
My Husband Sacrificed Our Child to Protect His Mistress
Chapter 2
The Bishop estate hadn’t changed, but I had. The heavy oak doors of the library felt like the entrance to a war room now, not a sanctuary. Kaiden stood by the window, silhouetted against the gray morning light, a tumbler of scotch in his hand despite the early hour.
"Are you sure about this, Gen?" he asked, not turning around. "Once we pull the trigger, there’s no going back. The board will scream. Dad’s legacy—"
"Dad’s legacy isn’t funding the man who authorized the beatings that killed his grandchild," I said. My voice was devoid of inflection, a flat line. I sat in the leather armchair that used to swallow me whole as a child. Now, I sat on the edge, spine rigid. My cane rested against my thigh, a cold, hard comfort.
Kaiden turned then, his face hardening as his gaze flicked to my leg, then to my stomach. He set the glass down with a sharp *clink*.
"The Bishop Protocol," he said, picking up his phone. "Effective immediately."
I watched as he made the call. It was clinical, precise. *Ethical misalignment.* A sterile phrase for a bloody betrayal. As he spoke, I opened my laptop. I didn’t need hacking skills for this part; I needed memory. Damian, in his arrogance, had once bragged about his tangled web of offshore accounts during a pillow-talk session I was never supposed to remember.
*Cayman. Shell corp: Blue Horizon. Account ending in 4492.*
My fingers flew across the keys. The anonymous tip form for the IRS was pitifully simple. I attached the account numbers and the routing paths I’d memorized three years ago.
"Done," I whispered.
Kaiden hung up. "The press conference is in an hour. By noon, Reynolds Global stock will be bleeding."
We watched the ticker later that afternoon. A red arrow pointed straight down. Fifteen percent. It wasn’t a kill shot, but it was a deep, jagged wound.
***
The Gomez Biotech Gala was an exercise in nausea. The ballroom of the Pierre Hotel smelled of expensive perfume and hypocrisy. I adjusted the scratchy collar of my catering uniform, keeping my head low. The wig Myla had procured was itchy, a dull brown bob that made me invisible.
"Keep your eyes on the prize, Princess," Myla’s voice buzzed in my earpiece. She was in a van three blocks away, monitoring the security feeds she’d looped. "Target is at the center table. Wearing red. Looking like she ate the canary and the cat."
I saw her. Carly. She wore a scarlet gown that clung to her like a second skin, diamonds dripping from her ears—diamonds Damian had probably bought. She was laughing, her hand resting possessively on a tablet lying on the white tablecloth. That tablet contained my life’s work.
I gripped the tray of champagne flutes until my knuckles turned white. My leg throbbed with every step, the uneven rhythm of my gait concealed by the bustling crowd.
"Champagne, ma'am?" I murmured, extending the tray as I reached her circle.
Carly didn’t even look at me. She was too busy basking in the adoration of a Senator. "Oh, just leave it," she waved a dismissive hand, knocking into the tray. A glass wobbled. I caught it, my heart hammering against my ribs.
"Of course," I said, my voice a rasp.
"As I was saying," Carly beamed, turning back to her admirers, "the serum’s efficacy is entirely due to my breakthrough in cellular regeneration. It came to me in a dream, really."
A dream. I felt bile rise in my throat. That *dream* was three years of my life in a basement lab, three years of failed trials and sleepless nights.
Just then, the photographer called out. "Ms. Gomez! A photo for the Times!"
Carly preened. She stood up, smoothing her dress, and took a step away from the table. The tablet sat there, unprotected. A sleek, black slab of stolen glory.
"Now, Gen!" Myla hissed.
I moved. It had to be fluid. I placed a fresh glass down and, in the same motion, slid a thin, transparent cloning card underneath her tablet. It was smaller than a credit card, virtually invisible.
"Wait," Carly said, spinning around. Her eyes narrowed, scanning my face. For a second, the air left the room. Did she recognize the eyes? The shape of the jaw?
"You spilled a drop," she sneered, pointing to a microscopic bead of condensation on the tablecloth. "Clean it up."
I bowed my head, subservient, burning with a cold, clear rage. "Immediately, ma'am."
As I wiped the table, the cloning card’s tiny LED blinked once. *Green.*
I palmed the card back into my sleeve, the transfer complete.
***
The safe house was a stark contrast to the gala—a loft in Brooklyn with exposed brick and the hum of servers. Myla sat cross-legged on the floor, the cloned data streaming onto three monitors.
"Decrypting..." she muttered, typing furiously. "Gotcha."
Files cascaded down the screen. My breath hitched. There it was. My original thesis. The timestamps were from four years ago. But the author metadata had been clumsily overwritten.
"Look at this," Myla said, pointing to an email thread.
*From: D. Reynolds*
*To: C. Gomez*
*Subject: Re: The Numbers*
*"Just change the variables on the enzyme decay. No one checks the raw data, Carly. Make it look like a 90% success rate. We need the FDA approval by Q3 to bury the Bishop acquisition."*
I stared at the screen. The glow of the monitor reflected in my eyes, cold and hard. It wasn’t just theft. It was fraud. It was a conspiracy documented in black and white pixels.
"He told her how to fake it," I whispered. "He knew the science was flawed, and he pushed it anyway."
Myla looked up at me, her expression grim. "This is the smoking gun, Gen. This buries her. And it links him directly to the fraud."
I reached out and touched the screen, tracing Damian’s name. The man I had loved. The man who had sold our child for a quarterly earnings report.
"It’s not enough to bury them," I said, the words tasting like iron. "I want them to suffocate."
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