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My Husband’s Mistress Is Carrying Quadruplets Novel Cover

My Husband’s Mistress Is Carrying Quadruplets

The fluorescent lights in the lab hum at a frequency that most people can't hear, but I've worked here long enough that the sound lives in my bones. I adjust the microscope stage, my fingers moving with the kind of precision that comes from five years of analyzing genetic material down to the nucleotide. The junior analyst—Marcus, fresh out of grad school—hovers at my elbow, watching me correct his sample prep with the nervous energy of someone who knows they've made a mistake but doesn't yet understand how costly mistakes can be in this field. "See this?" I tap the screen where his gel electrophoresis shows smearing. "You didn't let the samples equilibrate to room temperature. The proteins degraded." He nods, scribbling notes, and I feel the familiar satisfaction of catching an error before it becomes a problem. Control. Precision. These are the pillars of my work, the things that make me one of the most trusted DNA analysts in Seattle. My supervisor, Dr.
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Chapter 4

Harrison starts the campaign on a Tuesday morning, slamming his coffee mug on the counter hard enough that I flinch—a genuine reaction I don't have to fake.

"This is exactly what I'm talking about, Elise. You're never present. Always at that damn lab."

I blink at him, confused, because we were discussing grocery lists. "I don't understand—"

"Of course you don't." He runs his hand through his hair, the gesture practiced. "We haven't been happy in years. You know it. I know it."

My phone is recording in my pocket, the app Robert helped me install capturing every word. I let my voice waver. "Harrison, where is this coming from?"

"I need space. Time to think about what I really want." He won't meet my eyes. "Maybe we rushed into this. Maybe we want different things now."

I watch him perform, this man I thought I knew, and feel nothing but clinical interest. He's following a script—probably one Marigold fed him, or maybe one he workshopped with Leyla between the silk sheets I'm still paying for.

"Is there someone else?" I ask, making my voice small.

His pause is a fraction too long. "No. This is about us. About me figuring out who I am."

Liar. But I let tears well up, let my shoulders shake. "I love you. We can work on this. Counseling, maybe—"

"I don't think counseling can fix this." He's already moving toward the door, briefcase in hand. "I'll stay at a hotel for a while. Give us both space."

The penthouse in Belltown, he means. The one that costs more per month than most people's mortgages.

I wait until his car pulls out of the driveway before I stop the recording and send it to my encrypted cloud. Evidence file number forty-seven.

---

Three days later, I call him. My voice is steady now, businesslike. "We need to talk. About the logistics."

We meet at a neutral coffee shop, and I arrive with a leather folder containing documents my attorney spent two weeks perfecting. Harrison looks tired, guilty, exactly how a man should look when he's abandoning his wife.

"I've been thinking," I say, sliding the folder across the table. "About what you said. About needing space, needing to figure out who you are."

He nods, wary.

"And about the Aurora project. My father mentioned it again yesterday. They're down to final candidates." I pause, letting him lean forward. "You're on the shortlist, Harrison. But the conflict-of-interest issue is real. They won't bend on it."

His jaw tightens. "So what are you saying?"

"I'm saying maybe we approach this strategically." I open the folder, revealing the divorce settlement. "A legal separation. Clean, quick, uncontested. You get the project, the bonus—seven figures minimum, Harrison. And after a year, when the contract is secured and the money is in the bank, we can revisit. Remarry, if that's what we both want."

I watch him process this, watch greed war with caution. "You'd do that?"

"I'd do that for us. For our future." The lies taste like nothing now. "This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. We'd be set for life. Real wealth, not just comfortable."

He picks up the settlement, flipping through pages. My attorney buried the Criminal Conduct Forfeiture clause on page seventeen, in dense legal language that looks like standard boilerplate. It states that any assets acquired through illegal means are forfeit and revert entirely to the non-offending spouse.

Harrison skims it, his eyes glazing over the way they always do with fine print. He's already counting his millions.

"This seems fair," he says finally. "Equitable split of current assets, no alimony either way."

"Exactly. Clean and simple." I pull out a pen. "My attorney can file tomorrow if you're ready."

He signs without reading it again. His signature is bold, confident, the signature of a man who thinks he's won.

---

The family dinner happens the following Sunday at the Myers' estate in Laurelhurst. Harrison's mother, Patricia, has set the table with her wedding china, and his father, Richard, pours scotch like he's celebrating something.

Harrison clears his throat. "I have some news. Big news."

I sit beside him, playing the supportive almost-ex-wife, my face carefully neutral.

"I've been selected as a finalist for the Aurora Redevelopment project. It's a massive downtown initiative—mixed-use, high-rise, the whole corridor from Pike to Pine. The project lead position comes with a seven-figure bonus, plus equity stakes."

Patricia gasps. Richard's eyes sharpen with interest.

"The thing is," Harrison continues, "they need capital buy-in from the lead director. A show of commitment. About two million."

The room goes quiet. I can see the calculations happening on every face.

"That's a significant sum," Richard says carefully.

I lean forward, my voice gentle. "The returns are projected at fifteen to twenty percent annually once the development is complete. My father's firm has the market analysis. It's essentially guaranteed." I let that word hang in the air. "Of course, I understand if it's too much risk—"

"No," Patricia interrupts, glancing at her husband. "No, this is exactly the kind of opportunity we've been waiting for. Richard, we could liquidate the Mercer Island property. It's been sitting empty since your mother passed."

Harrison's brother, James, leans in. "What about investor shares? If we contribute capital, do we get equity?"

"Of course," Harrison says smoothly. "Family first. I'm thinking proportional shares based on contribution."

I watch them take the bait, these people who never liked me, who always thought Harrison married beneath him. They're already dividing money that doesn't exist, already imagining themselves as real estate moguls.

Richard raises his glass. "To the Aurora project. To family."

We all drink, and I taste victory beneath the expensive scotch.

By the end of the evening, they've committed $1.8 million between them—Richard and Patricia's investment property, James's stock portfolio, Harrison's sister's inheritance from their grandmother. All of it liquidated, all of it transferred to Harrison's account.

The account Robert is monitoring. The account that will become evidence when the FBI comes calling.

I kiss Harrison's cheek when we leave, playing my part perfectly. "I'm so proud of you," I whisper.

And I am. Proud of how thoroughly I've destroyed him, one calculated move at a time.

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