Follow
Chapters
Share
My Husband Missed Our Daughter’s Birthday for His Mistress Novel Cover

My Husband Missed Our Daughter’s Birthday for His Mistress

I spent the afternoon making Penny's birthday perfect. The dining table in our Manhattan apartment gleamed under the soft light of the crystal chandelier I'd insisted we install when we first moved in. I'd hand-painted three place cards with delicate gold edges—one for Mommy, one for Penny, and one for Daddy—each with tiny flowers that matched the cake I'd spent three hours baking this morning. Penny twirled in her new birthday dress, a pale pink confection with layers of tulle that made her look like a miniature ballerina. Her dark hair, so like Brayden's, was pulled back in a neat ponytail with a ribbon I'd tied myself. "Mommy, does Daddy know I picked the restaurant?" she asked, her voice bright with anticipation. "He promised he'd be here by six. He said he'd take us to Luciano's in the West Village." I smiled, smoothing down the front of my own dress. "Of course he does, sweetheart. He wouldn't miss your special day." At six-thirty, Penny's eyes began darting to the door every few minutes.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 4

The knock came at two in the afternoon.

I was at my kitchen counter, halfway through a cup of chamomile, when I heard it — three sharp raps, the kind designed to announce rather than ask. I already knew who it was before I reached the door. I'd been expecting this visit for days.

I pressed record on my phone and set it face-down on the counter, angled toward the entryway. Then I went to answer.

Sloan Fox stood in my doorway in a cream blazer and heels, her hair blown out like she was walking into a photoshoot. She'd dressed for this. She'd rehearsed for this. I could see it in the set of her jaw, the way she held herself just slightly too straight.

She was holding a small white stick.

'Lucia.' She said my name like she was doing me a favor by using it. 'I think we need to talk.'

I stepped back and let her in.

She walked into my apartment the way people walk into spaces they've already decided to judge — eyes moving, cataloguing, comparing. I watched her take in the smaller rooms, the modest furniture, the absence of the crystal chandelier and the marble countertops she'd probably heard about from Brayden. I watched her decide she'd already won.

'I'll get right to it,' she said, turning to face me. She held up the pregnancy test. 'I'm pregnant. Brayden's child. And I think you already know what that means.'

I looked at the test. Then I looked at her face.

I let my chin tremble. Just slightly. Just enough.

'How far along?' My voice came out soft, a little unsteady. I watched something flicker in her eyes — satisfaction, mostly, with a thin edge of relief. She'd expected a fight. She was getting tears instead. That was better for her.

'Eight weeks,' she said. She touched her collarbone with two fingers, a quick brush, then dropped her hand. 'Brayden and I have been together for almost a year. I know this is hard to hear. But you deserve the truth.'

I pressed my lips together and looked at the floor. 'A year,' I repeated.

'He loves me.' She said it with the conviction of someone who needed to believe it. 'He's been trying to find a way to tell you. But you've made it so difficult, Lucia. The invoice, the lawyers — you're dragging this out and it's not fair to anyone. Especially not to this baby.'

She touched her collarbone again.

I looked up at her, my eyes wide and glassy. 'When is it due?'

She blinked. She hadn't expected that question. 'Late spring,' she said, after a half-second pause that told me everything.

'And you've seen a doctor?'

Another pause. Shorter this time, but there. 'Of course.'

'Which one?' I asked, my voice still soft, still trembling. 'I just — I want to understand. I want to do the right thing. I just need to understand.'

She shifted her weight. Her hand went to her collarbone a third time, fingers pressing against the hollow of it like she was trying to hold something down. 'That's private,' she said. 'The point is, this is real, and Brayden needs to be free to be a father to this child. You walking away quietly — that's the right thing. For everyone.'

I nodded slowly. I let my shoulders drop. I let her watch me fold.

'Okay,' I said quietly. 'I need a minute. Can I — can I get you some water?'

She looked almost disappointed that it had been this easy. 'Sure,' she said.

I walked to the kitchen. I picked up my phone, stopped the recording, and saved the file. Then I filled a glass with water and brought it back to her.

