
My Husband Let My Father Die for His Mistress
Chapter 3
The last of the dinner guests departed, leaving behind the stale scent of cigar smoke and performative sympathy. The penthouse was quiet, save for the hum of the wine fridge and the frantic tapping of Damian’s foot against the hardwood. He stood by the balcony doors, staring out at the city, his reflection ghost-like against the glass.
I sat on the velvet sofa, smoothing the skirt of my gown. The fabric felt like armor. I reached into my clutch and silently tapped the record button on my phone.
"Carla was quite... spirited tonight," I said, my voice soft, laced with feigned innocence. "That toast. 'Fertile ways.' It almost sounded like an announcement."
Damian flinched. He didn't turn around. "She had too much champagne, Ana. You know how she gets. Dramatic."
"It made me wonder," I continued, watching the tension knot his shoulders. "About your sacrifice. The vasectomy. You never reversed it, did you? While I was asleep?"
He spun around then, his face a mask of wounded virtue that was beginning to crack at the edges. "Reversed it? Ana, I did that for *us*. To prove my devotion. Why would I undo the one thing that proved I was yours completely?"
"So you're still sterile?"
"Yes!" He raked a hand through his hair, a gesture of frustration that looked more like panic. "I looked into it once, years ago, just out of curiosity... but I never went through with it. I swear."
I smiled, a tight, fragile thing. "I believe you, darling."
*Click.* I stopped the recording. If he was sterile, Carla’s implied pregnancy was either a lie to trap him or a biological impossibility he was too cowardly to confront. Either way, I had him.
***
The next morning brought a different kind of heartache. My father, Marcus, sat in the sunroom, looking smaller than I remembered. His suit hung loosely on his frame, and his hands, once steady enough to build a shipping empire, trembled as he held his tea.
"He’s a good man, Ana," Papa said, though his eyes didn't meet mine. "He’s been taking care of the trust. The taxes are... complicated. He says if I sign over power of attorney, it will protect your assets."
My blood ran cold. Power of attorney. They weren't just stealing my life; they were scavenging the carcass of my family's legacy.
I reached across the table, gripping his withered hand. His skin felt like parchment. "Papa, look at me."
He looked up, startled by the steel in my voice.
"I need you to listen very carefully," I whispered, leaning in so our foreheads nearly touched. "I am not confused. My memory is perfect. Damian is lying to you."
"Ana? But the doctors—"
"The doctors hear what he pays them to hear. Do not sign anything. Not a check, not a contract, and certainly not power of attorney. If he pushes you, tell him you’re consulting outside counsel."
Tears welled in his cloudy eyes. He squeezed my hand back, a flicker of his old strength returning. "He... he told me you were losing your mind, sweetheart. That you needed to be managed."
"I'm not the one losing control," I promised him. "Stay safe, Papa. For me."
***
The Metropolitan Charity Gala was a battlefield disguised as a party. The ballroom was a sea of black ties and designer gowns, the air thick with perfume and ambition. I had insisted on coming, claiming I needed to "reintegrate." Damian had agreed only because refusing a recovering wife looked bad in the society pages.
He kept a possessive hand on my waist, steering me away from anyone who might ask too many questions. But he couldn't steer me away from Stone Turner.
Stone approached us like a storm front—dark, imposing, and inevitable. He didn't look at Damian. His gaze was fixed on me, intense and unreadable.
"Mrs. Hayes," Stone said, his voice a deep rumble that vibrated in my chest. "May I have this dance?"
Damian bristled. "She's still recovering, Turner. Her balance—"
"I'll hold her up," Stone cut in. He extended a hand. It was a challenge, not a request.
I took it. Damian’s grip faltered, and I stepped into the circle of Stone’s arms. On the dance floor, surrounded by the swirl of music, the world narrowed to the heat of his hand on my back.
"You're playing a dangerous game, Anastasia," Stone murmured, leading me with effortless grace. He didn't use the diminutives Damian favored. He said my name like it was a prayer.
"I don't know what you mean," I said, though my pulse hammered against my throat.
"I see the way you look at him. Like you're deciding where to bury the body." He pulled me a fraction closer, breaking propriety but offering shelter. "I know about the affair. I know about the accounts. And I know you're drowning."
I looked up at him, searching for deceit, but found only a fierce, terrifying clarity. "Why do you care?"
"Because I remember Yale," he said softly. "And I remember the woman who deserved better than a coward in a custom suit."
He slipped something into my palm—small, sleek, cold. A phone. "Encrypted. Pre-paid. No traces. Call me when you're ready to stop playing defense."
***
I waited until 3:00 AM to check the burner phone Victoria had given me earlier. It vibrated against my thigh, a jarring sensation in the silence of the guest room.
"Mrs. Hayes?" Dr. Rodriguez's voice was tight with professional outrage.
"Tell me," I whispered, clutching the duvet.
"I ran the toxicology screen on the sample you sent. It’s not just sedatives, Anastasia. We found traces of scopolamine and a synthetic hallucinogen used in... well, usually in experimental psychiatric treatments."
The room seemed to tilt. They weren't just trying to keep me asleep. They were trying to drive me mad. If I started hallucinating, if I became erratic, Damian could legally commit me. He could lock me away in a sanitarium and take control of everything without a single signature from my father.
"Thank you, Doctor," I said, my voice trembling not with fear, but with a cold, crystallizing fury. "Keep the results safe. I'll need them for the trial."
I hung up and stared at the door separating me from my husband. He wasn't just a cheater. He was a monster. And monsters didn't deserve mercy—they deserved to be put down.
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