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My Husband Left Me Bleeding for His Mistress’s Child Novel Cover

My Husband Left Me Bleeding for His Mistress’s Child

The scent of bergamot and spun sugar was the first betrayal. It was too young, too cloying, and it clung to the lapel of Sterling’s bespoke Tom Ford coat like a parasite. I had followed that scent, followed the midnight text chimes that lit up our darkened bedroom with a sickly blue glow, all the way to the gilded awning of the Waldorf Astoria. Rain slicked my windshield, distorting the streetlights into jagged halos. Through the rhythmic, frantic sweep of the wipers, I watched my husband of five years—the man who had once promised me the world on the sagging mattress of a cramped college dorm—press his intern, Georgia Morris, against a marble pillar. His hands, the very hands that had poured my coffee that morning, were tangled greedily in her blonde hair. My fingers curled into my palms until crescent moons bled into my skin. Slowly, they drifted down to rest flat against my lower abdomen. *Pregnant.* The word was a fragile, terrifying secret I had planned to whisper to him tonight. A sharp metallic tang coated my tongue as I bit the inside of my cheek.
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Chapter 1

The scent of bergamot and spun sugar was the first betrayal. It was too young, too cloying, and it clung to the lapel of Sterling’s bespoke Tom Ford coat like a parasite. I had followed that scent, followed the midnight text chimes that lit up our darkened bedroom with a sickly blue glow, all the way to the gilded awning of the Waldorf Astoria.

Rain slicked my windshield, distorting the streetlights into jagged halos. Through the rhythmic, frantic sweep of the wipers, I watched my husband of five years—the man who had once promised me the world on the sagging mattress of a cramped college dorm—press his intern, Georgia Morris, against a marble pillar. His hands, the very hands that had poured my coffee that morning, were tangled greedily in her blonde hair.

My fingers curled into my palms until crescent moons bled into my skin. Slowly, they drifted down to rest flat against my lower abdomen. *Pregnant.* The word was a fragile, terrifying secret I had planned to whisper to him tonight. A sharp metallic tang coated my tongue as I bit the inside of my cheek. *Don't shatter,* I commanded myself. My father, Roger, had walked out on my mother without a backward glance, leaving a gaping crater in my chest I’d spent a lifetime trying to fill. I refused to let my child inherit that same hollow legacy. I put the car in drive, swallowing the bile rising in my throat, and chose the suffocating silence of endurance.

Time became an agonizing test of will, until three weeks later, my body made the choice I was too cowardly to make.

It started as a dull, heavy ache, then escalated into a violent, tearing cramp that dropped me to my knees on the cold bathroom tiles. I gasped, my fingers scrabbling for purchase on the edge of the porcelain sink. A drop of crimson hit the pristine white grout. Then a steady, terrifying stream.

My hands trembled so violently I dropped my phone twice before dialing Sterling’s number.

"What is it, Elizabeth?" His voice clipped through the speaker, sharp and impatient, layered over the muffled, sterile hum of a waiting room. Not a boardroom.

"Sterling," I choked out, a fresh wave of agony folding me in half. "I'm bleeding. It hurts. Please, I need you to take me to the hospital."

A heavy, exasperated sigh crackled through the line. "Elizabeth, for God's sake, take an Advil. I am in the middle of an urgent corporate matter. I can't derail a multi-million-dollar merger because you're exaggerating your cramps."

"I'm pregnant," I sobbed, the secret torn from my chest in a desperate, ragged breath. "Or... I was. Please, I’m scared."

Silence stretched between us, thick and suffocating. Then, a voice drifted through the background—Georgia's voice, sweet and lilting. *Sterling, the doctor is ready for us.*

"Stop being hysterical," Sterling snapped, his tone dropping to a furious, icy hiss. "Call a cab if you're that worked up. I have to go." The line went dead.

I drove myself. The leather steering wheel was slick with my sweat, the city lights blurring into cruel, mocking streaks. The emergency room was a sensory nightmare of glaring fluorescents, the sharp stench of rubbing alcohol, and the agonizing, hollow scrape of the ultrasound wand confirming what my body already knew. Empty. Gone.

The physical pain was a wildfire, but the subsequent numbness was absolute. I lay on the stiff hospital bed, staring at the water stains on the ceiling tiles until a nurse finally helped me into a wheelchair to process my discharge.

"Take it easy for the next few days, Mrs. Elliott," she murmured, pushing me down the long, echoing corridor.

I didn't answer. My gaze had snagged on a tableau unfolding twenty yards ahead, outside the premium VIP maternity wing.

Sterling stood under the warm, golden glow of a wall sconce, his broad shoulders relaxed, his profile softened by a boyish, radiant smile I hadn't seen directed at me in years. Georgia stood beside him, her hand resting protectively over her own slightly rounded stomach. She held up a glossy black-and-white strip—a premium ultrasound photo.

Sterling reached out, tracing the grainy image with a reverence he had just denied my bleeding body. Then, he leaned down and pressed a tender, lingering kiss to Georgia’s forehead.

The air left my lungs, but not in a sob. The frantic, desperate girl who had clung to the ghost of her college sweetheart, who had terrified herself with the shadow of her father's abandonment to the point of accepting abuse, quietly died in that wheelchair. In her place, a glacial, terrifying clarity settled over my bones.

He hadn't just killed our marriage; he had let our child die in a cold bathroom while he celebrated another woman's pregnancy down the hall.

I didn't scream. I didn't demand an audience. I simply let the nurse wheel me past the sliding glass doors into the freezing night air. I wrapped my coat tighter around my empty, aching center, letting the bitter wind strip away the last remnants of my delusion.

The trauma bond—that rusted, jagged chain I had mistaken for love—shattered. Tomorrow, the mourning would begin. But tonight, the only thing left to nurture was my escape.

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