie countered, her voice trembling slightly.

I lifted my paddle. "One hundred thousand."

The room went silent. Eric turned slowly, his eyes locking onto mine. There was confusion there, and something darker—recognition he couldn't place.

"One hundred ten," Rosie squeaked. She was sweating now. She didn't have the funds. She was betting on Eric stepping in to save face.

"Two hundred thousand," I said, my voice calm, bored even.

Rosie looked at Eric. He wasn't looking at her. He was staring at me, mesmerized by the audacity.

"Two hundred fifty!" Rosie practically screamed.

The auctioneer looked at me. "Dr. Stone?"

I smiled, a slow, predatory curving of lips painted the exact shade of arterial blood. I lowered my paddle. "Too rich for my blood."

"Sold! To Ms. Freeman for two hundred and fifty thousand dollars!"

The gavel banged like a gunshot. The color drained from Rosie’s face. She had just committed a quarter of a million dollars from frozen accounts. Eric’s face turned a shade of purple I’d only seen in textbooks on strangulation. He didn't step in. He let her stand there, drowning in her own victory.

I moved through the crowd, the silk of my dress rustling like a whisper. I passed Rosie on my way to the exit. She was trembling, clutching her clutch so hard the leather groaned.

I leaned in close, invading her personal space just enough to unsettle the air around her. "He hates waste, doesn't he?" I whispered.

Rosie froze. Her head snapped toward me, eyes wide with terror. It was a phrase Eric used constantly. *I hate waste, Kathryn. Don't waste the food. Don't waste my time. Don't waste the blood.*

I didn't wait for a response. I walked out into the cool night air, leaving the chaos simmering behind me.

***

Later that night, the encrypted line on my laptop chirped. Justin sent a single image file.

*Subject: Eric Gilbert. Location: 412 Maple Street, Queens. Time: 11:42 PM.*

I opened the file. It was a grainy photo taken from a distance. Eric was standing in front of a dilapidated row house—his childhood foster home. He was holding a photograph in his hand, illuminated by the streetlamp.

I zoomed in on the inset image Justin had included. It was a photo of me—Dr. Katherine Stone—taken at a conference in Vienna six months ago. I was wearing a simple silver necklace. A locket shaped like a crumpled sandwich wrapper.

I touched my throat, where the silver rested now. It was a foolish risk, wearing it. But it was the only piece of truth I allowed myself. The wrapper from the sandwich I had given a starving boy twenty years ago. The boy who grew up to butcher me.

Eric was staring at the photo, then at the house. He was trying to connect the dots. The timeline didn't make sense to him. Katherine Stone didn't exist before 2022. But the necklace... the necklace was a ghost story he couldn't explain away.

He was looking for a savior in the past. He didn't realize the savior had returned as the executioner.

