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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 3

The crash came at 2:47 a.m.

I jolted awake to the sound of splintering wood—Palmer's apartment door exploding inward like kindling. Heavy boots thundered across her hardwood floor. My lungs seized. The darkness pressed against my eyeballs, thick and suffocating.

"Elizabeth Sanders." A man's voice, flat and professional, cut through the chaos. "Mr. Elliott has requested your immediate return."

Palmer's scream tore through the bedroom wall. I heard the struggle—furniture scraping, glass shattering, her furious cursing abruptly muffled. My fingers clawed at the fitted sheet beneath me, nails catching in the cotton weave. The metallic tang of adrenaline flooded my mouth.

The bedroom door slammed open. Flashlight beams sliced through the black, pinning me against the headboard like an insect under glass. Two men—broad-shouldered, expressionless, wearing tactical gear that screamed private security—moved toward me with mechanical efficiency.

"Don't touch me." My voice came out strangled, barely human. I pressed myself into the corner, knees drawn up, every muscle coiled. "Don't you fucking touch me."

The lead man reached for my arm.

Then the world exploded in a different way.

Screaming tires. Slamming doors. The sudden, violent intrusion of new voices—deeper, colder, carrying the weight of absolute authority. Sterling's men froze mid-motion. Through the window, I glimpsed a convoy of black SUVs forming a perfect blockade across the narrow Queens street, their high beams transforming the shabby block into a stage lit for war.

"Step away from her. Now." The command sliced through the apartment with surgical precision.

A man appeared in the doorway, backlit by the hallway's emergency lighting. Tall. Impeccably dressed even at three in the morning. His features were sharp and aristocratic, his dark hair silvered at the temples. But it was his eyes—gray, calculating, and somehow achingly familiar—that made my breath catch.

"My name is Jonas Hamilton," he said, his gaze never leaving Sterling's hired thugs. "And you've just made a catastrophic error in judgment."

The lead mercenary's hand moved toward his waistband. He didn't make it halfway. Jonas's security detail flooded the room—six men moving with military precision, weapons drawn, forming a protective semicircle around the bed. Around me.

"Elizabeth." Jonas's voice softened, his attention finally shifting to where I sat trembling against the headboard. "I'm your cousin. Your mother was my aunt Catherine. And I'm taking you home."

The Hamilton estate didn't announce itself—it simply existed, sprawling across twenty manicured acres in the Hamptons like a sovereign nation. Wrought-iron gates. Stone walls topped with discreet security cameras. The main house rose from the landscape in pale limestone and leaded glass, its windows glowing with warm amber light despite the pre-dawn hour.

I sat in the back of Jonas's Mercedes, wrapped in a cashmere blanket someone had draped over my shoulders, watching the impossible architecture slide past. My hands wouldn't stop shaking.

"Palmer?" I managed.

"Safe," Jonas assured me from the driver's seat. "My team is relocating her to a secure location. Sterling's men won't find her."

The car glided to a stop beneath a columned portico. The front door opened before Jonas could reach for the handle. An elderly man stood framed in the entrance—white-haired, rail-thin, leaning heavily on a cane. But his eyes, the same storm-gray as Jonas's, blazed with fierce vitality.

"Elizabeth." My name broke on his lips. "My God. Catherine's daughter."

Grandfather Hamilton.

I climbed out of the car on legs that barely supported my weight. He moved toward me with surprising speed, the cane forgotten, and then his arms were around me—careful, trembling, reverent.

"I looked for you," he whispered against my hair. "For thirty years, I looked. I'm so sorry. I'm so goddamn sorry."

Something cracked open in my chest. The tears I'd been choking back since the miscarriage, since the divorce, since the moment I'd watched Sterling kiss Georgia's forehead—they came in a flood that left me gasping. I collapsed into this stranger's embrace, this grandfather I'd never known existed, and let myself shatter.

"You're safe now," he murmured. "You're home."

The library where they brought me after I'd cried myself hollow smelled like leather and old wood and money so old it had stopped needing to announce itself. I sat curled in a wingback chair, a mug of tea cooling between my palms, while Jonas explained the pieces of my life I'd never been given.

My mother. The Hamilton heiress who'd fallen in love with the wrong man—Roger Sanders, charming and vicious and utterly unsuitable. The family's disapproval. Her elopement. The estrangement that had lasted until her death in a car accident when I was three.

"He kept you from us," Jonas said quietly. "Roger. He knew what you were worth, what you'd inherit. So he hid you."

I thought of my childhood. The cramped apartments. Roger's sudden disappearances. The gnawing hunger that had nothing to do with empty cupboards.

"Elizabeth." A new voice, warm and careful, drew my attention to the doorway.

The man standing there was younger than Jonas, perhaps mid-thirties, with kind eyes and an easy, unassuming presence that felt like oxygen after drowning. He held a small potted orchid, its white blooms impossibly delicate.

"Brooks Stone," he introduced himself. "I'm... a friend of the family. Jonas thought you might like some company that doesn't come with a genealogy lecture."

Despite everything, my mouth twitched. Almost a smile.

"I have a greenhouse," Brooks continued, his tone conversational, unthreatening. "Nothing fancy. Just plants and quiet. If you ever need a place to breathe without anyone asking how you're doing, you're welcome anytime."

He set the orchid on the side table, met my eyes briefly—no pity, no pressure, just simple human kindness—and left.

I stared at the delicate white petals. Fragile. Resilient. Still blooming despite everything.

Maybe I could be, too.

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