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My Husband Saved His Mistress and Let Our Baby Die Novel Cover

My Husband Saved His Mistress and Let Our Baby Die

The first thing I registered wasn’t pain. It was the white. Blinding, sterile, aggressive white. It saturated the ceiling tiles, the stiff sheets tucked too tightly around my legs, and the humming fluorescent tube overhead that flickered like a dying heartbeat. Then came the hollowness. A physical, gaping void in my lower abdomen that felt less like an injury and more like an eviction. I tried to sit up, but my body felt heavy, anchored by lead weights in my veins. A nurse materialized at my side—a woman with kind eyes and tired shoulders, smelling of antiseptic and cheap coffee. She adjusted the IV drip, her movements practiced and gentle, but she wouldn’t look me in the eye. "Mrs.
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Chapter 3

Three days. That’s how long the attic had been my universe. The air was stale, recycled dust and cedar that coated my throat like ash. My stomach gnawed at itself, a sharp, acidic hunger that competed with the dull, throbbing void where my baby used to be. Ryan had left me water and a few protein bars, treating me like a unruly pet in a kennel rather than a human being.

I paced until my feet blistered. The window was reinforced glass; the door was solid oak. There was no way out, not through brute force. I sat in the corner, picking at a splinter in the floorboard, my mind replaying the image of Kayleigh in my robe. The rage was a cold stone in my chest, heavy and grounding.

The splinter gave way. Underneath, the wood was rotted. I dug my fingernails in, ignoring the tearing of my own skin, and pried. The board groaned, lifting just enough to reveal a hollow space between the joists. It wasn't empty.

Resting in the insulation was a heavy, leather-bound ledger and a cheap burner phone. My breath hitched. Ryan never wrote anything down—that was rule number one. Unless it was insurance. Unless it was something he couldn't trust to the cloud.

I opened the book. The handwriting was his—sharp, aggressive slants. I scanned the columns. Dates, shipping container numbers, chemical compounds. *Fentanyl.* My heart stopped. We had a code. No needles, no poison. We sold vices, not death. But the numbers here were staggering. He was flooding the streets with the one thing we swore never to touch. He hadn't just betrayed me; he’d betrayed the only moral line we had left.

I pocketed the phone and the ledger. The plan formed instantly, born of desperation and the street instincts Ryan thought I’d lost.

I curled into a ball near the door, clutching my stomach, and let out a guttural, wet scream. I wailed, channeling the very real physical agony of my recovery into a performance of dying.

"Help!" I shrieked, my voice cracking. "Please! The bleeding!"

Heavy footsteps thundered up the stairs. The lock clicked. The door swung open, revealing the new guy—the enforcer I didn't know. He looked annoyed rather than concerned, his hand hovering near his holster.

"Boss said to keep it down," he grunted, stepping into the room. "What’s the problem?"

"I'm hemorrhaging," I gasped, writhing on the floor. "Please, I need a doctor."

He hesitated, his eyes dropping to my sweatpants. It was the split second I needed. As he leaned down to check me, I surged upward. I didn't go for his gun; I went for the heavy Ming vase sitting on the dusty console table behind me.

I swung it with every ounce of strength I had left. The porcelain shattered against his temple with a sickening crunch. He didn't even yell; he just folded, hitting the floor like a sack of wet cement.

I didn't check if he was breathing. I scrambled over his body, my hands shaking violently as I fished the keys from his pocket. I grabbed the ledger, stepped over the shards of blue-and-white porcelain, and ran.

The drive to the Bronx was a blur of adrenaline and terror. I kept the speedometer at eighty, my eyes darting to the rearview mirror every three seconds. The Hamptons receded, replaced by the gray, industrial sprawl of the city that raised me.

I didn't go to my grandmother's old place. I went to the one door that would always open.

Bonnie’s apartment smelled of antiseptic and peppermint tea. When she opened the door, her face crumbled. She pulled me inside without a word, locking the three deadbolts behind us.

"Jesus, Cass," she whispered, guiding me to the sofa. Her hands were already moving, checking my pulse, lifting my shirt to see the bruising on my ribs. "He did this? Ryan did this?"

"He locked me away," I said, my voice raspy. "He thinks I'm broken."

" We need to get you out of the city," Bonnie said, her voice trembling but firm. "I have a cousin in Vermont. We can go tonight."

"No." I pushed her hands away. "No running."

I pulled the ledger and the burner phone from my jacket. I slammed them onto her coffee table. "He crossed the line, Bon. Fentanyl. He's poisoning the city."

Bonnie stared at the book, her nurse's instinct warring with her fear. "Cassidy, if you use this... he will kill you. He won't hesitate this time."

"He already killed me," I said, my hand drifting to my empty stomach. "The woman he married died in that warehouse."

I picked up the burner phone. It had a full battery. I didn't call the police. The police were on Ryan's payroll. I needed someone who wanted Ryan Cole dead as much as I did. Someone with the resources to burn his kingdom to the ground.

I dialed a number I had memorized years ago—a number written on a 'Do Not Engage' list Ryan kept in his safe.

It rang twice.

"Speak," a smooth, baritone voice answered. Cultured, calm, dangerous.

"Landon Patterson," I said, my voice steady for the first time in days. "This is Cassidy Cole. I have the shipping routes for the Jersey operation. And I want to make a deal."

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