You may also like

Bound By A Billionaire's Contract Novel Cover
9.3
Ava Rosen never expected her life to fall apart in a single night. Broke, exhausted, and drowning under hospital bills, the last thing she needs is to spill coffee on a stranger, especially when that stranger turns out to be Damian Blackwell, the city's most feared billionaire. Cold, brilliant, and impossibly controlled, Damian is the one man she should never cross. But instead of destroying her, he makes her an offer: pretend to be his fiancée for six months, and he will save her family from financial ruin. Ava wants to refuse, but desperation traps her. Soon, she is pulled into Damian's glittering world of luxury, secrets, and ruthless power. His rules are strict. His temper is dangerous. His attention is intoxicating. And falling for him violates every clause of their contract. But as enemies close in and buried truths rise to the surface, Ava realizes the greatest threat is not Damian's world, it's the possibility that she might lose her heart to the man who swore he could never love her.
Hidden Heiress: The Lycan King's Disfigured Queen Novel Cover
8.1
"Why can't you just leave me alone?" Valentina snarled, breath hitching as she shoved against the bark of the tree behind her. He stepped closer, eyes glowing with an untamed hunger. In one swift, possessive motion, he pinned her hands above her head, his lips grazing the pulse at her neck-dangerously close to the spot only a mate should touch. "Because, little wolf," he whispered, his voice dark velvet against her skin, "you belong to me-and I'm done pretending otherwise." _______ Stabbed by the man she once loved and betrayed by the friend she trusted most, Valentina was reborn in the ashes of heartbreak. No longer the obedient luna of the Shadow Crust pack, she rises from the shadows to reclaim her life-and her power. But home is no longer safe. Her pack is in ruins. Her father? Bewitched by a mysterious woman named Carmella. And fate? Cruel, as always. Because waiting for her in the heart of the storm is the man she should never desire-Andres Donovan, the cold and dangerously obsessive Lycan King. and her second-chance mate. He watches her with eyes full of secrets, speaks in riddles that echo of a past she can't remember, and touches her like he's been starving for centuries. But as enemies close in, alliances fracture, and war brews over the divine blood flowing in her veins, Valentina must decide: Will she fight fate again. Or surrender to the one man who could ruin her-or save her?
His Empire, My Vengeful Return Novel Cover
9.2
My husband watched our newborn son die on the cold hospital floor and called it a "relief." He threw a check for $100,000 at my feet, telling me to disappear so he could marry his mistress. He thought I was just a poor nobody he could discard like trash. I lay in a pool of blood, clutching my lifeless baby, while his mistress, Clarabelle, laughed and kicked me. They had barred the doctors from entering, turning my delivery room into a torture chamber. Kenton looked at the tiny, still body and sneered. "He was just baggage, Kaylene. Now I can finally focus on my future with someone who has status." He believed the lie I had maintained for eight years-that I was an orphan with nothing. He had no idea that the "startup capital" he used to build his empire came from my trust fund. Or that the VIP investor he was desperate to impress was actually my father. Just as they turned to leave, the delivery room doors crashed open. My father, billionaire Harold Mcneil, stepped in, his eyes burning with a terrifying fury as he saw his daughter broken and bleeding. Clarabelle' s face went pale as she realized who he was. I wiped my tears and stood up. The grieving mother died with her son. Now, only the heiress remains, and I will burn their world to ash.
My Fiancé Destroyed My Family to Protect His Mistress Novel Cover
8.0
The Grand Ballroom of the Plaza Hotel glittered with crystal chandeliers and the diamonds of New York's elite. My engagement gala was everything I'd dreamed of—until it wasn't. I stood frozen at the top of the marble staircase, my custom Vera Wang gown catching the light as hundreds of guests turned to stare. My heart hammered against my ribs as Kendrick strode through the crowd below, his arm wrapped possessively around Sadie Weaver's waist. "Amelia." His voice carried across the suddenly silent room. "I need to speak with you." The orchestra fell silent. Camera flashes erupted like lightning. I could feel my father's hand tense on my elbow, but I couldn't tear my eyes away from Kendrick's face—the face I'd loved since childhood. "Kendrick," I whispered, my voice barely audible even to myself. "What are you doing?" He climbed the stairs until we were face to face.
Playing The Toxic Wife To Attract Billionaires Novel Cover
9.1
June woke up transmigrated into the body of a ruthless billionaire's toxic, disposable wife. Before she could even process the massive Beverly Hills mansion, a cold system voice announced she had exactly five minutes of lifespan remaining. To survive, she was forced to bind with the system and strictly maintain the original owner's "brainless, abusive drama queen" persona to earn hours to live. She was forced to violently slap hot coffee out of a terrified maid's hands and physically spank her manipulative five-year-old stepson. When she tried to escape this nightmare by throwing divorce papers at her terrifying husband, Isaac Walton, he simply ripped them to shreds. Every time she tried to be reasonable or show a hint of kindness, the system tortured her with agonizing cardiac pain, cementing her status as the most hated monster in the family. The most absurd part happened when she threw a hysterical, system-mandated tantrum over a gossip magazine, and Isaac's icy demeanor suddenly melted. He gently touched her hair, offering the one thing she desperately needed. "Stop crying. I'll handle it." Just as a spark of hope ignited in her chest, the system's critical death warning exploded in her skull: accepting his sympathy would instantly deduct thirty days of her life. To stay alive, June had no choice but to violently slap away the only hand reaching out to save her, forcing herself to play the greedy villain while her husband's gaze turned dangerously dark.