
My Husband Planned to Replace Me with His Mistress
Chapter 3
The silence on the other end of the line was heavy, loaded with a professional hesitation I recognized from boardrooms right before a hostile takeover. I sat in the hushed library of my father’s Hamptons estate, the phone pressed so hard against my ear it hurt.
"Tiffany," Dr. Mitchell said, her voice stripped of its usual bedside warmth. "I ran the sample three times. I didn't want to believe it."
I stared at the dust motes dancing in the shaft of afternoon sunlight, my hand instinctively covering the swell of my stomach. "Tell me."
"The red capsules aren't vitamins," she said, the words clipped and clinical. "They contain trace amounts of mistletoe extract—a uterine contractant—and significant levels of lead-based fillers. It’s not enough to cause an immediate miscarriage, but over time? It could trigger premature labor. Or worse, developmental delays."
The air in the room seemed to crystallize, turning sharp and cold in my lungs. Margaret Wells hadn't just been negligent; she had been waging biological warfare on my unborn daughter. She was willing to damage her own grandchild simply because she wasn't a grandson.
"I'm calling the police," Dr. Mitchell said, the rustle of papers audible in the background. "This is assault, Tiffany. Maybe attempted—"
"No," I interrupted. My voice was steady, a flat line that frightened me more than the anger bubbling beneath it. "Not yet."
"Tiffany, you cannot remain in that house. It’s unsafe."
"I stopped taking them yesterday, Sarah. I’m safe." I watched my reflection in the dark window—pale, eyes dark as bruises, but posture rigid. "If we call the police now, they’ll claim it was a manufacturing error. They’ll lawyer up. They’ll spin it."
"Then what do you want me to do?"
"Document it," I commanded. "Write up the official toxicology report. Seal it. Date it. When I pull the trigger on this family, I want the bullet to be lethal."
I hung up before she could argue. The grief I expected didn't come. Instead, a cold, metallic resolve settled in my chest, replacing the heartbeat of the woman I used to be.
***
Two hours later, the library table was buried under a blizzard of legal documents. Victoria Chen, the Evans Corporation’s fiercest litigator, sat across from me. She didn't look at me with pity; she looked at me like a general waiting for orders.
"The logistics contracts with Wells Industries," Victoria said, sliding a thick binder across the mahogany. "They rely on our shipping fleet for eighty percent of their distribution. Without us, their supply chain freezes within forty-eight hours."
I opened the binder. The numbers were staggering. My husband’s family had been leeching off my father’s empire for years, disguising their dependency as 'synergy.'
"Find the exit clauses," I said, uncapping my pen. The ink was black, permanent.
"Clause 14B," Victoria pointed out, her finger tapping the page. "'Material breach of trust or reputational damage.' It’s vague, usually hard to enforce without a public scandal."
"There will be a scandal," I promised, the ghost of a smile touching my lips. "Prepare the termination notices. I want them drafted and ready to file at 9:00 AM the Monday after Thanksgiving."
My father, who had been silently pacing the perimeter of the room, stopped. He looked at the paperwork, then at me. "That’s the nuclear option, Tiff. It will bankrupt them before the divorce is even finalized."
"They tried to poison your granddaughter, Dad," I said softly.
He didn't blink. He just walked to the liquor cabinet, poured two fingers of scotch, and set it down next to my water glass. "Burn them down."
I signed the authorization. The scratch of the nib against the paper sounded like a bone snapping.
***
My phone buzzed against the table, vibrating with a violence that made me jump. It was a notification from Marcus Rivera.
*Intercepted text chain. 10:42 PM.*
I shouldn't have looked. I knew the anatomy of the betrayal already; I didn't need to see the blood. But my thumb hovered over the screen, and then I pressed it.
**Amelie:** *I’m done waiting, Lucian. I saw her at the gala photos. She looks huge. Put her in a home or I’m driving to the estate myself.*
**Lucian:** *Calm down, babe. She’s just a vessel. Once the brat is born, I’ll file for full custody. My mother already has the lawyers prepping the unfit parent angle.*
**Amelie:** *You promised Christmas.*
**Lucian:** *And I’ll keep it. Let me just secure the trust fund first. I can’t toss the whale out until the ink is dry on the payout. She’s such a bore, Amelie. It’s like sleeping next to a corpse. Just hold on.*
*Whale. Corpse. Vessel.*
The words didn't hurt. They cauterized.
I set the phone down, face up. I looked at the termination papers, at the toxicology report Dr. Mitchell had emailed, at the ultrasound photo propped against the lamp.
Lucian thought I was a corpse? Fine.
I stood up, smoothing the fabric of my dress over my stomach. The baby kicked, a strong, rhythmic thud against my ribs.
He was about to find out that dead things don't bleed—but they can certainly haunt you.
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