Follow
Chapters
Share
My Husband Left Me for His Pregnant Mistress Novel Cover

My Husband Left Me for His Pregnant Mistress

The phone lit up at 2:47 in the morning. I was standing at the kitchen counter in the dark, reaching for the water glass I'd left there after dinner, and Xander's phone was just—there. Face-up. Glowing that particular blue-white that means a new message. *Miss you already. Tonight was everything. — G* The counter edge cut into the heel of my hand. I'd pressed into it without realizing. I read the message twice. Then the screen dimmed and the kitchen went back to dark, and I stood there very still the way you go still when you've heard something fall somewhere in the house and you're waiting to understand whether it broke.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 4

Alden became a constant in the way weather becomes a constant—unannounced, reliable, shaping the atmosphere of my days without asking permission. He showed up at the studio each morning with black coffee in a paper cup, the kind with no logo, no performance, just caffeine and the particular attention of someone who'd noticed I took it with nothing added. He didn't hover. He worked in the corner with his equipment, adjusting lenses, reviewing shots on his laptop, occasionally asking a question about drape or hemline that revealed he'd been paying closer attention than I'd realized.

On the third day, I caught myself talking to the succulent.

"You're doing great," I murmured, adjusting its position on the windowsill. "Better than me, honestly. You're thriving."

When I turned around, Alden was watching me with an expression I couldn't quite read—something warm and careful, like he'd just witnessed something he wanted to remember.

"What?" I asked, defensive.

"Nothing." But the corner of his mouth lifted. "I just think your plant's lucky."

I felt heat climb my neck. "I'm losing it."

"No," he said quietly. "You're not."

---

By Friday night, after twelve hours of steaming garments and pinning hems and directing models through poses while Alden shot frame after frame with that silent, total focus, I was wrung out in a way that felt almost clean. We wrapped at nine. The models left. The studio emptied. And Alden, packing his equipment with methodical precision, said: "You need a drink."

It wasn't a question.

The bar he chose was dark and nearly empty, the kind of place where the bartender didn't try to make conversation and the music was low enough to think through. We took a corner booth. He ordered whiskey. I ordered wine and drank half of it before I remembered I hadn't eaten since noon.

"The shoot looked good," I said, because I didn't know what else to say, because the silence between us felt too large and too full at the same time.

"It looked like you," Alden said. "That's better than good."

I turned the glass in my hands, watching the light move through the red. "I don't know what that means anymore. What I look like. Who I am when I'm not—" I stopped. Started again. "I spent eight years being useful. Being the person he needed me to be. And I was so good at it that I forgot I was performing."

Alden didn't interrupt. He just waited, his hands folded on the table, his attention so complete it made my chest ache.

"The worst part," I said, and my voice cracked on the words, "is that I still don't know if I was ever enough. If I could have been enough. Because I was never his first choice. I was the one who stayed when she left, and I think—" I pressed my palm against my sternum, trying to hold something in. "I think I've spent my whole life believing that love is something you earn by being indispensable. That if you're just useful enough, patient enough, small enough, eventually you become someone's priority."

The words hung in the dim air between us. I couldn't look at him. I stared at my wine and waited for the pity, the platitudes, the careful distance people put between themselves and someone else's open wound.

Instead, Alden reached into his jacket.

He pulled out a plain envelope—the kind you'd use for a card, nothing special—and set it on the table between us. His hand rested on it for a moment, as if he was deciding something. Then he slid it toward me.

"Open it," he said.

My hands shook as I lifted the flap. Inside was a photograph—a single print, slightly worn at the edges, as if it had been handled carefully and often.

It was me.

I was standing at a bus stop, my hair longer than I wore it now, a sketchbook pressed against my chest. The light was gray and soft, late afternoon, and I was looking at something outside the frame with an expression I'd never seen on my own face—distant, dreaming, unguarded. Beautiful in a way I'd never allowed myself to believe I could be.

"When—" My voice barely worked.

"Four years ago," Alden said. "You were waiting for the M15. I had my camera. I took one shot. I didn't approach you. I didn't know your name." He paused, and when he spoke again, his voice was steady and raw at the same time. "But I never forgot your face."

I stared at the photograph. At the evidence of being seen when I thought I was invisible.

"I've been paying attention, Logan," he said quietly. "The whole time. You were never a backup. Not to me."

The bar blurred at the edges. I looked up at him—at this man who had carried a photograph of me for four years, who had waited and watched and never asked for anything in return—and felt the careful architecture of my disbelief begin to collapse.

"Why didn't you say something?" I whispered.

"Because you weren't ready," Alden said. "And I wanted you to be ready."

I set the photograph down carefully, my fingers tracing the edge. "And now?"

He leaned forward, and his eyes held mine with an intensity that made it hard to breathe.

"Now," he said, "I'm saying something."

