
My Husband Saved His Mistress’s Son and Let Me Bleed
Chapter 1
Lightning fractured the Manhattan skyline, briefly illuminating the tension etched into the reflection of my husband’s face on the floor-to-ceiling glass. Three years of marriage, of private islands and gallery buyouts, and yet, when the thunder rolled, James didn’t look at me. He looked at his phone.
It buzzed against the marble countertop—a sound like a wasp trapped in a jar. The screen lit up: *Maria*.
My hand instinctively went to the swell of my abdomen, a protective reflex I hadn’t even realized I’d developed over the last six months. "James," I said, my voice soft but laced with the exhaustion of a woman tired of competing with a ghost from his past. "It’s two in the morning. Let it go to voicemail."
He snatched the device before the second ring finished. "It could be Baker."
I watched the transformation—the way his shoulders hunched, his eyes widened. The billionaire CEO of Richardson Group vanished, replaced by the foster kid desperate to save the only family he thought mattered. He listened for three seconds before the color drained from his face.
"I'm coming," he barked, ending the call. He spun toward me, eyes wild. "Get your coat. I need you to drive while I keep him stable in the back."
"James, look outside." I gestured to the deluge hammering the terrace. "I’m six months pregnant. I can’t be running around in a storm like this. Call an ambulance."
"There’s no time for an ambulance! He can’t breathe, Cecelia!" He was already grabbing my trench coat, shoving it into my chest with enough force that I stumbled back a step. "Stop being selfish. A child is dying."
Selfish. The word hooked into my ribs. I pulled the coat on, my fingers trembling over the buttons. I told myself it was for the boy. It was always for the boy.
By the time we reached Maria’s pre-war brownstone, the streets were rivers of black oil and rain. James didn’t wait for the car to stop completely before he threw the door open, sprinting toward the entrance where Maria stood under the awning, clutching a wheezing seven-year-old.
I struggled out of the passenger seat, the wind whipping my hair across my face, stinging my eyes. The pavement was slick, treacherous. I moved as fast as my altered center of gravity allowed, rounding the hood just as James came barreling back, Baker limp in his arms, Maria clinging to his bicep like a barnacle.
"Open the door!" James roared over the thunder.
I fumbled with the handle of the rear door, my fingers slippery with rain. It clicked open.
"Faster, Cecelia!"
"I’m trying!" I shouted back, stepping aside to let them pass.
But I wasn't fast enough. Not for James. Not when Maria was sobbing in his ear. As he lunged for the open backseat, his shoulder slammed into mine. It wasn't an accident; it was a frantic, ruthless shove to clear his path.
"Move!"
My heel caught on a grate. My arms flailed, grasping at wet air, finding no purchase. I didn't just fall; I crashed. The concrete rushed up to meet me, and I landed hard, directly on my stomach. The impact punched the air from my lungs, replaced instantly by a blinding, white-hot tear through my abdomen.
I gasped, curled on the wet asphalt, paralyzed by a pain that felt like the world splitting open. Through the haze of agony, I heard the car door slam. The engine revved.
I lifted my head, rain mixing with the tears blurring my vision. "James!" I screamed, or tried to, but it came out as a broken whimper.
The taillights of the Bentley flared red—demon eyes in the dark—and then they were gone. He hadn’t even looked back.
***
The silence of the private clinic was worse than the storm. It was white, sterile, and smelled of antiseptic and finality. I sat on the edge of the paper-covered exam table, my designer coat ruined, my hands resting on a stomach that was no longer a sanctuary, but a tomb.
"I'm sorry, Mrs. Richardson," the doctor had said, her voice gentle, professional, devastating. "The placental abruption was too severe."
I didn't cry. I couldn't. The shock had frozen my tear ducts. I handled the paperwork alone. I walked out alone. I took a taxi back to the penthouse alone.
For hours, I sat in the living room, staring at the darkened skyline. The sun eventually rose, casting long, cruel shadows across the floor. I hadn't changed my clothes. I needed him to see the blood.
The elevator chimed at noon. James walked in, looking disheveled, his shirt untucked, dark circles under his eyes. He walked straight past me toward the kitchen, pouring a glass of water with a trembling hand.
"He’s stable," James said, exhaling a breath he seemed to have been holding all night. "Doctors said another ten minutes and his airways would have closed completely. Maria is a wreck, but... God, that was close."
He turned, leaning against the counter, finally looking at me. He didn't see the hollows of my cheeks or the dried rust-colored stains on my coat. He only saw an audience for his heroism.
"You should have seen him, Cece. He’s so small."
I stood up. My legs shook, but my voice was steady, dead.
"James."
He rubbed his face, annoyed at the interruption. "What? I haven't slept, Cecelia. Can we not do the jealousy thing right now?"
"I lost the baby."
The glass in his hand didn't drop. He didn't fall to his knees. He just blinked, his brow furrowing in genuine confusion, as if I had spoken in a language he didn't understand.
"What?" he asked, the word flat, devoid of the horror that was consuming me.
"Last night," I whispered, the first crack appearing in my voice. "When you pushed me. I fell. I lost our baby."
He stared at me, and in his eyes, I didn't see heartbreak. I saw calculation. He was already rewriting the night in his head, absolving himself before the accusation even landed. And in that silence, my marriage didn't just break; it died.
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