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My Husband Let His Mistress Kill Our Child Novel Cover

My Husband Let His Mistress Kill Our Child

The elevator doors hissed shut, sealing Carter inside the steel box that would carry him down to the waiting limousine. Tokyo. He would be gone for forty-eight hours. I pressed my hand against the cold glass of the penthouse window, watching the blizzard swallow the Manhattan skyline. The condensation under my palm felt like the only real thing left in a world that was rapidly dissolving. "He’s gone to build the empire, Lilah. We must do our part here." Sasha’s voice didn't come from behind me; it seemed to materialize inside my head. I turned. She stood by the kitchen island, a silhouette against the sterile white marble, holding my bottle of prenatal vitamins upside down over the garbage disposal. The rattle of pills hitting the metal blades sounded like hail on a tin roof.
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Chapter 2

The transition from the master suite to the servant’s quarters was a descent into the underworld. My feet, bare and swollen, dragged against the rough, unfinished concrete. Carter didn't shove me; his touch was terrifyingly gentle, the firm, guiding grip of a nurse leading a patient to surgery.

"This is necessary, Lilah," he murmured, his voice hollowed out. He wasn't looking at me. He was looking through me, at some stain on my soul that only he—and *she*—could see. "Comfort breeds stagnation. The toxicity in your womb... it needs to be starved out."

He opened the door. The room was a concrete box, intended for storage or staff we never hired. The air inside was stale and frigid, smelling of dry wall dust and neglect. There was no silk, no velvet, no trace of the life I had built. Just a single, stained mattress on the floor and the harsh glare of a naked bulb dangling from a wire.

"Carter, please," I whispered. My throat felt like it was filled with glass shards. My body was still weeping from the birth, aching and empty. "I just need to rest. I need..."

"You need to mourn," Sasha’s voice drifted in from the hallway. She didn't enter. She stood in the doorway, a wraith in white linen, her face a mask of tragic sympathy. "You held on to the ego, Lilah. You held on so tight it suffocated him. You must learn to let go."

Carter nodded, a jerky, puppet-like motion. He closed the door. The lock clicked. The sound echoed in the hollow space like a gunshot.

Hours bled into days. Or maybe minutes. Time had no architecture here. I lay on the mattress, curling around the void in my stomach, listening to the wind howl against the single, unsealed window. The cold settled into my marrow.

Then came the water.

The bathroom attached to the quarters was a functional, tiled closet. Carter entered, carrying two large bags of ice from the kitchen freezer. The plastic crinkled—a domestic sound that had become a weapon. He dumped the ice into the porcelain tub. The crash of cubes hitting the surface sounded like breaking bones.

"Get in," he said.

I looked at the slurry of ice and tap water. Steam didn't rise; the air above it seemed to warp with the chill. "Carter, I’m bleeding. I’m sick. Please."

He grabbed my arm. His fingers dug into the soft flesh of my bicep, his eyes wide and wet with tears. He looked terrified, not of me, but for me. "Don't fight the cure, Lilah. Sasha says the heat is the anger. We have to freeze it out before it kills you too."

He lifted me. I was too weak to struggle, a ragdoll with a broken heart. The water hit me like a physical blow, a thousand needles piercing every inch of skin. My lungs seized. I gasped, sucking in air that wouldn't reach my chest. The cold burned, an acidic fire that turned my limbs to stone.

"Shh, shh," Carter chanted, his hands clamping down on my shoulders, forcing me under until the water lapped at my chin. His tears dripped onto my face, hot against the ice. "*Free the vessel. Numb the sin. Purity is pain.*"

He was reciting her words. They tumbled out of his mouth in a frantic cadence, a prayer to a god that demanded human sacrifice.

I stopped fighting. I stared at a hairline crack in the subway tile, focusing on the jagged black line until the rest of the world dissolved. The pain became a distant hum. I wasn't in the tub. I was floating in the Seine. I was walking a runway in Milan. I was anywhere but here, being baptized in ice by the man who had once given me a part of his own body to keep me alive.

When he finally pulled me out, I was blue. He wrapped me in a rough wool blanket, shivering as violently as I was.

"It’s working," he whispered, rocking me back and forth on the bathroom floor. "You're becoming clean."

He left me shivering on the mattress.

Sometime later, a sound cut through the haze of hypothermia. The intercom buzzer. It was a jagged, abrasive noise from the main hallway, muffled by the thick walls but unmistakable.

*Adele.*

Adrenaline, sharp and desperate, spiked through my blood. I dragged myself to the window. It was high up, a narrow slit overlooking the street. I pulled myself up by the sill, my muscles screaming.

Below, parked illegally next to a snowbank, was a black sedan. A figure in a crimson trench coat stood by the building's entrance, arguing with the doorman. Even from this height, I recognized the aggressive stance, the sharp chopping motion of her hand. Adele.

The intercom in the penthouse clicked on. I pressed my ear to the door of my cell, holding my breath.

"She is unavailable," Sasha’s voice floated through the penthouse, smooth as poisoned honey. "She had a breakdown, Adele. A psychotic break. We’ve moved her to a private facility upstate for her own safety."

"I want to see the paperwork, you witch!" Adele’s voice was tinny, distorted by the speaker, but fierce.

"Carter has power of attorney," Sasha replied, her tone dipping into a performative sadness. "Please. Respect our privacy during this tragedy."

The line went dead.

I pounded on the door, a weak, fleshy thud that made no sound against the solid wood. "Adele!" I screamed, but it came out as a croak.

I scrambled back to the window. Down on the street, the figure in red stood frozen for a moment. She looked up at the building, her gaze sweeping the windows. For a second, I thought she saw me—a pale ghost pressed against the glass.

She didn't leave. She pulled out her phone, pacing a tight circle in the snow. She wasn't giving up. I saw her talking rapidly, pointing at the building. Then, she got back into the car, but she didn't drive away immediately. She sat there, a sentinel in the storm.

She knew. She knew Sasha was lying.

I slid down the wall, the cold from the concrete seeping into my back. They had taken my baby. They had taken my warmth. But they hadn't taken Adele. A tiny, fractured spark ignited in the center of my frozen chest.

*Survival is the only revenge.*

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