You may also like

After My Fiancé Kissed His Mistress, I Left Him Novel Cover
9.1
On the day we were supposed to get our marriage license, my boyfriend's childhood friend insisted on coming along. She said she wanted to be there for our happy moment. But as we waited in line, she suddenly fainted. Right there, my boyfriend intertwined his fingers with hers, giving her CPR. When the ambulance arrived, without a second glance at me, he accompanied her on the way to the hospital. That evening, she posted on Instagram, "Only Joel truly cares for me, always putting me first," along with a selfie of them cheek-to-cheek. I pulled out my phone and sent a message to Professor Washington: "Professor Washington, is the plan to study abroad still an option?" --- A cold wind swept through, and I shivered involuntarily, staring at the marriage certificate in my hand. This was the fifth time Joel Porter had failed to show at the marriage registry. Each time, his excuses sounded plausible. But this time, I finally felt completely let down.
Betrayed Wife: Hiding The Mafia Boss's Son Novel Cover
7.1
I woke up wrapped in the arms of a man I believed would burn the world for me. Michael Thorne was the underworld’s golden boy, and I was pregnant with his legacy. But by sunset, the illusion shattered. During our family brunch, the doors burst open and a woman dragged a four-year-old boy into the room. The child had Michael’s nose. His chin. "Tell them who Leo is!" the woman screamed. Michael froze. He didn't deny it. While I stood there in shock, his mistress lunged at me, clawing at my face. My husband hesitated. In that split second, I realized I wasn't his wife; I was just an incubator for his empire. He had kept a secret family as an insurance policy. My father destroyed Michael’s career in an hour, stripping him of his money and status. But I wanted to destroy his soul. He begged for forgiveness, weeping, claiming he loved our unborn child more than anything. So I placed a hand on my stomach and looked him dead in the eye. "There is no baby, Michael," I lied. "Your legacy is dead." As he fell to his knees, broken, I walked away to build my own empire—with the son he would never know existed.
From Surgeon's Hands to Avenging Fire Novel Cover
9.7
The world knew me as Dr. Brenna Mann, the neurosurgeon with hands insured for millions. My husband, Davis, was a powerful lawyer, and our life was perfect-until he shattered it. He protected his secret lover, Kiley, after she killed my mother in a hit-and-run. Then, to silence me, he had his family' s dogs maul my hand, ending my career forever. He didn't stop there. He fabricated a video that drove my innocent sister to suicide, then held her fate over my head to force me to save his lover's mother. He took everything-my mother, my hand, my career, and my sister. The man I had vowed to love was a monster wearing my husband's skin. He thought he had broken me, leaving me kneeling in public humiliation. He was wrong. He had only created a monster of his own, one with a brilliant mind and a billionaire's backing, ready to burn his world to the ground.
His to Preserve Novel Cover
8.2
BLURB: The job was simple; to preserve the past. But Isla never expected her own past to walk through the door of the Thorne Estate. Isla Campbell lands a career-defining project as a historian for organizing the archives of the Thorne estate, a task critical for a high-stakes foundation review. Her client, Cade Thorne, is the dedicated and undeniably handsome heir to a legacy he strives to honor and keep. But on her first day, Isla is met with a shocking  surprise: her boss, Cade, is the charming stranger she shared a fleeting, unforgettable night with just days before. Now, the undeniable spark between them threatens to ignite, risking the professional integrity of the project and the future of the very estate Isla was hired to protect. As their passion deepens and secrets unravel, they must choose between the history they're preserving and the future they're dangerously close to writing together despite the odds. What happens when Isla finds out she is also a Thorne?
His Unwanted Wife Is Madame Lan Novel Cover
7.8
Andrea was trapped in a suffocating marriage with billionaire Gregory Morse, forced to live as the pathetic substitute for his dead fiancée. When armed intruders broke into their estate in the dead of night, she called her husband in pure terror. "Stop playing these cheap, attention-seeking games," Gregory sneered with disgust, and hung up the phone. She barely escaped with her life, but the cruelty only escalated. At the family mansion, his dead fiancée's sister deliberately scalded Andrea's hand with boiling tea. Instead of defending his wife, Gregory publicly humiliated her, ordering her to clean up the mess while calling her a stray dog. That night, hiding in the dark wine cellar, Andrea overheard a chilling confession. Gregory admitted to his brother that he knew Andrea was completely innocent of the car crash that killed his fiancée. He knew she had been framed. Why did he marry her? Just to use her as a psychological punching bag to vent his twisted grief. He watched her suffer every single day, treating her like disposable trash, while violently threatening anyone who showed her an ounce of kindness. He thought she was just a useless, helpless shadow who would quietly endure his torment forever. He had no idea that behind her submissive facade, she was secretly Madame Lan, the apex predator of the global fashion world. And now, she was ready to burn his empire to the ground.
HOUSE OF TABOOS(erotica shorts) Novel Cover
9.8
A collection of scorching stepdad erotica shorts where forbidden desire knows no limits. Every story is packed with raw lust, shameless seduction, and taboo encounters that will leave you wet and burning for more.