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My Husband Took My Blood for His Mistress’s Baby Novel Cover

My Husband Took My Blood for His Mistress’s Baby

I push through the front door of our penthouse at seven-thirty, my heels clicking against the marble foyer. The familiar weight of my purse strap cuts into my shoulder. Another charity luncheon. Another afternoon of smiling until my cheeks ached while Manhattan socialites whispered about my empty womb. The living room glows with warm lamplight. Savanna Morris sprawls across our white leather sofa like she owns it. Her silk robe — cream-colored, expensive — falls open at the thigh. Her bare feet rest on the glass coffee table, toes painted cherry red. She flips through a pregnancy magazine, the glossy pages catching the light. "How to Prepare Your Nursery for Baby's Arrival," she reads aloud, voice dripping honey.
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Chapter 3

I wake up to silence. No flowers on the bedside table. No cards. No husband sleeping in the chair beside me. Just white walls and the steady beep of machines.

The nurse is young. Maybe twenty-five. She checks my IV with gentle hands. "How are you feeling, Mrs. Cunningham?"

"Tired." My voice sounds like gravel.

"Your driver brought you in. Marcus, I think? Sweet man. He stayed until you were stable." She adjusts my blanket. "Your husband... he called to check on you this morning."

Called. Didn't come. Called.

"Thank you," I whisper.

Marcus appears in the doorway an hour later. His weathered face is creased with worry. He's holding a small bouquet of daisies from the hospital gift shop.

"Mrs. Peterson." He uses my maiden name. Always has. "How are you holding up?"

I can't speak. He sets the flowers on the table and squeezes my hand. His palm is warm and calloused. Real.

"You take care of yourself," he says quietly. "You hear me?"

I nod. He leaves. The daisies smell like summer.

Two days later, I'm walking toward the elevator in my discharge clothes. The hallway stretches ahead like a tunnel. My legs still shake. The IV site on my arm throbs with each heartbeat.

That's when I see it. Room 412. The door is half-open.

Vance sits on the edge of Savanna's bed. She's propped up against white pillows, her hair brushed to silk. He holds a bowl of soup in one hand. With the other, he guides a spoon to her lips.

"Too hot?" His voice is soft. Tender. I've never heard him use that tone.

Savanna shakes her head. Smiles. Her hand rests on the curve of her belly. "It's perfect."

He sets down the bowl and adjusts her pillows. Fluffs them. Smooths the blanket over her legs. "Better?"

"Much." She leans into his touch. "You take such good care of me."

He kisses her forehead. Lingers there. "Always will."

I stand frozen in the hallway. Watching. The scene is so intimate. So careful. So full of love.

And that's when it hits me. The memory I've buried for seven years. The one that's been clawing at the edges of my mind since I woke up.

I was twenty-four. Two years married. Pregnant for the first time.

The baby was the size of a plum. I'd seen the ultrasound. Heard the heartbeat. Fast and strong like a hummingbird's wings. I carried the sonogram picture in my wallet. Showed it to Mrs. Chen. To Marcus. To anyone who would listen.

Vance was traveling for work. Again. I was driving to meet him for dinner when the truck ran the red light. I remember the impact. The way my body slammed forward. The wetness between my legs.

The ambulance ride was a blur of sirens and pain. I called Vance from the stretcher. My phone slick with blood. It rang four times before he picked up.

"What is it, Brynn? I'm busy."

In the background, I heard laughter. High and bright. A woman's voice. Savanna's voice, though I didn't know her name then.

"Vance," I sobbed into the phone. "I'm bleeding. The baby—"

"Jesus, Brynn." His voice was sharp with irritation. "Can't you handle anything by yourself?"

More laughter. The sound of sheets rustling. He was shirtless on a video call. I could hear it in his voice.

"She's always making everything about herself," he said to someone else. Not to me. About me.

The line went dead.

I lost the baby at 3:47 AM. Alone. No one holding my hand. No one counting contractions. Just me and a tired resident who kept checking his watch.

Vance showed up the next afternoon with coffee shop flowers. Wilted carnations in plastic wrap.

"These things happen," he said, not quite meeting my eyes. "Probably for the best. We're not ready anyway."

He stayed twenty minutes. Left for a dinner reservation.

I never got pregnant again.

Now I watch him spoon soup to Savanna's lips. Watch him smooth her hair. Watch him cradle her belly like it holds the most precious thing in the world.

The last ember in my chest dies. Not dramatically. Not with tears or screaming. It just... goes out. Like a candle in a sealed room running out of oxygen.

Quiet. Final. Complete.

I turn away from the door. Walk to the elevator. Press the button. The doors open with a soft ding.

As they close, I hear Savanna's laugh. Light and happy. The sound of a woman who is loved.

I ride down in silence. The numbers count backward. Twelve. Eleven. Ten.

By the time I reach the ground floor, I know exactly what I'm going to do.

The debt is paid. All of it. Every last drop.

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