
My Husband Swapped Our Baby with His Mistress’s Son
Chapter 3
The crystal chandeliers of the Pierre Hotel ballroom didn’t sparkle; they glared. Beneath them, Manhattan’s elite moved like sharks in a tank of champagne and silk, their laughter sharp enough to draw blood. I stood by a pillar, clutching a glass of sparkling water I had no intention of drinking, watching my husband charm a senator while his mistress watched me.
Isabela wore blood-red satin, a deliberate contrast to my pale silver gown. She glided through the crowd, her hand lingering on Valentino’s arm a fraction too long, a territorial mark invisible to everyone but me. I felt the weight of the secret I carried—the knowledge of Rhys’s cold, lonely death—pressing against my ribs like an iron band.
"You look tired, Genevieve," Isabela purred, materializing at my elbow. Her perfume was heavy, jasmine rotting in the heat. "Perhaps the stress of the donor incompatibility is getting to you?"
"I’m perfectly fine, Isabela," I said, my voice steady despite the bile rising in my throat. "Just admiring the view."
"It is a beautiful night." She smirked, her eyes darting to my clutch. She stumbled slightly, bracing herself against me, her fingers brushing the clasp of my bag. "Oh! Clumsy me. Too much vintage Krug."
She pulled away before I could recoil. Moments later, a piercing cry cut through the ambient hum of the string quartet.
"My necklace!" Isabela’s hands flew to her bare throat. "The Emerald Tear! It’s gone!"
The room went dead silent. The Emerald Tear was a Matthews family heirloom, worth more than the building we were standing in.
Valentino was at her side instantly, his face a mask of practiced concern. "Are you sure, Bella? check the floor."
"I had it a moment ago!" Isabela sobbed, a performance worthy of Broadway. Her gaze snapped to me, wide and accusing. "I... I only bumped into Genevieve."
The accusation hung in the air, toxic and heavy. The cameras flashed, a strobe light of impending disaster.
"Don't be ridiculous," I said, the words tasting like ash. "I haven't touched you."
Valentino turned to me. There was no warmth in his eyes, only the cold calculation of a man protecting his assets. "Genevieve. Give me your bag."
My heart hammered against my sternum. "Excuse me?"
"If you didn't take it, you have nothing to fear," he said, his voice carrying to the back of the room. "Security!"
Two burly men in dark suits stepped forward. The humiliation was a physical blow, a slap across the face that left my skin burning. "Valentino, this is insane. I am your wife."
"And that is my family's legacy," he snapped. He snatched the silver clutch from my hands and upended it over a cocktail table.
Lipstick, a compact, my phone... and a heavy, green coil of emeralds and diamonds clattered onto the glass surface.
A collective gasp sucked the oxygen out of the room. The flashes went wild, blinding me. I stared at the necklace, my mind racing. She must have slipped it in when she stumbled. It was a setup so crude, so obvious, yet in this shark tank, truth didn't matter. Only optics did.
Valentino looked at me with a sneer that shattered the last fragile remnant of the love I had once borne him. "You're sick, Genevieve," he hissed, loud enough for the press to hear. "Stealing from family? Because you couldn't be the donor? Is this how you beg for attention?"
I didn't cry. Tears were for people who still had hope. I straightened my spine, feeling the steel reinforce my bones. I looked him dead in the eye. "Remember this moment, Valentino."
He turned his back on me to comfort the weeping, triumphant Isabela.
***
The next morning, the sunlight in Valentino's corner office was aggressive, illuminating the dust motes dancing over his mahogany desk. He didn't look up from his tablet when I walked in. The headlines were likely already dissecting my "mental breakdown."
I didn't sit. I walked to the edge of his desk and slammed a thick manila envelope onto the polished wood. The sound was like a gunshot.
Valentino finally looked up, an amused quirk at the corner of his mouth. "More drama, Genevieve? I have a board meeting in ten minutes."
"Divorce papers," I said, my voice devoid of tremor. "Irreconcilable differences. I want nothing but my freedom."
He laughed—a rich, baritone sound that used to make my stomach flutter. Now, it just made me want to retch. He picked up the document, scanning the header, and then, with deliberate slowness, tore the papers in half. Then in quarters.
He let the confetti rain down onto the desk.
"You don't get to walk away, Gen," he said, leaning back in his leather chair, the picture of arrogance. "You’re my wife. You stay until I say we’re done. Remember my vow? 'If I ever hurt you, I'd let you go'?"
He stood up, looming over the desk, his shadow stretching over me. "I lied. You belong to me. Now go home, take a Xanax, and stop embarrassing this family. Or I’ll have you committed."
I looked at the shredded paper, then at the man who had murdered my son and buried my heart. He thought he had won. He thought I was trapped.
He had no idea that he had just signed his own death warrant.
"As you wish, Valentino," I whispered, turning on my heel. "As you wish."
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