
My Husband Moved His Mistress Into Our Home
Chapter 2
I stood in the hallway outside Kingsley's study, my heart pounding against my ribs. My hearing—this miraculous gift that had returned so unexpectedly—now felt like a curse. Each sound I heard only confirmed my worst fears.
I pressed myself against the wall, listening as Kingsley's voice drifted through the partially open door.
"Kiana, I can't stop thinking about last night," he murmured, his tone intimate in a way it hadn't been with me in years. "The way you played... it was like you were speaking directly to my soul."
I closed my eyes, fighting back tears. The woman on the other end of the line—his first love, the violinist who'd abandoned him for Berlin—was now the center of his universe.
"I've cleared my schedule for Thursday," Kingsley continued, unaware that I could hear every word. "We can meet at the usual place. I'll tell Lorelai it's a business lunch."
A bitter laugh escaped my lips before I could stop it. Business lunch. How many "business meetings" had there been?
"She doesn't suspect anything?" Kiana's voice was like silk through the phone, confident and smug.
"Lorelai? Please." Kingsley's dismissive tone cut deeper than any knife. "She's been deaf for six years. She doesn't notice anything anymore."
I stepped back, my hand covering my mouth to stifle a sob. I'd given up my hearing to save his life, and now he was using my disability against me.
---
The Emerald Lounge was dimly lit, the air thick with expensive perfume and the soft murmur of Seattle's elite. I'd followed Kingsley and Teo here, watching from outside as they entered the upscale live music venue.
I slipped in behind a group of well-dressed patrons, keeping to the shadows. My heart raced as I spotted them at a front table—Kingsley looking distinguished in his tailored suit, Teo bouncing with excitement beside him.
Then I saw her.
Kiana Fernandez glided onto the small stage, her dark hair cascading over bare shoulders, her violin case in hand. She wore a red dress that clung to every curve, drawing every eye in the room.
"Straight from Berlin," the announcer's voice boomed. "We're honored to have international violinist Kiana Fernandez joining us tonight for a special duet with our own resident pianist."
Kingsley squeezed Teo's shoulder, his face alight with pride and something darker—desire.
When Kingsley took the stage, sitting at the gleaming grand piano, I felt my world tilt sideways. I'd never heard him play—not since before the explosion. He'd given up music when I lost my hearing, claiming it wasn't the same without me.
Now he played for her.
The first notes hung in the air, tentative and sweet. Then Kiana raised her violin to her shoulder, her eyes locked with Kingsley's across the stage.
What followed was nothing short of intimate—a conversation between two instruments that spoke of longing and fulfillment. Their bodies swayed in perfect synchronicity, as though they'd played together for years.
In the front row, Teo watched with undisguised adoration. "She's amazing, Dad," I read from his lips. "I wish Mom could see this."
Kingsley nodded, his eyes never leaving Kiana. "Some things are better appreciated without words, son."
I pressed my fist against my mouth to keep from crying out. My son—my beautiful boy—had been turned against me so completely that he couldn't even imagine I might understand the music.
---
The house was silent when I returned home, Kingsley and Teo still out enjoying their evening. I moved through the darkened rooms like a ghost, my footsteps echoing in the emptiness.
Without conscious thought, I found myself in my music room—the one place that had been my sanctuary during six years of silence. I'd kept it exactly as it was before the explosion, hoping someday I might play again.
I reached for the light switch, flooding the room with soft amber glow.
And froze.
The corner where my cello had stood for years—my precious antique instrument that had once soothed Kingsley's broken heart when Kiana first left him—was empty.
I rushed forward, my hands reaching for the space where it should have been. Nothing but dust marked where its case had rested.
"No," I whispered, my voice breaking in the silence. "No, no, no."
I knew exactly where it was—who had it. The cello had been my gift to Kingsley during his darkest days, the instrument that had helped heal his heart.
Now he'd given it to her.
I sank to my knees in the empty space, my fingers tracing the outline of dust on the floor. This wasn't just about an affair anymore. This was about erasing me entirely—replacing me with the woman who'd once abandoned him.
And I had heard every moment of it.
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