
My Husband Swapped Our Baby with His Mistress’s Son
Chapter 1
The steering wheel slicked under my palms, my knuckles white ridges against the leather. Rain lashed the windshield of my sedan, blurring the Manhattan skyline into a smear of weeping gray. I checked the dashboard clock again. 2:14 PM. Collin’s prep began at 2:30. My son needed a piece of my liver to survive, and I would tear this city apart with my bare hands to get to him.
In the rearview mirror, a black SUV loomed, its grille a steel maw swallowing the distance between us. I changed lanes. It followed. Another flanked me on the right, boxing me in against the concrete divider of the FDR Drive. My heart hammered a frantic rhythm against my ribs. This wasn’t traffic. This was a hunt.
Metal screeched—a high-pitched shriek that vibrated in my teeth—as the SUV on my right swerved, clipping my fender. The impact jolted my spine, sending the car skidding toward the barrier. I fought the wheel, breath hitching in a sob I refused to release. They were trying to stop me. Why?
"Not today," I hissed, slamming the brakes. The flanking SUV shot past, missing its block. I wrenched the wheel left, scraping the divider in a shower of sparks, and took the exit ramp at a speed that made the tires scream. Smoke curled from the hood as I abandoned the vehicle three blocks from Manhattan General, the engine sputtering its death rattle. I didn't look back. I ran.
The hospital lobby was a sensory assault of antiseptic and hushed panic. I burst through the doors, rain-soaked and trembling, my dress clinging to my skin like a second, freezing layer.
"Mrs. Matthews!" Dr. Sarah Chen met me near the elevators, her expression tight. She didn't look at the clipboard in her hands; she looked at me, and the pity in her dark eyes stopped me cold.
"Is he okay?" I gasped, my lungs burning. "Is Collin—did I miss it?"
"Come with me, Genevieve." She didn't use my title. She used my name. That was the first fracture in the world.
She led me into a private consult room, the fluorescent lights humming with a nausea-inducing buzz. "We ran the final compatibility panels. The pre-op protocol is strict."
"I know. I'm his mother. I'm a match. Let's go."
Sarah placed a hand on my forearm. Her fingers were cold. "Genevieve, listen to me. The HLA markers... they don't match. It’s not just that you aren't a donor match."
She took a breath that seemed to suck the oxygen out of the room.
"The DNA test confirms that there is zero percent probability of maternity. Collin is not your biological son."
The words were foreign objects, jagged and nonsensical. I laughed, a brittle, wet sound. "I gave birth to him. I held him. Valentino cut the cord."
"I ran it three times," Sarah whispered, sliding a paper across the desk. The numbers blurred into black static. "I'm so sorry."
The room tilted. I stood up, the chair screeching against the linoleum, and stumbled out before she could touch me again. I needed air. I needed Valentino to fix this error. He would fix it. He was the CEO of Matthews Enterprises; he fixed everything.
I wandered the corridors blindly, my footsteps echoing like gunshots in my ears. I drifted toward the surgical wing, drawn by a magnetic pull to where my husband—my partner of ten years—would be waiting.
Voices drifted from a shadowed alcove near the vending machines. Hushed, venomous tones I recognized instantly.
"...insane to let her do the surgery, Val! If they test the tissue, we’re finished."
Isabela. My sister-in-law. Her voice wasn't the sweet, grieving lilt she used at family dinners. It was sharp, jagged with panic.
I froze, pressing myself against the cold wall.
"Keep your voice down," Valentino snarled. The cruelty in his tone was a stranger to me. "She’s hysterical. She thinks she’s saving him. If I stop her now, she’ll ask questions."
"She’s going to find out, Valentino!" Isabela’s hiss was like steam escaping a valve. "She’s going to find out that Collin is *my* son. That we swapped them."
The floor seemed to dissolve beneath my feet. I clamped a hand over my mouth to stifle the scream clawing up my throat.
"She won't," Valentino said, his voice dropping to a terrifyingly calm register. "She’s too stupidly in love to see what’s right in front of her. She raised your son like a prince, just like we planned."
"And her brat?" Isabela challenged. "What if she goes looking for the one we sent away?"
"Rhys is dead, Isabela," Valentino said flatly. "He died in that foster hole two years ago. Pneumonia. Neglect. It doesn't matter. He’s gone."
My knees gave out. I slid down the wall, the cold tile biting into my skin. Rhys. The name I had wanted to give Collin, but Valentino had insisted on a family name. My baby. My real baby. Dead. While I played house with the son of the woman sleeping with my husband.
The world didn't just break; it evaporated. The love, the memories, the vows—all of it incinerated in the span of three sentences. I stared at my hands, expecting to see blood. I felt gutted, hollowed out, and in the dark cavern where my heart used to be, something cold and sharp began to take shape.
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