
My Husband's Mistress Killed My Baby
Chapter 2
I woke to the sound of Lily's laughter drifting up from the kitchen below. For a moment, in that hazy space between sleep and consciousness, I smiled. My daughter's joy was always the brightest part of any morning.
But as I padded downstairs, my hand trailing along the banister for support, something felt off. The laughter was too distant, too... directed away from me.
"Good morning," I said as I entered the kitchen, expecting to see Lily at her usual spot at the breakfast table.
Instead, I found her perched on a stool next to Gemma, who was standing at my stove, flipping pancakes with practiced ease. Lily's face was bright with excitement as she pointed to the perfectly golden circles sizzling in my cast-iron pan.
"Aunt Gemma makes them with chocolate chips!" Lily announced, not even turning to look at me. "And she knows how to make Mickey Mouse shapes!"
"Oh, you're up," Gemma said, glancing over her shoulder with a sweet smile that didn't quite reach her eyes. "You slept in pretty late. I already fed Lily breakfast. I hope you don't mind—I found some eggs in the fridge and made her scrambled eggs with cheese, just how she likes them."
I stared at her, my brain struggling to process the casual way she'd inserted herself into my morning routine. "That's... that's fine," I managed, though my voice sounded hollow even to my own ears.
I moved toward my usual chair at the kitchen table, but stopped short. Gemma's designer purse sat in my seat, along with her phone and a half-empty coffee mug. The only available chair was the one beside it—the guest chair that Sterling rarely used.
As I lowered myself carefully into the unfamiliar seat, my belly pressing against the table's edge, I reached for the plate of toast in the center. My fingers had barely touched the ceramic when Gemma's voice stopped me.
"Oh, wait—" She turned from the stove, spatula in hand, her expression apologetic but firm. "That's actually for Sterling. I made it with that imported fig jam he loves—you know how particular he is about brands. There's some leftover Chinese takeout in the fridge if you want to heat it up?"
I pulled my hand back as if the toast had burned me. In my own kitchen, I was being offered leftovers while this woman prepared fresh food for my husband.
Sterling chose that moment to appear, dressed in his navy suit, already checking his phone. He kissed Lily's forehead, accepted the plate of toast from Gemma with a murmured "thanks," and finally looked at me.
"Gemma was up crying half the night because of what happened yesterday," he said, his tone carrying a subtle reproach. "You could try to be a little more welcoming. She's our guest."
I opened my mouth to respond—to say that this was my kitchen, my daughter, my morning routine—but Lily was watching, her young face already sensing tension she couldn't understand. I swallowed the words like broken glass.
"Of course," I whispered.
By noon, I was determined to reclaim some semblance of control. Sterling's business partners were coming for lunch—an important meeting that could secure a major contract. I'd spent three hours in the kitchen, preparing a spread of Southern comfort food: buttermilk fried chicken, creamy mac and cheese, a fresh cucumber and tomato salad with herbs from my garden.
Six people gathered around our dining room table: Sterling, myself, Gemma, and three business associates including a sharp-eyed woman named Dana who kept glancing between Sterling and me with barely concealed curiosity.
I served the meal with pride, watching as everyone filled their plates. The chicken was golden and crispy, the mac and cheese bubbling with the perfect blend of sharp cheddar and gruyere. I'd even made my grandmother's buttermilk biscuits from scratch.
Gemma took a delicate bite of the chicken, chewed slowly, then suddenly pressed her napkin to her mouth. Not discreetly—dramatically, making sure everyone at the table noticed as she spit the food into her napkin.
"Oh my God," she gasped, her hand flying to her throat. "This is so salty! Did you use a whole container of salt? I'm so sorry, everyone, but I literally can't swallow this."
The table fell silent. I felt heat creep up my neck as six pairs of eyes turned to me. Gemma's eyes were already filling with tears as she looked at Sterling.
"I'm not trying to be difficult," she said, her voice breaking slightly. "You know how sensitive my stomach has been lately, Sterling. Ever since the stress with my ex... I just can't handle really salty food right now."
Sterling set down his fork with deliberate precision and pushed his plate away. The sound of ceramic scraping against wood seemed to echo in the sudden silence.
"From now on, when Gemma's here, she'll handle the cooking," he said, his voice calm but cutting. "Wren, you've been... distracted lately. Everything you touch seems to turn out wrong."
I stared at him, my mouth dry as cotton. He was humiliating me in front of his business associates, dismissing my cooking—cooking that had been perfectly seasoned, that I'd tasted multiple times while preparing.
Dana shifted uncomfortably in her seat, her gaze dropping to her plate. The other partners followed suit, suddenly fascinated by their untouched food.
Without a word, I began collecting the serving dishes. My hands shook slightly as I stacked the plates, the weight of my belly making it difficult to lean over the table. In the kitchen, I closed the door behind me and turned on the hot water tap, letting steam fog the window above the sink.
In the distorted reflection of the faucet's chrome surface, I caught sight of myself: swollen and tired, wearing a faded maternity shirt that had seen better days. Meanwhile, Gemma sat in my dining room, wearing one of my silk blouses—the burgundy one that used to be my favorite—looking effortlessly put-together as she accepted sympathy from my husband.
The dinner cleanup took until nearly eleven. Sterling and Gemma had retreated to the living room to watch a movie while I scrubbed pots and loaded the dishwasher. My lower back screamed in protest as I bent over the sink, my pregnant belly making every movement awkward and painful.
As I dried the last plate, Sterling appeared in the doorway. He moved past me to the wine refrigerator, selecting a bottle of the expensive Bordeaux we'd been saving for a special occasion.
"You embarrassed me today," he said quietly, not looking at me as he worked the corkscrew. "Gemma's stomach issues are serious. She's been dealing with stress-related gastritis ever since her divorce proceedings started. You should have known better than to oversalt everything."
He paused, finally meeting my eyes. "Are you doing this on purpose, or are you really this oblivious?"
The words hit me like a physical blow. I stood there, dish towel in my hands, watching my husband take wine to another woman while questioning my basic competence.
After he left, I remained frozen by the sink. Something warm was trickling down my inner thigh. I looked down, panic fluttering in my chest. Was it my water breaking? Or just another humiliating symptom of late pregnancy that my body couldn't control anymore?
I didn't know. I was too exhausted, too emotionally drained to tell the difference.
I didn't tell Sterling. Instead, I cleaned myself up in the downstairs powder room and climbed the stairs alone, each step a monumental effort.
At two in the morning, I woke to the sound of laughter from the living room below. Gemma's bright giggle mixed with Sterling's low murmur, intimate and familiar. I pulled my pillow over my head, but their voices seemed to seep through the fabric, through the floorboards, through my skin.
When morning came, I waited until I heard Sterling's car pull out of the driveway before making my way to the guest room. I needed my robe back—the burgundy silk one that Gemma had been wearing like it belonged to her.
The door was slightly ajar. I pushed it open, expecting to find Gemma still asleep.
The room was empty, but the bed was unmade. And there, on the nightstand beside the rumpled sheets, sat a pair of Sterling's gold cufflinks—the ones I'd given him for our first anniversary. Next to them lay a torn condom wrapper, the foil catching the morning light like an accusation.
I hadn't had sex with Sterling in six months.
My knees nearly buckled as I reached for the nightstand, my fingers closing around the empty wrapper. The evidence was undeniable, damning, and somehow still not quite real.
In my own house, in the room where I'd welcomed his sister, my husband had been fucking another woman.
And I was still expected to make them breakfast.
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