
My Husband Tricked Me Into Saving His Mistress
Chapter 2
The morning sun didn’t bring warmth; it brought exposure. I lay in the guest room bed—my prison cell—staring at the ceiling while the phantom ache in my side throbbed in time with my heartbeat. The door clicked open, but I didn't flinch. I knew the cadence of those footsteps. Heavy. Assured. Ownership.
Cyrus walked in, looking immaculate in a charcoal suit, the scent of sandalwood and expensive deception trailing behind him. He didn't ask how I was feeling. He didn't check my bandages. instead, he tossed a thick folder onto the duvet near my legs.
"Sign it," he said. His voice was flat, devoid of the desperate tremor he’d used to beg for my kidney just days ago.
I pushed myself up, ignoring the sharp tear in my abdomen. "What is this?"
"A non-disclosure agreement. Standard procedure for medical privacy," he replied, adjusting his cufflinks—the onyx ones I’d bought him for Christmas. "It ensures you don't go running to the tabloids with wild stories."
"Wild stories?" A laugh clawed its way out of my throat, jagged and hysterical. "Like the fact that you butchered me for your mistress? That our marriage is a fraud?"
Cyrus moved faster than I expected. His hand shot out, fingers clamping around my jaw like a vice, forcing my head back. His eyes were cold, dark pits.
"Watch your tone," he whispered. "Do you remember where I found you, Novah? You were fighting a rat for a half-eaten bagel behind a dumpster in the Bronx. You were filth. I gave you a life. I gave you education, clothes, a roof over your head."
"You bought a pig to slaughter," I spat, my hands gripping his wrist, trying to pry him off.
He squeezed harder, his thumb digging into my cheekbone. "You lived like a princess for eight years. Consider the kidney rent due. You should be grateful you had something of value to pay me back with."
He released me with a shove that sent me falling back against the pillows. Before I could recover, he snatched my phone from the nightstand.
"You stay here until you're healed. No calls. No internet. Don't test me, Novah. You have no money, no family, and no identity outside of what I allow you to have."
The door slammed shut, the lock clicking into place with a finality that echoed in my bones.
***
Two days later, the lock turned again. I sat up, expecting Cyrus, but the figure in the doorway made my blood run cold.
Laylah Campbell drifted into the room like a poisonous fog. She wore white—an innocent, angelic white sundress that contrasted sharply with the malice in her eyes. She looked vibrant, glowing with the health I had carved out of my own body to give her.
"It’s smaller than I imagined," she mused, looking around the guest room. "But then again, you’re used to small spaces, aren't you?"
"Get out," I said, my voice raspy.
"Is that any way to speak to the woman carrying a piece of you?" She smiled, walking to the bedside. She picked up a glass of hot tea the housekeeper had left earlier. "I just wanted to say thank you. Cyrus told me you were… hesitant. But eventually compliant."
"I wasn't compliant. I was tricked."
Laylah laughed, a tinkling sound that grated on my nerves. "Oh, honey. We’ve been watching you for years. The security cameras in the penthouse? Cyrus and I used to watch the feeds together. We’d laugh at your attempts to dress like high society. You always looked like a child playing dress-up in her mother’s clothes. It was pathetic, really. That little crush you had on him? It was our favorite form of entertainment."
My stomach churned. Every private moment, every look of adoration I’d given Cyrus—they had shared it. mocked it.
"You're nothing," she whispered, leaning in close. "Just spare parts. A biological vending machine."
She tilted her hand. The steaming tea splashed directly onto my lap, soaking through the thin sheets and scalding the fresh incision on my side.
I screamed, scrambling back as the heat seared my skin.
"Oops," Laylah said, her face a mask of faux shock as the housekeeper burst into the room. "Oh my god! She’s so clumsy! She knocked it right out of my hand!"
***
Weeks blurred into a gray haze of pain and isolation until Cyrus decided I was well enough to be useful again. Not as a donor, but as a prop.
"The Gala," he announced, throwing a dress onto the bed. It was backless, designed to show off skin, but high-waisted enough to hide the scar. "We have appearances to maintain. People are asking where my 'wife' is."
The ballroom was a kaleidoscope of diamonds and hypocrisy. I stood by Cyrus’s side, a mannequin in emerald silk, while he accepted congratulations on his "recovery." Laylah was there, of course, clinging to his other arm, disguised as a supportive friend.
"You look tense, darling," Laylah murmured, brushing past me. "Relax. Have a drink."
A waiter materialized instantly, stumbling as he passed. Red wine cascaded down the front of my dress. The cold liquid soaked through to my skin, looking disturbingly like blood.
"Oh, how dreadful," Laylah said, her voice dripping with insincere pity. "Go to the VIP changing room. I’ll send someone with a towel."
Humiliated, I kept my head down and hurried to the back. The changing room was quiet, dim, and smelled of lavender. I grabbed a towel, dabbing frantically at the stain, my hands shaking.
The door opened. It wasn't a maid.
A man I recognized vaguely—one of Cyrus’s sleazier investors—stepped inside, locking the door behind him. He was sweating, his eyes glassy.
"Cyrus said you needed some… comfort," he slurred, loosening his tie.
"Get out," I warned, backing up until my spine hit the vanity.
"Don't be shy. Laylah said you were looking for a good time." He lunged.
Panic, primal and sharp, surged through me. I grabbed a heavy glass vase from the vanity and swung it. It connected with his shoulder with a dull thud. He grunted, stumbling back, giving me just enough space to scramble for the door.
As I burst into the hallway, the world tilted. My vision swam. The heat in my body wasn't just fear—it was chemical. Laylah. The drink she’d insisted I take before the spill.
I stumbled toward the exit, the lights of the gala smearing into streaks of neon. I was drugged, alone, and hunted. And for the first time, I realized that escaping the penthouse wasn't enough. I had to survive the night.
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