
My Husband Moved His Pregnant Mistress Into Our Home
Chapter 4
I woke to the sound of Pierce's voice. He was sitting beside my hospital bed, his posture perfect, his expression arranged into something that was supposed to look like concern. The morning light caught the gold of his wedding ring—a ring he still wore, even while Camilla wore his child.
'Vivian,' he said, his voice soft in a way that made my skin crawl. 'I'm so sorry. I overreacted. When Camilla said you tried to hurt her... I was scared. For the baby. For her.'
I studied his face while he spoke. I had seen this performance before—the careful modulation of his voice, the strategic pauses, the way his eyes sought mine to gauge my reaction. He was good at it. He had always been good at making repentance look real.
'I never meant for things to go so far,' he continued, reaching for my hand. 'The whiskey... I didn't think it would hurt you like that. Not again.'
I let him take my hand. His palm was warm against mine, familiar in a way that made my stomach turn. I had once believed that touch meant safety. Now I knew better.
'I've been thinking,' he said, squeezing my fingers gently. 'Maybe we could start over. Try counseling. Work on our marriage.' His thumb traced circles on my wrist. 'We've been through so much together. You owe me that much, don't you? To try?'
I looked at his face—really looked at it. The expensive haircut. The carefully maintained skin. The practiced sincerity in his eyes. This was the man who had saved my life at twenty. Who had held me while I cried over the chemo. Who had promised to love me forever.
This was also the man who had moved his pregnant mistress into our home. Who had watched me collapse on the floor in pain and done nothing. Who had weaponized my greatest trauma against me for sport.
I slid my free hand under my pillow and felt the cool metal of the folder Mallory had left there. The divorce papers. Already filed. Already in motion.
'Vivian?' Pierce's voice sharpened slightly. 'Did you hear what I said? About trying again?'
'I've been seeing someone else,' I said.
The words hung in the air between us, simple and devastating. Pierce's face went completely still. His grip on my hand tightened, then loosened, then tightened again.
'What did you say?' His voice was barely above a whisper.
'I've been seeing someone else,' I repeated, my voice almost gentle. 'For two years.'
Pierce's composure shattered like glass.
He surged to his feet, the bedside chair clattering backward as he knocked it over. 'Who?' he demanded, his face flushing dark red. 'Who is it? What kind of sick game are you playing?'
'Not a game,' I said quietly. 'Just the truth.'
'Give me a name!' His voice rose to a shout. 'Give me a face! I'll destroy him. I'll ruin him. Do you hear me? No one takes what's mine—'
'Yours?' The word came out sharper than I intended. 'I stopped being yours the moment you moved her into our home.'
'You ungrateful bitch—' He took a step toward the bed, his hands clenched into fists. 'After everything I've done for you—'
The hospital room door exploded inward with a sound like a gunshot.
Kaizen stood in the doorway, his tall frame silhouetted against the corridor light. Blood had dried at his temple. A field dressing was taped along his jaw. His eyes found mine first—checking, confirming, making sure I was whole. Then they shifted to Pierce.
Kaizen crossed the room in three long strides. I saw him take in the overturned chair, Pierce's aggressive stance, my position in the bed. His jaw tightened almost imperceptibly.
'Get away from her,' he said, his voice deadly quiet.
Pierce spun toward him, his face twisted with rage. 'Who the hell are you? This is a private—'
Kaizen's punch connected with Pierce's jaw with a sound like a crack of thunder. Pierce went down hard, his head hitting the linoleum floor with a second, duller thud.
The room went silent.
Pierce hauled himself upright, blood trickling from his split lip, his eyes wild with fury and shock. 'You son of a bitch! Do you know who I am? I'll have you arrested. I'll sue you for—'
'For what?' Kaizen straightened his jacket with deliberate calm. 'For stopping you from assaulting my wife?'
'Your wife?' Pierce's laugh was ugly, desperate. 'She's my wife, you piece of—'
'Mr. Montgomery.' Dr. Cole's voice came from the doorway, steady and professional. 'I'm glad you're here. We were just about to discuss Mrs. Turner's discharge papers.'
Pierce's mouth snapped shut. He stared at Kaizen, then at Dr. Cole, then back at Kaizen.
'Montgomery?' he repeated, the word coming out strangled.
A new figure appeared in the doorway—Pierce's lawyer, his face already ashen as he took in the scene. He hurried to Pierce's side, grabbing his arm and pulling him away from Kaizen.
'Mr. Snyder,' he whispered urgently, 'we need to talk. Now.'
I watched Pierce's face as his lawyer spoke in his ear. Watched the color drain from his cheeks as the name Montgomery registered fully. Watched him look at Kaizen with new eyes—not seeing a rival anymore, but something far more dangerous. Something untouchable.
The air pressure in the room seemed to change. Pierce's shoulders sagged. His eyes darted to me, then back to Kaizen, then to the floor.
'I don't understand,' he said, but his voice had lost all its conviction. It was the voice of a man watching his world collapse in real time.
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