
My Husband Refused to Divorce After His Mistress Killed Mom
Chapter 1
The flash of cameras hit like physical blows. I stood on the red carpet of the Met Gala, alone, watching my husband step out of our limousine with another woman on his arm.
Not just any woman. Someone deliberately chosen for her ordinariness—mousy brown hair, ill-fitting dress, nervous smile. Killian Warren, Manhattan's most eligible heir turned cruelly married man, had perfected this particular torture over our two-year marriage. Parade someone less beautiful, less polished, less everything than me, and watch high society whisper about what must be wrong with his wife.
I adjusted the diamond bracelet at my wrist. Smiled. The pageant smile I'd worn since I was sixteen, the one that never reached my eyes but photographed beautifully. My Valentino gown cost more than most people's cars, a deep emerald that Killian's stylist had selected because it complemented his date's beige monstrosity.
Even our humiliation was coordinated.
"Mila! Over here!" A photographer gestured. I turned, angled my chin just so, and let them capture Mrs. Killian Warren in all her solitary glory. Behind me, Killian's hand rested on the small of his date's back—the same spot he'd touched on our wedding day, the last time he'd shown me any public affection.
Inside the museum, the seating arrangement completed the picture. Killian had placed me at a table near the kitchen doors, where the clatter of dishes provided a soundtrack to my shame. He sat at the head table with the Vanderbilts and the Astors, his date giggling at something he'd whispered in her ear.
Across from me, Patricia Whitmore—old money, older grudges—leaned toward her companion. Her voice carried just enough. "I heard she trapped him with the pregnancy scare. When that didn't work, her mother's medical bills did."
My fingers tightened around my clutch. The crystal beading bit into my palm. I kept smiling.
The truth was worse than their speculation. I'd married Killian Warren believing in fairy tales, in the handsome man who'd pursued me with single-minded intensity after we'd reconnected at a charity auction. He'd remembered me from prep school, he'd said. Had never forgotten me.
What he'd never mentioned was why.
The gala blurred into a parade of pitying glances and carefully averted eyes. I floated through it, a ghost in emerald silk, until finally the car arrived to take us home. Separately, of course. Killian would stay for the after-party. I was dismissed.
Our penthouse overlooked Central Park, forty floors of glass and steel and money. I kicked off my heels in the foyer, leaving them where they fell. My feet ached. Everything ached.
"We need to talk." My voice echoed in the empty space.
Killian appeared an hour later, bow tie undone, smelling of scotch and someone else's perfume. He looked at me the way he always did—with something cold and calculating behind those gray eyes.
"About what?" He poured himself another drink.
"About tonight. About every night." I stood straighter, channeling every ounce of pageant poise I had left. "About why you insist on humiliating me in front of everyone we know."
He laughed. Actually laughed. Then he grabbed my wrist and pulled me down the hallway to the mirror—the full-length antique his mother had given us as a wedding gift. From his pocket, he produced a photograph, creased and faded, and taped it to the glass beside my reflection.
The woman in the photo could have been me. Same dark hair, same bone structure, same wide-set eyes.
"Your aunt," Killian said, his voice flat. "My father's mistress. The woman who destroyed my family when I was twelve years old." His fingers dug into my arm. "Every time I look at you, I see her. Every single time."
The room tilted. "That's not—I'm not her."
"No. You're better." His smile was a blade. "You're my penance. My revenge. Every day you wear my ring is another day her bloodline pays for what she did."
He released me and walked away, leaving me staring at the ghost in the mirror.
My phone rang at six the next morning. Mount Sinai Hospital. My mother's doctor, his voice tight with urgency. Deterioration. Experimental treatment. Two hundred thousand dollars. Immediately.
I pulled up my banking app with shaking hands. Frozen. Every account.
Killian emerged from his study, already dressed for the office, coffee in hand. He'd been expecting this.
"I need—" My voice cracked. I swallowed. Started again. "I need you to unfreeze my accounts. My mother needs treatment."
"I'll pay for it." He set down his coffee. "On one condition."
He slid a document across the marble counter. An addendum to our prenuptial agreement. One more year of marriage. One more year of this exquisite torture.
I picked up the pen. My hand didn't shake as I signed my name, selling another piece of my soul to save my mother's life.
Killian smiled. "Good girl."
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