
My Husband Let His Mistress Kill Our Baby
Chapter 2
Consciousness returned not with light, but with fire. My knees and elbows throbbed, a grinding, rusted ache that felt like my bones were scraping against raw nerves. I tried to shift, but a gasp tore from my throat.
I wasn't in our bedroom. The sterile beige walls of the guest suite stared back at me. No warmth. No Caden.
"You're awake."
Dr. Sterling stood at the foot of the bed, scribbling on a chart. He didn't meet my eyes. "A mild fever. Some stiffness. You simply have a frail constitution, Mrs. Brooks. I've prescribed rest."
"Frail?" My voice was a jagged whisper. "I was locked outside in freezing temperatures for six hours."
Sterling snapped his notebook shut. "Exposure to the elements can be taxing on delicate women. Rest."
He left before I could scream. In his place, the door clicked open to reveal Mrs. Brooks. Her pearls were perfectly aligned, her expression carved from the same marble as the foyer.
"This dramatic episode ends now," she said, not stepping fully into the room. "Rumors are already circulating. A good wife does not air her family's dirty laundry, Everly. If you cannot handle the responsibilities of this family, perhaps you aren't fit to be in it."
"Your son locked me out—"
"My son was provoked."
Caden appeared behind her. He looked impeccable in a charcoal suit, utterly untouched by the night that had broken me. He walked to the bedside table and picked up my phone.
"Give that back," I rasped, reaching out. The movement sent a spike of agony through my elbow.
"For your mental health," Caden said, sliding the device into his pocket. His eyes were flat, devoid of the warmth I had once mistaken for love. "You're clearly unstable. No calls until you learn to control your temper."
The door clicked shut. The silence was absolute.
***
Three weeks later, the ache in my joints had settled into a dull, constant companion. I stood at the edge of the ballroom, clutching a glass of sparkling water. The Brooks’ annual charity gala. I was here for one reason: to prove I wasn't the "hysterical invalid" the tabloids were whispering about.
I wore white silk, high-necked and long-sleeved to hide the bruising that had finally faded.
Then I saw her.
Amber glided through the crowd. She was wearing white. Not just white—a gown cut almost identically to mine, save for the plunging neckline that showcased her skin. She caught my eye and smiled, a predator spotting wounded prey.
She moved toward me, weaving through the throng of donors and politicians. As she passed a waiter carrying a tray of red wine, she didn't stumble. She didn't trip. She simply checked her hip to the side with the precision of a dancer.
The waiter lurched. The tray tipped.
Cold liquid splashed across my chest. The stain bloomed instantly—violent crimson spreading across pristine white. Like a gunshot wound.
Gasps rippled through the room. The music seemed to stutter.
"Oh my god!" Amber’s hand flew to her mouth, her eyes wide with theatrical horror. "Everly! You're so clumsy lately. Have you been drinking again?"
"I haven't had a drop," I said, my voice shaking as the wine soaked through to my skin.
"It's okay, sweetie." Amber reached out, her voice pitching up for the audience. "We know you're struggling."
Caden materialized at my side. He didn't look at the wine. He looked at the faces staring at us. His fingers clamped around my upper arm—right over the joint that still throbbed when it rained.
"You are an embarrassment," he hissed, his breath hot against my ear. His grip tightened until I nearly cried out. "Go upstairs. Now."
"Caden, she pushed the waiter—"
"Go." He shoved me toward the exit, then turned back to the crowd, his smile instantly charming. "My apologies, everyone. My wife isn't feeling well."
As I fled the ballroom, clutching my ruined dress, I looked back. Caden was extending a hand to Amber. She took it, stepping into the space I had just vacated, and they began to dance.
***
I sat on the edge of the bathtub two days later, staring at the plastic stick in my trembling hands.
Two pink lines.
The world tilted. A baby.
My hand went to my stomach. Despite everything—the cold, the cruelty, the pain—a spark of hope ignited in my chest. A child could change things. Caden had always talked about wanting an heir. Maybe this was the bridge back to the man I thought I married. Maybe this would make him see me again.
I wrapped the test in a tissue and hid it in my vanity drawer, right next to the prenatal vitamins I'd bought in secret.
"Everly?"
The door to the master bath swung open. Amber stood there, leaning against the frame. She wasn't supposed to be in our private wing.
"What are you doing here?" I stood up quickly, blocking the drawer.
"Looking for Caden." Her eyes dropped to the vanity. To the bottle of vitamins I hadn't pushed back far enough.
Her gaze snapped back to mine. The mask of sweetness evaporated. Her eyes were ice. "You think that will save you?"
"Get out."
She laughed, a low, ugly sound. "You poor thing."
That evening, I waited for Caden in the library, the positive test burning a hole in my pocket. When he finally walked in, the air in the room dropped ten degrees.
"Caden, I have news," I started, stepping forward.
He held up a hand. "I know."
My heart leaped. "You know?"
"Amber told me." He walked to the liquor cabinet, pouring a scotch with rigid, angry movements. "She told me about your plan."
"My... plan?"
He spun around, glass slamming onto the mahogany table. "To trap me. To get pregnant so you can squeeze a bigger settlement out of the family when we divorce. She heard you on the phone with your brother, Everly. Plotting."
The lie was so bold, so monstrous, it stole the air from my lungs. "That's insane. Caden, I didn't—"
"Don't lie to me!" He roared, the sound echoing off the shelves. "You think a child is a bargaining chip? You think you can manipulate me like that?"
"I love you!" I screamed back, tears hot on my face. "This is our baby!"
"This," he sneered, looking at me with pure disgust, "is a transaction. And I'm not buying."
He stormed out, leaving me alone in the dim light, my hand clutching the small plastic stick that was supposed to be a miracle, now twisted into a weapon.
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