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My Husband Replaced Our Baby with His Mistress's Novel Cover

My Husband Replaced Our Baby with His Mistress's

The smell of hospital antiseptic still clung to my hair, a sharp, chemical reminder of the emptiness in my womb. The elevator to the penthouse rose with a smooth, silent velocity that made my head spin. I pressed a hand to my lower abdomen, where the cramping was a dull, rhythmic throb—a second heartbeat where the real one had stopped three days ago. Ten years. Ten years of building a life, a company, a home. And all I wanted now was the cool sheets of my own bed and the oblivion of sleep. The elevator doors slid open, revealing the foyer of our San Francisco penthouse. The floor-to-ceiling windows framed the gray skyline, the city drowning in a persistent drizzle. I walked toward the master bedroom, my steps heavy, my legs feeling like they were filled with lead. I reached for the biometric pad next to the double mahogany doors.
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Chapter 1

The smell of hospital antiseptic still clung to my hair, a sharp, chemical reminder of the emptiness in my womb. The elevator to the penthouse rose with a smooth, silent velocity that made my head spin. I pressed a hand to my lower abdomen, where the cramping was a dull, rhythmic throb—a second heartbeat where the real one had stopped three days ago.

Ten years. Ten years of building a life, a company, a home. And all I wanted now was the cool sheets of my own bed and the oblivion of sleep.

The elevator doors slid open, revealing the foyer of our San Francisco penthouse. The floor-to-ceiling windows framed the gray skyline, the city drowning in a persistent drizzle. I walked toward the master bedroom, my steps heavy, my legs feeling like they were filled with lead. I reached for the biometric pad next to the double mahogany doors. I needed rest before I told Miles. I needed him to hold me, even if his touch had grown cold in the last year.

*Access Denied.*

The panel flashed an angry red. I blinked, thinking the anesthesia hadn't fully worn off. I pressed my thumb again.

*User Not Recognized.*

My breath hitched. I didn't have the energy for a glitch. I punched in the override code—my birthday. *Invalid.*

Then I heard it. Laughter. Low, throaty, and intimate. It wasn't Miles’s stressed, CEO bark. It was the sound of a man at ease.

Adrenaline spiked through my exhaustion, sharpening my vision. I didn't knock. I gripped the handle, found it unlocked, and shoved the heavy door open.

The scene before me was a tableau of domestic bliss that didn't belong to me. Miles was sitting on the edge of the bed—*my* bed—his tie loosened, a glass of scotch in hand. Next to him, leaning back against the pillows I had picked out, was a woman. Younger. blonde. Brielle Stephens. I knew her name. She was the marketing consultant Miles had hired six months ago to "freshen up the brand."

But it wasn't her presence that stopped my heart. It was the glossy black-and-white photos scattered across the duvet. Sonograms.

Miles looked up. He didn't flinch. He didn't scramble to cover himself. He just checked his watch, his expression shifting from amusement to mild annoyance.

"You're back early," he said. His voice was devoid of warmth, smooth and flat like polished glass.

Brielle sat up, smoothing a hand over her stomach. The swell was visible beneath her silk camisole. She looked at me not with guilt, but with a pitying smirk. "Miles, you said she wouldn't be discharged until tomorrow."

"I lost the baby," I whispered. The words tasted like ash.

Miles stood up, walking over to the nightstand. He picked up a thick manila envelope and tossed it onto the foot of the bed. It landed with a heavy thud.

"It’s for the best, Hazel," he said, as casually as if discussing a quarterly projection. "We both know you weren't built for motherhood. Just like you weren't built for the spotlight."

My hands trembled, not from weakness anymore, but from a rising, molten heat in my chest. "What is this?"

"Divorce papers," Miles said. "Irreconcilable differences. The prenup holds, obviously. You get the jewelry and the car. I keep the assets, the penthouse, and Griffin Corp."

"The code," I managed, my voice hardening. "The Skyline architecture. That’s my IP, Miles. You can't keep my source code."

He laughed, a sharp bark. "I own the company, Hazel. I own the servers the code lives on. Therefore, I own you. There's an NDA in there, too. Sign it, and I won't ruin your reputation by telling the board about your... mental instability."

"I wrote every line," I stepped forward, my fists balling. "You couldn't code a 'Hello World' script if your life depended on it."

Miles closed the distance between us in two strides. His face, usually camera-ready handsome, twisted into a sneer. He shoved me. Hard.

My weakened legs gave way. I hit the marble floor, the impact jarring my spine. A fresh wave of pain radiated from my womb, stealing my breath.

"Look at you," Miles spat, towering over me. He gestured to Brielle, who was watching with wide, excited eyes. "She’s carrying my legacy, Hazel. A real legacy. Not lines of code. Not a failure. Now sign the papers and get out of my house."

The pain in my body clarified everything. The grief evaporated, replaced by a cold, mathematical certainty. He thought he was the architect. He forgot he was just the user interface.

I didn't cry. I didn't scream. I reached for the pen on the floor.

"Smart girl," Miles muttered, turning back to Brielle.

I signed the document. But I didn't sign *Hazel Griffin*. I signed *Hazel Barnes*.

I stood up, clutching my purse. I pulled out my phone. Miles didn't even look at me; he was pouring champagne for Brielle.

I opened the calculator app. It looked standard, harmless. I typed in a sequence: *10-24*. The date I lost my child. The date his empire would die.

*Execute Protocol: Scorched Earth.*

I pressed the equals sign. The screen blinked once, imperceptibly.

"Goodbye, Miles," I said softly.

"Just go," he waved a hand dismissively, not turning around.

I walked out of the bedroom, down the hall, and into the elevator. When the doors opened to the lobby, the air was cold, but I didn't feel it. A black SUV was idling at the curb, rain slicking its tinted windows.

The rear door opened before I reached it. Elena Rodriguez, my head of security, stood there, an umbrella snapping open in her hand. Her dark eyes scanned my face, noting the pallor, the set of my jaw.

"Mrs. Griffin?" she asked, guiding me into the leather interior.

I sank into the seat, watching the penthouse disappear into the fog.

"Ms. Barnes," I corrected her, staring at my phone as the signal bars flickered. "Drive. It’s done."

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