
My Husband Saved His Mistress’s Son and Let Me Bleed
Chapter 3
The notification from Christie’s pinged on my phone just as the elevator doors slid open. *Lot 402: Sold.* The diamond tennis bracelet James had given me after his first 'business trip' with Maria was gone, converted into a wire transfer that would fund my new life. It was cleaner this way. Diamonds might be forever, but my tolerance for disrespect had an expiration date.
I walked into the penthouse to find James pacing the living room, a tablet clutched in his hand like a weapon. The headline on the screen was visible from the foyer: *Trouble in Paradise? Richardson Wife Liquidates Assets in Shock Auction.*
"Are we destitute, Cecelia?" James didn't turn as I entered; he simply hurled the question at the panoramic window. "My mother has been calling non-stop. You’re selling gifts I bought you. Publicly. It’s humiliating."
"Humiliation is a matter of perspective, James." I dropped my keys on the console table. The sound was sharp, metallic. "I thought I was just decluttering. Making space for the truth."
He spun around, his jaw tight. "You sold the emeralds. The vintage Chanel. You’re acting like a petulant child because I helped a dying boy."
"I’m acting like a woman who knows what her marriage is worth."
I walked past him toward the fireplace. Above the mantle hung the centerpiece of his guilt-spending: a Banksy original, a girl reaching for a heart-shaped balloon, framed in museum-grade glass. He’d bought it for our second anniversary, right around the time Maria had 'accidentally' run into him at a coffee shop.
"That painting," James said, his voice dropping to a warning growl as he tracked my movement. "Don't touch it. It’s an investment."
"Is it?" I picked up a heavy silver letter opener from the mantle. The metal was cool against my palm. "I always thought it was just a receipt."
"Cecelia, put it down."
I didn't look at the painting. I looked at him. I locked eyes with the man who had shoved me into the rain, and with a calm, fluid motion, I drove the tip of the opener into the canvas.
The sound was exquisite—a dry, tearing rasp that filled the silent room. James froze, his face draining of color as I dragged the blade downward. The girl was severed from her balloon. The investment was liquidated.
"You're insane," he whispered, staring at the ruined canvas ribbons.
I set the letter opener down with a soft click. "Some things lose their value when you realize the buyer is cheap."
***
The tension at the Richardson family dinner two nights later was thick enough to choke on. Eleanor sat at the head of the table, her spine rigid, while Maria sat across from me, playing the role of the demure, grateful charity case. Baker sat between them, wheezing softly, a prop in their theater of virtue.
"I made this for you, Uncle James," Baker said, his voice small and scratchy. He slid a piece of construction paper across the mahogany table.
James picked it up, his expression softening into that performative tenderness he reserved exclusively for the Torres family. He held it up. It was a crayon drawing titled *My Family*. Three stick figures stood under a yellow sun: a small boy, a woman with dark hair, and a tall man in a suit holding their hands.
Eleanor cooed, "Oh, how precious. He sees you as a father figure, James. It speaks to your generosity."
I leaned forward, swirling the Pinot Noir in my glass. The red liquid coated the crystal like fresh blood.
"It is precious," I said, my voice cutting through the murmurs. "But I’m confused, Baker. Which one is me?"
The table went silent. Maria shifted, her hand fluttering to her throat. "Oh, Mrs. Richardson, he’s just a child. He didn't mean to offend..."
"I'm not offended," I smiled, ice forming at the corners of my mouth. I looked directly at James. "I’m just curious. Baker, did you forget to draw your Uncle James’s wife, or did your mommy teach you that 'Daddy' doesn't really have one?"
James slammed the drawing down. "That is enough, Cecelia."
"Is it?" I took a slow sip of wine. "Because from where I’m sitting, this looks less like a child’s drawing and more like a blueprint for a hostile takeover."
***
Maria showed up at the penthouse the following afternoon. She claimed she wanted to "clear the air," but she brought Baker, using him as a human shield. James was in his study, leaving me to entertain the woman who had cut my brake lines.
"I really am sorry about the dinner," Maria said, sitting on my sofa, her eyes scanning the room as if measuring it for drapes. "I never want to be the cause of friction."
I stood at the tea cart, the electric kettle rumbling to a boil. "You aren't the cause of friction, Maria. You're the cause of wreckage. There's a difference."
She smirked then—a quick, microscopic twitch of her lips when she thought I wasn't looking. Her phone buzzed in her lap. I saw the screen light up with a text to her cousin. *She suspects nothing. We’re close.*
The kettle clicked off. I poured the water into the porcelain pot, the steam rising in a scalding plume.
"Sugar?" I asked, lifting the pot.
"Two, please."
I walked toward her. As I reached the coffee table, my foot caught the edge of the rug—or appeared to. I stumbled forward. With surgical precision, I tilted the pot.
The boiling water splashed in a heavy arc, landing directly on the back of Maria’s hand resting on her knee.
Her scream was piercing, shattering the quiet luxury of the apartment.
"My hand! Oh god, it burns!"
James burst out of the study, wild-eyed. "What happened?"
He rushed to her, falling to his knees to inspect the angry red welt rising on her skin. He looked up at me, accusation burning in his gaze. "Cecelia?"
I stood over them, the empty teapot dangling from my fingertips, my face a mask of cool indifference. I didn't apologize. I didn't flinch.
"Accidents happen, don't they, Maria?" I whispered, my voice low enough that only she could hear the threat beneath the words. "Like brake failures. Or slippery rugs."
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