
My Husband Sacrificed Our Child to Protect His Mistress
Chapter 3
The alley behind the safe house smelled of wet cardboard and impending violence. I had just stepped out to retrieve a burner phone Myla had stashed in a rusted drainpipe when the shadows detached themselves from the brickwork. A hand slammed against the wall next to my head, boxing me in. The scent of expensive sandalwood and stale scotch filled my nose—a nauseating perfume of betrayal.
"You think you're clever, Genevieve?" Damian’s voice was a low growl, vibrating against my chest. "Leaking the FDA data? Do you have any idea how much that stock dip cost me?"
My heart hammered a frantic rhythm against my ribs, but I forced my spine straight, gripping my cane until the silver handle bit into my palm. "It cost you less than three years of my life," I whispered, refusing to look away from his bloodshot eyes. "Less than our child."
His pupils dilated. For a fraction of a second, something like regret flickered there, only to be swallowed by the cold, hard shell of the CEO. He leaned closer, his fingers grazing the hollow of my throat. It wasn't a caress; it was a boundary line.
"I did what I had to do," he hissed. "The merger was failing. The board needed a scapegoat, and Carly needed a win. I saved the company, Gen. I saved *us*."
"Us?" The word tasted like ash. "There is no 'us.' You sent me to hell so your mistress could play scientist."
"I own you," he snarled, his composure fracturing. "I put you in that cell, and I can put you back. One call to your parole officer about 'erratic behavior,' and you’re gone. Violating parole is easy to prove when you have my resources. Stop this crusade, or I will bury you so deep even your brother won’t find you."
My hand was in my pocket, thumbing the record button on the digital recorder. "Is that a threat, Damian?"
"It's a promise."
He shoved off the wall and stormed away, leaving me trembling in the damp air. I waited until his footsteps faded before pulling out the device. The red light blinked—a tiny, electronic heartbeat. *Got you.*
***
The Vault was less a lounge and more a fortress for the morally bankrupt. Getting in required slipping through the kitchen service entrance, dodging a sous-chef screaming about truffle oil. I crouched behind a high-backed velvet booth in the VIP section, my bad leg screaming in protest. Through the gap in the upholstery, I saw them.
Carly was swirling a martini, looking bored. Damian was pacing.
"She's escalating," Damian muttered. "The FDA leak was precise. She knows about the raw data."
"So handle her," Carly snapped, checking her reflection in her phone screen. "You’re being too soft. Just like you were when you let her keep the baby for so long."
I froze. The air in my lungs turned to ice.
Damian stopped pacing. "That wasn't the plan, Carly. The miscarriage... that was an accident. The riot wasn't supposed to go that far."
"Oh, please," she scoffed. "It was necessary collateral. You couldn't have a heir with a felon. Imagine the PR nightmare. Besides, I never actually got hurt when she 'assaulted' me, did I? A little makeup, a paid-off doctor... and poof. Three years for her, a career for me."
My vision blurred. The rage wasn't hot anymore; it was absolute zero. I pressed stop on the recorder. I had the confession. I had the conspiracy. I had the soul of my enemy on tape.
***
Paranoia is a contagion. Damian must have felt the walls closing in because the attack came two hours later. I was limping down 4th Avenue, the streetlights blurring in the rain, when a nondescript gray van screeched onto the sidewalk, cutting off my path.
The side door slid open with a metallic rasp. Two men in balaclavas jumped out. No words, just grabby hands and the stink of cheap tobacco.
"Get off me!" I swung my cane, the heavy ebony wood connecting with a kneecap. One of them grunted, buckling, but the other grabbed my hair, yanking my head back. Pain exploded in my scalp. They were dragging me toward the open maw of the van, my heels scraping uselessly against the wet pavement.
*This is it,* I thought, panic rising like bile. *He’s going to finish what he started in prison.*
Then, a roar of an engine. Headlights blinded me.
A white sedan hurtled over the curb, smashing into the side of the van with a deafening crunch of metal and shattering glass. The impact threw my captors off balance. The grip on my hair loosened.
The driver’s door of the sedan flew open. A man stumbled out, blood trickling from a cut on his forehead, but his eyes were focused entirely on me.
"Emilio?" My voice cracked.
He didn't hesitate. He charged the remaining thug, tackling him with a ferocity I’d never seen in the gentle professor I remembered. Sirens wailed in the distance—Kaiden’s doing, or perhaps just New York waking up to chaos.
The thugs scrambled, abandoning the mission, limping into the darkness. Emilio didn't chase them. He turned to me, his chest heaving, rain plastering his dark hair to his skull.
"Genevieve," he breathed, rushing over. He didn't ask if I was okay; he could see I wasn't. He wrapped his arms around me, pulling me into the solid warmth of his chest. For the first time in three years, the shaking stopped. I buried my face in his coat, smelling rain and old books and safety.
"I've got you," he whispered into my hair, his arms a shield against the world Damian Reynolds had built. "I've got you."
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