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My Husband Planned to Replace Me with His Mistress Novel Cover

My Husband Planned to Replace Me with His Mistress

The scent of lemongrass usually soothed me. Today, it made me gag. I shifted the weight of my belly, my lower back throbbing in time with the soft, ambient chimes filling the lobby of *Serenity Bump*. Eight months pregnant, and I felt less like the heiress to the Evans Corporation and more like a capsized vessel. All I wanted was the prenatal massage Lucian had promised would help with the swelling in my ankles. "I’m sorry, Mrs. Wells," the receptionist said, her gaze fixed on her computer screen. Her manicured nails clicked a nervous staccato against the keyboard. "Your account is empty." I blinked, leaning against the polished mahogany counter. "Empty?
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Chapter 4

The floor wasn't actually moving, but I made sure my body did.

I gripped the doorframe of the master bedroom, letting my knees buckle just enough to look convincing. I pressed the back of my hand against my forehead, exhaling a sharp, ragged breath that I had practiced in the vanity mirror three times before opening the door.

"Lucian," I gasped, my voice pitched low and tremulous.

He was sitting on the edge of the bed, unbuttoning his shirt. He froze, his eyes darting to me with a mixture of annoyance and obligatory concern. "Tiffany? What is it?"

"The dizziness," I lied, squeezing my eyes shut. "It’s back. Dr. Mitchell said my blood pressure is spiking. I... I feel like the room is spinning."

He stood up, but he didn't rush to me. He hovered three feet away, as if my condition were contagious. "Do you need water? Should I call the doctor?"

"No," I whispered, straightening slightly but keeping a hand on my belly. "I just need space. The doctor said body heat might exacerbate it. I can't sleep in here tonight, Lucian. I'm tossing and turning too much. I don't want to keep you awake."

I watched the tension leave his shoulders. It was subtle—a slight drop of the trapezius, a relaxing of the jaw—but to a woman who had been studying him like a predator studies prey, it was screamingly obvious. He didn't want to share a bed with the "whale." He didn't want to touch me.

"Of course," he said, his voice dropping into that smooth, fake baritone he used for clients. "You need your rest. Take the guest suite. I'll have the maid change the sheets to the silk ones you like."

"Thank you," I said, managing a weak, grateful smile. "You're so good to us."

"Go," he urged, practically ushering me out. "Think of the baby."

I turned away, letting the smile drop the second my face was in shadow. I walked to the guest room, locked the door, and for the first time in weeks, I slept without the suffocating weight of his betrayal sharing my air.

***

The next morning, the rain was lashing against the windows of my father’s study in the city. Marcus Rivera sat across from me, his trench coat still damp. He didn't open with a greeting. He slid a tablet across the desk.

"Brooklyn," Marcus said. "A dive bar off Bedford Avenue. Amelie likes her cosmos, but apparently, she likes tequila shots with the locals even more."

I swiped through the photos. They were grainy, taken with a long lens through a rainy window, but the subjects were clear. Amelie, looking far less polished than she did on Lucian's arm, was tucked into a booth with a man who looked like he carved furniture with his teeth. He was rugged, bearded, and had a hand firmly on her thigh.

"Who is he?" I asked.

"Jaxson Miller. Bartender. Ex-boyfriend from her Queens days," Marcus said. "I had a guy pull a coffee cup from his trash. We got a hair sample from Amelie’s brush last week. Ran the panel twice just to be sure."

I looked up, my heart hammering a strange, frantic rhythm against my ribs. "And?"

"Lucian isn't the father."

The words hung in the air, heavy and absolute.

"99.9% probability match to Miller," Marcus clarified. "Amelie is playing the long con. She needed a billionaire to fund her lifestyle, so she pinned Miller’s kid on your husband. Lucian is destroying his marriage, risking his reputation, and draining your bank accounts for a baby that shares zero DNA with him."

A laugh bubbled up in my throat—dark, jagged, and bordering on hysterical. I clamped a hand over my mouth to stifle it. It was perfect. It was grotesque, tragic, and absolutely perfect.

"Does Lucian know?" I asked, my voice trembling with suppressed mirth.

"He has no idea. He’s already shopping for custom nurseries for 'his son.'"

"Good," I said, sliding the tablet back. "Don't release it. Not yet. I want him to lose everything first. I want him to be destitute *before* he finds out he did it all for nothing."

***

By the time I met Lucian at the bank that afternoon, I felt invincible.

We sat in the private wealth management office, the silence punctuated only by the hum of the air conditioner and the scratch of Lucian’s pen. He was bored. He checked his watch twice in three minutes.

"Is all this paperwork really necessary, Tiff?" he sighed, flipping a page without reading it. "It’s just a standard update, right?"

"Estate planning for the baby," I said softly, resting a hand on his forearm. "My father insisted. He wants to ensure that if anything happens to me during labor—God forbid—the assets are protected for our child immediately. It creates a trust loop."

"Right, right. The trust." Lucian’s eyes lit up at the word. He assumed the trust meant access. He didn't realize it meant a fortress.

I slid the final document toward him. It was the spousal waiver. In plain English, it stated that he waived all rights to manage, access, or inherit my liquid assets, transferring full power of attorney and guardianship to Joseph Evans in the event of my incapacitation or death. It also reclassified my personal inheritance as 'separate property,' untouchable in a divorce.

He picked up the pen. "And this secures the transfer?"

"It secures the future," I said, meeting his gaze. My eyes were wide, innocent. "For the family."

He smiled—arrogant, dismissive, completely blind—and signed his name with a flourish.

"Done," he said, dropping the pen. "Now, can we go? I have a meeting at four."

"Of course, darling," I said, taking the document and sliding it into my folder. The click of the binder closing sounded like the bolt of a prison cell sliding home.

"You go ahead," I told him. "I just need to notarize these."

He kissed my cheek, his lips cold. "Don't be late for dinner."

I watched him walk out, striding confidently toward a future that no longer existed. He had just signed away his safety net, his leverage, and his golden parachute. He was walking into a war with an empty gun, and he didn't even know the shooting had started.

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