She left twelve minutes later, her heels clicking down the hallway with the rhythm of a woman who thought she'd just closed a deal.

I stood at my door and listened until the elevator came.

Then I forwarded the recording to Diane Winters and went to make a fresh cup of tea.

---

I found Jazmin Gomez on a Wednesday.

It wasn't difficult. Sloan's Instagram had given me everything I needed — the tagged locations, the shopping companions, the woman who appeared in the background of enough photos to be a fixture but never quite in the center. Always slightly to the left of the frame. Always holding the bags.

I'd done my research. Jazmin worked in marketing, lived in Murray Hill, and had been photographed carrying a Celine tote she clearly couldn't afford on her salary. She'd been eyeing the new Bottega on Sloan's stories for three weeks running, always commenting with the same small flame emoji. Never buying.

I went to Bergdorf's on a Wednesday afternoon and I waited.

She came in at half past one, moving through the handbag floor with the careful attention of someone who was looking but had already decided she couldn't. I gave her ten minutes before I approached.

'Excuse me,' I said, stopping beside her at the display case. 'I'm sorry — is that the Intrecciato?' I nodded at the bag she was holding.

She looked up. 'Yeah. It's beautiful, right? Way out of my budget, but—' She laughed a little, self-deprecating.

'I was going to get it for a friend,' I said, 'but I think she'd prefer the other colorway. Would you mind if I asked your opinion?'

We talked for twenty minutes. She was warm, funny, sharper than she let on. By the time I suggested coffee, she'd already told me she worked in marketing and that she was having a complicated week.

We sat at a small table near the window. I ordered for both of us. When the coffee came, I slid the Bergdorf's bag across the table.

'For your opinion,' I said simply.

She looked at the bag. Then at me. Something shifted in her expression — not suspicion exactly, but recognition. She was smart enough to know this wasn't random.

'You're Lucia Robertson,' she said.

'I am.'

A long pause. She looked at the bag again. Then she wrapped both hands around her coffee cup and leaned forward slightly.

'The test was fake,' she said. Her voice was quiet and completely steady, like she'd been waiting to say it to someone for weeks. 'She bought it at a drugstore and doctored the window with a marker. I watched her do it at her kitchen table.' She paused. 'She practiced the face she was going to make when she showed it to you.'

I didn't say anything. I let her keep going.

'She has a credit card Brayden doesn't know about. She's been running it up for months — clothes, spa days, a weekend in the Hamptons she told him was a work trip. She's planning for a life he hasn't agreed to yet.' Jazmin's jaw tightened. 'And the Miami trip — the one the weekend of your daughter's birthday — that was on his company card. She kept the receipts. She thought they were romantic.'

I looked at her across the table. 'Why are you telling me this?'

She was quiet for a moment. 'Because she told me you were pathetic,' she said finally. 'She said it at brunch, in front of four people, like it was funny. Like you were nothing.' She picked up her coffee. 'You don't seem pathetic to me.'

I nodded once.

'I'm going to need those receipts,' I said.

Jazmin reached into her bag and pulled out her phone. 'I already photographed them,' she said. 'I've been waiting for the right moment to spend what I know.' She slid the phone across the table. 'I think this is it.'

I looked at the photos. The company card charges. The dates. The hotel name.

I slid the phone back to her.

'Send them to this address,' I said, and wrote Diane Winters's email on a napkin.

Jazmin folded it carefully and tucked it into the Bergdorf's bag.

Outside, the city moved the way it always did — indifferent, continuous, completely unaware that somewhere in a Midtown coffee shop, the last piece had just fallen into place.

