
My Husband Replaced Our Baby with His Mistress's
Chapter 3
The glow of the monitors was the only light in the safe house, painting the concrete walls in washes of sterile blue and angry red. I sat wrapped in a wool blanket August had draped over me hours ago, clutching a mug of tea that had long since turned cold. My eyes felt like they were packed with sand, but I couldn't look away.
Miles wasn't panicking anymore. He was performing.
On the central screen, CNN broadcasted live from the steps of the Griffin Corp headquarters. Miles stood behind a podium bristling with microphones, his suit impeccable, his face arranged into a mask of stoic sorrow. Beside him stood Marilyn, clutching a handkerchief, looking for all the world like a grieving matriarch rather than the woman who had once told me my bloodline was "too common" to mix with theirs.
"This isn't a corporate failure," Miles said, his voice dropping an octave, vibrating with rehearsed vulnerability. "This is a family tragedy. My ex-wife, Hazel... she has been struggling with severe mental health issues for some time. The loss of our pregnancy earlier this week was the breaking point."
My grip on the mug tightened until the ceramic handle bit into my skin. He was using our dead child as a shield.
"We believe this system paralysis is a cry for help," Marilyn added, leaning into the microphone. Her voice wavered perfectly. "Hazel is unwell. She’s lashing out in grief. We are not angry; we are just worried. We want her to come home and get the treatment she needs."
Then came the visual evidence. A photo flashed on the screen—me, leaving the hospital three days ago. My hair was matted, my eyes swollen and red, my posture broken by physical pain. They had stripped away the context of the miscarriage and framed it as madness.
"Unbelievable," August muttered from the corner of the room, pacing the length of the rug. "They're pathologizing your genius. They're turning a copyright dispute into a psychiatric hold."
"It's smart," I said, my voice hollow. "If I'm crazy, I can't be a credible threat. If I'm crazy, the code isn't a legal asset; it's a weapon wielded by a lunatic."
But the assault wasn't confined to traditional media. On the tablet resting on my knee, a TikTok video was already trending, racking up millions of views by the minute. It was Brielle.
She sat in what used to be my living room, the lighting softened by a filter that made her skin look like porcelain. Tears—glossy and perfectly tracked—rolled down her cheeks. She cradled her bump protectively.
"I didn't want to speak up," she whispered to the camera, "but I'm terrified. Hazel told Miles that if she couldn't have a baby, no one could. She threatened us. And now... now she's trying to destroy everything to get to me."
The comments section scrolled by so fast it was a blur of hatred.
*#JusticeForBrielle*
*Lock her up.*
*Who attacks a pregnant woman?*
*Psycho ex-wife energy.*
Then, a notification pinged. Then another. Then a deluge. My old address—the townhouse I lived in before meeting Miles—was posted in a thread. Someone had found my personal email. Death threats poured in, graphic and specific.
I set the tablet face down. The nausea rolled in, hot and acidic, but I swallowed it back. They wanted me to break. They wanted the woman in the photo—the weeping, broken thing.
Instead, they got the architect.
The heavy steel door of the safe house clanked open. Elena stepped in, shaking rain from her coat, followed by a man in a sharp charcoal suit carrying a leather briefcase that looked older than the Constitution.
David Chen. My IP lawyer. The only man in San Francisco who hated Miles Griffin as much as I did.
"Rough night on Twitter?" David asked, setting his briefcase on the coffee table. He didn't look at the screens. He looked at me, his expression grim but focused.
"They're winning the court of public opinion," I said, gesturing to the stock ticker on the far monitor. It had dipped, but it hadn't crashed. The narrative was holding. Investors believed Miles could fix the "glitch" once the "crazy wife" was handled.
"Public opinion is fluid," David said, snapping the latches of his briefcase. "Federal law is rigid."
He pulled out a thick black binder and slid it across the table. It hit the wood with a heavy, final thud.
"I've been monitoring the filings," David said, taking a seat opposite me. "Miles's legal team is preparing an injunction based on marital property laws. They're going to argue that since the code was developed during the marriage, half belongs to him, and as CEO, he has executive control."
I ran my hand over the binder's cover. "Let them argue."
David smiled, a shark-like baring of teeth. "Exactly. Because they’re looking for 'Hazel Griffin' on the patent registry. They’re looking for 'Hazel Barnes.'"
He flipped the binder open. Inside were documents dated ten years ago, yellowing slightly at the edges. Patents for the core architecture of the Skyline system. The registered owner wasn't me, and it certainly wasn't Miles.
"Nemesis Holdings," I read the name of the shell company I had formed a decade ago, back when Miles first made a joke about women being better at design than backend logic. It had been a safety measure I prayed I’d never need.
"Sole proprietor," David confirmed. "You licensed the tech to Griffin Corp on a renewable ten-year contract. A contract that expired..."
"Yesterday," I finished.
"Miles doesn't just have a PR problem, Hazel. He has been operating his entire empire on an expired license owned by a holding company he doesn't know exists."
I looked back at the screen. Miles was still talking, wiping a tear from his eye, playing the benevolent leader dealing with a hysterical woman.
"He thinks he's fighting a divorce case," I said, feeling the first spark of warmth return to my chest. It wasn't happiness. It was the cold, hard comfort of checkmate.
"He thinks I'm emotional," I whispered, tracing the logo of Nemesis Holdings. "He forgot that I'm the one who wrote the rules."
"Ready to release the cease and desist?" David asked, pen hovering.
"No," I said, watching Brielle's video loop again. "Not yet. Let them dig the hole a little deeper. I want them to feel safe before the ground collapses."
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