
My Husband Used My Money to Keep His Mistress
Chapter 3
Kade was at the hospital, saving lives. Or so the narrative went. I sat alone at our kitchen island, the afternoon light casting long, sterile shadows across the marble countertop. The financial documents Magnus had given me two days ago were locked in my safe, but the numbers still danced behind my eyes. I thought I had reached the bottom of Kade’s betrayal. I was wrong.
The soft click of the front door unlocking broke the silence. I had given Magnus a spare key that morning. When he walked into the kitchen, the ambient temperature in the room seemed to drop. He didn’t wear his usual composed neutrality. His jaw was tight, a muscle feathering beneath the skin, and in his hand, he carried a single, sealed manila envelope.
"The financial fraud was just the architecture, Kate," Magnus said, his voice stripped of its usual smooth cadence. He didn't sit. He stood on the opposite side of the island, placing the envelope between us like a loaded weapon. "I kept digging into the timeline of the trust. To understand why he bought the villa when he did, I had to look at the family's inheritance stipulations. A biological heir secures the principal trust. But a child born to you would have cemented your legal claim to the Robertson estate, making you impossible to quietly discard."
I stared at the envelope. My fingertips went numb. "What is that, Magnus?"
"It’s from a private clinic’s archived database. Unlisted. Kade thought he scrubbed it, but data always leaves a ghost." Magnus’s eyes locked onto mine, dark and unblinking. "Kate, there is no gentle way to deliver this."
He opened the seal and slid a single sheet of paper across the marble. It was a toxicology report, dated five years ago. Two days before I lost my baby.
I looked down at the medical jargon, my eyes catching on two highlighted words. *Misoprostol. Mifepristone.*
"Abortifacients," Magnus said quietly, the word dropping into the quiet kitchen like a stone down a well. "He purchased them under an alias through a shell pharmacy. The blood draw from your emergency room admission showed trace amounts. His uncle Victor had the hospital bury the lab result, but the raw data was backed up to this clinic's server."
The edges of my vision blurred into static. A high-pitched ringing pierced my ears. I remembered the metallic taste in my mouth that morning five years ago. The sudden, violent cramping. The blood on the white bathroom tiles. The way Kade had held me as I sobbed on the floor, stroking my hair, whispering that it was just nature, that my body just wasn't ready.
"He drugged me," I whispered. The words felt like ground glass tearing up my throat. "He killed my baby so I wouldn't get a share of the trust."
Magnus didn’t offer empty platitudes. He didn’t reach across the island to pat my hand. He simply stood there, absorbing the shockwave of my realization, a silent sentinel in the ruins of my life.
"I am going to leave for exactly one hour," Magnus said, his tone thick with a quiet, lethal anger I had never heard from him before. He stepped back from the island. "Lock the door behind me. Do whatever you need to do."
The door clicked shut.
For a long moment, I didn't move. Then, the dam broke. I slid off the barstool, my knees hitting the hardwood floor with a sharp crack that I barely felt. The grief was prehistoric—a hollow, tearing agony that ripped through my chest. For five years, I had hated my own body. I had carried the guilt of a barren woman, pouring my thwarted maternal love into Evie, into Kade, into anyone who would take it.
I crawled toward the bedroom, my breath coming in ragged, ugly gasps. I tore open the bottom drawer of my dresser and pulled out the small cedar box I hadn't opened in years.
Inside lay a grainy, faded ultrasound picture. A tiny gray smudge that had been my entire world. Beside it sat a stack of letters and cards. My shaking hands knocked the pile over, and a heavy, cream-colored envelope spilled out.
It was a birthday card from Evie, dated last year. I opened it, staring at her looping, elegant handwriting.
*Kate, thank you for your endless maternal generosity. You’ve given me so much. You are the mother I never had. Love, Evie.*
My tears stopped.
The hot, suffocating agony in my chest suddenly went cold. Absolute zero. I traced the words *maternal generosity*. She had written this while sleeping with my husband. While bouncing a child on her knee in a villa bought with my money. She had weaponized my deepest, most agonizing wound, wearing my kindness like a trophy.
I stood up. The woman who had collapsed on the kitchen floor was gone.
I walked to my study and pulled a fresh, black leather journal from the drawer. I set it flat on the desk. I grabbed a roll of tape, the ultrasound, the toxicology report, and Evie's card.
With meticulous, unhurried precision, I taped the ultrasound to the first page. Beneath it, the toxicology report. On the facing page, Evie’s card. I smoothed the edges of the tape until they were perfectly flush with the paper. I clicked my pen.
*Exhibit A,* I wrote in sharp, black ink.
I adjusted my watch, the leather strap cool against my wrist. I had an hour before Magnus returned. It was time to build a gallows.
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