You may also like

After Discovering His Affair Account I Divorced Him Novel Cover
9.5
When I mentioned I was feeling under the weather, Andrew drove through a snowstorm just to see me. From then on, except when it was a matter of principle, this gesture became his ticket to forgiveness. That was until I accidentally discovered his chat records. "The other day, I had a physical need. She was cleaner than the usual ones I hang out with." "Women are always touched by little gestures. Act more emotional and they'll stick with you." *** As I reached for the fruit on the table, Andrew subtly angled his phone away from my view. My gut instinct immediately screamed he was cheating. I realized I hadn't checked Andrew’s phone in ages. When we first got together, I was filled with insecurity and often asked to see his phone to ensure he wasn’t seeing anyone else. Andrew never seemed bothered; he simply smiled and added my fingerprint to his access settings, letting me check it anytime.
After His Mistress Took My Baby, I Took Everything Novel Cover
8.5
I wore champagne silk because Xavier said it was his favorite color on me. That was three years ago, but I held onto it. That's the thing about a marriage going quiet—you start collecting the small kindnesses like artifacts, proof that it was real. The bracelet was on my left wrist. Pale green jade, worn smooth at the edges, the clasp slightly loose in the way I'd never fixed because my mother had worn it loose too. I pressed my right hand flat against my stomach once, just for a second, standing in the elevator on the way up to the rooftop. A private thing. A secret I'd carried for eleven days, waiting for the right moment. Tonight was supposed to be it. The party was beautiful.
Billionaire's Forced Bride  Novel Cover
7.9
Amara Benson believed her mother loved her until she was traded to a powerful man for profit, Victor Grey. On her engagement night, she gets drugged and ends up waking up in the bed of Damian Kane, a cold billionaire who is feared by many. The scandal spreads and the engagement is called off. Weeks later, Amara realizes she's pregnant. She is taken by Damian under a contract marriage meant to end after childbirth. But Damian hides a past filled with danger and lies. As a kind doctor offers her safety and truth, Amara must choose between forced loyalty and real love. When she learns she is the true heiress, the fight for her heart and fortune begins.
Crave Me, My Monster  Novel Cover
8.0
She was betrayed. She was broken. She was left to die. Sold to the black market by her own sister, cheated on by the man she loved. Murdered with nothing but tears and heartbreak in her final moments. But fate had other plans. Now, she’s back—one month before it all went wrong. This time, she’s not the naive girl who trusted too easily. This time, she has a plan. Step one…seduce Rael Morgan—her sister’s cold, powerful billionaire fiancé. Yet, what starts as revenge quickly spirals into a dangerous game of obsession. Rael doesn’t just fall for her… he claims her. Body and soul. How will she escape his grasp?
Ex Threatens My Son Novel Cover
9.3
The sterile hospital corridors seemed to stretch endlessly before me as I hurried through Mount Sinai's maze-like hallways. Dawn light filtered weakly through distant windows, casting long shadows that matched the fear gripping my heart. In my arms, Oliver's small body trembled with each labored breath, his normally rosy cheeks now alarmingly pale beneath the oxygen mask that threatened to slip with every step I took. "Hold on, sweetheart," I whispered, adjusting the mask with gentle fingers while maintaining my pace. "We're almost there." Nurses and orderlies pressed themselves against the walls as we passed, their faces reflecting professional concern. I caught fragments of their whispered exchanges—"Sterling's son"... "emergency treatment"—but kept my focus entirely on the precious weight in my arms. "Mrs. Sterling," called a nurse, hurrying alongside me. "Dr.
Fleeing a Fraudulent Marriage Novel Cover
7.9
I tore through my jewelry box for the third time, fingers frantically pushing aside diamond earrings and pearl necklaces that Henry had given me over our ten years together. None of them mattered now. Only the jade pendant—that exquisite piece of emerald green stone that Henry had presented to me on our fifth anniversary with promises of "until death do us part." "It has to be here," I whispered, my voice echoing in our spacious bedroom. The afternoon light streamed through the floor-to-ceiling windows, illuminating dust particles dancing in the air as I upended another drawer. The pendant wasn't just jewelry. It was the symbol of everything I believed about our marriage—solid, precious, eternal. The jade had been cool against my skin for five years, a comforting weight that reminded me I was loved, chosen, secure. Now it was gone. "Maybe I left it in the bathroom," I murmured, hurrying down the hallway of our penthouse apartment. The marble floors felt cold beneath my bare feet as I pushed open the bathroom door, scanning the countertops with desperate eyes.