
My Husband Saved His Mistress’s Son and Let Me Bleed
Chapter 5
The deadbolt of the guest room door slid home with a heavy, final *thud* that echoed in the hallway. It was the only sound I had made since James murdered Luna.
I didn't pack bags. I didn't storm out. Leaving would have given him the satisfaction of chasing me, of performing the role of the repentant husband. Instead, I stayed. I became a ghost in his own house, haunting the west wing while he suffocated in the silence of the master suite.
"Cecelia, open the door." James’s voice was muffled through the mahogany, thick with an exhaustion I no longer pitied. "Please. We need to talk about this. I… I didn't know the cat was there. It was a reflex. I was terrified for Baker."
I sat on the edge of the pristine, unused bed and stared at the door handle. It jiggled, then stopped. He was leaning his forehead against the wood; I could hear the ragged intake of his breath.
"I’ll get you another cat," he whispered, the offer slipping under the door like a foul draft. "A better breed. Something hypoallergenic."
I didn't scream. I didn't throw a vase. I simply turned my back to the door and opened my laptop. The glow of the screen illuminated the dark room, casting long, sharp shadows against the walls.
For three nights, that room became my command center. I didn't sleep. I didn't eat the food the housekeeper left on a tray outside. I fed only on the footage Marcus Chen had uploaded to the secure server.
Frame by frame, I stitched together the shroud for the Richardson empire.
*Clip one:* The grainy garage footage. Maria’s petite figure kneeling by my rear tire, the glint of wire cutters in her hand.
*Clip two:* The timestamped emails from her personal account to Vanguard Industries.
*Clip three:* The medical report of my miscarriage, redacted but damning, overlaid with James’s text: *Baker needs me.*
"Transition to the schematics at the three-minute mark," I told Marcus over the encrypted line, my voice raspy from disuse. "I want the board members to see the stolen clean energy designs before they see her face. Let them realize they’ve been robbed before they realize they’ve been played."
"It’s aggressive, Cecelia," Marcus warned, the click of his keyboard audible in the background. "Once we play this at the Gala, there’s no walking it back. You’re nuking the family name."
I looked at the empty spot on the rug where Luna used to sleep. "The blast radius is the point, Marcus."
By the night of the Richardson Group Gala, the silence between James and me had solidified into a physical barrier. He moved around the penthouse like a man walking on a frozen lake, terrified that one wrong step would crack the ice. He didn't know the ice was already gone; he was just treading water before drowning.
The invitation on the vanity specified the dress code: *Subtle Elegance. Neutrals and Pastels preferred.* Eleanor’s handwriting. A directive to blend in, to be the beige, supportive background to the Richardson brilliance.
I reached into the garment bag that had arrived via private courier that morning.
The silk spilled out like a fresh arterial wound. It was red. not burgundy, not maroon, but a violent, screaming crimson. The neckline plunged dangerously low, and the back was entirely open, exposing the spine that James had tried to break. It was a dress designed for a woman who intended to be looked at, judged, and feared.
I applied my lipstick—a shade that matched the silk perfectly. In the mirror, my eyes looked older. The softness was gone, replaced by the flat, predatory gaze of a survivor.
I picked up my phone and opened my contacts. I scrolled past James, past Eleanor, and tapped on the number for the senior editor at *Page Six*.
*Tip for tonight: Cecelia Hayes-Richardson is making a special announcement at the Gala. You won’t want to miss the livestream. It concerns the future of the company. And the heir.*
Sent.
When I walked out into the foyer, James was waiting. He wore a tuxedo that fit him perfectly, but he looked diminished inside it. He was adjusting his cufflinks, his hands trembling slightly. When he looked up, his hands stopped.
His eyes widened, traveling from the hem of the crimson gown to my face. He swallowed hard. "Cecelia. That dress…"
"Is it too much?" I asked, my voice smooth, devoid of the jagged edges of grief.
"It’s… it’s not the dress code. Mother specifically asked for—"
"Your mother asks for a lot of things, James. Silence. Compliance. Blindness." I walked past him, the silk swishing with a sound like a blade being drawn from a sheath. I didn't wait for him to open the door. I reached for the handle myself. "Tonight, she gets the truth."
He hurried to catch up, grabbing his coat. "What is that supposed to mean? Are you going to cause a scene?"
I paused at the elevator, pressing the call button. The metal doors reflected us: a handsome billionaire and his trophy wife, a picture-perfect lie.
"I’m not going to cause a scene, James," I said, stepping into the car as the doors slid open. I didn't look at him. I looked straight ahead, into the abyss of the night. "I’m going to finish the performance."
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