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My Husband's Mistress Killed My Baby Novel Cover

My Husband's Mistress Killed My Baby

Wren Calloway gave Sterling everything — her career, her pride, her silence. For three years, she swallowed every lie he fed her about Gemma, his "childhood friend" who somehow always needed saving. When Wren's daughter dies in an accident caused by Sterling's obsession with Gemma, something inside her doesn't break. It recalibrates. She doesn't file for divorce. She doesn't cry. She picks up her phone, opens Instagram Live, and points the camera at the bedroom door where her husband and his mistress are tangled in sheets — broadcasting their betrayal to everyone they've ever known. But the livestream is only the beginning. What follows is a calculated, devastating unraveling — of Sterling's reputation, his fortune, his family name, and every lie Gemma ever told. And when the dust settles and Sterling is on his knees begging, Wren has one final weapon he never saw coming: his own child now calls her Mom. They wanted to destroy her. They just built her a throne.
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Chapter 3

It was Trojan Ultra Thin.

I stood in the guest room doorway, the foil wrapper pinched between my fingers, and my brain did something strange — it went very, very quiet. Not numb. Quiet. Like the moment after a car crash when the world stops spinning and you can suddenly see every detail with horrible clarity.

Sterling always used Durex. Said he hated the way Trojans felt, too thin, too loose, something about the texture. I'd heard that particular complaint so many times over seven years of marriage that it had become a kind of joke between us. Funny how preferences change when the woman does.

I took out my phone and photographed it. The cufflinks too — my anniversary gift, gold and gleaming against the cheap wood of the guest nightstand. My hands were steady. That surprised me. I sent both photos to Harper with three words: *call me now.*

Her FaceTime request came back in under thirty seconds.

I never got to answer it.

"What are you doing in here?"

Sterling filled the doorway behind me. His voice wasn't panicked. It wasn't guilty. It was sharp and cold, the tone he used with contractors who showed up late or assistants who made mistakes.

I turned around. He looked at my hand. At the wrapper.

Something moved across his face — not shame, not fear. Anger. Pure and immediate, like I was the one who'd done something wrong.

"You're going through Gemma's room." He said it like a verdict.

He crossed the space between us in three steps and grabbed the wrapper from my hand. Not gently. His fingers closed around my wrist and twisted as he yanked it away, and I heard something — a dull, muffled pop from somewhere in my wrist joint. Pain shot up my arm, bright and sudden.

I gasped.

Sterling went still. For one second, he looked at my face, then at my wrist, and I thought — I actually thought — he was going to apologize.

He didn't.

He pocketed the wrapper and stepped back, straightening his collar. "Gemma has a private life. She probably had someone over last night. You didn't know because you were asleep." His voice had leveled out again, almost reasonable. "Stop looking for problems, Wren. You've been paranoid for weeks. It's not good for the baby."

He walked out.

I stood there holding my wrist against my chest, my phone buzzing in my other hand with Harper's unanswered call.

---

Back in our bedroom, I sat on the edge of the mattress and watched the skin above my wrist bone turn pink, then red, then begin to swell in a ridge about two inches wide. I flexed my fingers carefully. Nothing broken. Probably.

I unlocked my phone to call Harper back.

Except my phone wasn't on the bed.

I checked the nightstand. The floor. Under the pillow. I pulled back the covers, got down on my knees — slowly, my belly swinging low — and looked under the bed frame. Nothing.

I knew I'd set it down right there. I remembered the exact motion, screen-side up, Harper's name still glowing on the display.

I searched the whole room. Twice.

Then I went downstairs.

Gemma was curled on the living room sofa, legs folded beneath her, wearing one of my cardigans — the soft grey cashmere one I'd bought myself after Lily was born as a new-mother gift. She looked comfortable. At home. She looked like she belonged there more than I did.

She was holding my phone.

When she saw me, she lifted it with a small, apologetic smile. "Oh good, you're up. Mine died — I just borrowed yours for a sec. You don't mind, right?"

The screen was facing me. I could see the chat window open. My conversation with Harper. The photos I'd sent.

Gemma's eyes weren't apologetic at all. They were steady and bright and watching me with the focused attention of someone who has already decided how this scene ends.

She smiled a little wider.

Then she turned her head toward the kitchen, where I could hear Sterling pouring coffee. "Sterling?" Her voice was light, almost musical. "Come look at this."

He appeared in the doorway, mug in hand.

Gemma held up the phone. "Wren's been telling her friend that you're cheating on her. With me." A small pause. "She sent pictures. From my room."

Sterling set the mug down on the bookshelf. Slowly. He walked over and looked at the screen. I watched his jaw tighten, the muscle jumping just below his ear.

He turned to me. "Call Harper. Right now. Tell her you made a mistake."

My wrist was throbbing. The baby shifted, pressing hard against my ribs. I met Sterling's eyes and I thought about the wrapper in his pocket and the cufflinks on the nightstand and the way he'd held Gemma in our kitchen to our wedding song, his hand at the back of her neck, in that exact spot.

"No," I said.

The word came out quieter than I intended. But steady.

Sterling's voice went up like a door blown open by wind. "You're out of your mind. Do you understand that? I work seventy hours a week for this family — for you, for Lily, to keep this house — and you're in there taking pictures and calling me a cheater to your friends?" He was across the room now, and his hand came down flat on the coffee table, hard enough to rattle the coasters. "I have been nothing but patient with you. You've been irrational for months."

Gemma made a sound then — soft, broken, perfectly timed. A little sob that pulled Sterling's attention like a hook through the cheek.

He turned. And just like that, the storm in his face dissolved. He went to her. Sat beside her. Put his arm around her shoulders and pulled her in, and she tucked her face against his neck the way you only do with someone whose smell you already know.

"It's not your fault," he murmured into her hair. Then, without looking at me: "From now on, Gemma takes the room next to the main hall. You move to the attic."

I didn't say anything.

"There's a bed up there. Everything you need. I don't want Lily seeing you like this."

I stood in the center of my own living room — wrist swollen, phone in another woman's hand, my husband's arm around someone who was not me — and I didn't say a single word.

Because at the top of the stairs, Lily was standing on the third step from the bottom, her stuffed rabbit pressed against her chest, her eyes enormous and very, very still.

I don't know how long she'd been there.

I walked to her. I picked her up, all thirty-eight pounds of her, even though my belly made it awkward and my wrist screamed when I shifted her weight to my other arm. She wrapped her legs around me without a word.

The attic stairs were narrow. I took them slowly, one at a time.

The room was small and smelled of dust and old cardboard. A folding cot sat against one wall, a fitted sheet stretched over the thin mattress. A bookshelf with a broken spine held a few forgotten paperbacks and a dead plant. One window, small and square, looked out over the backyard. The oak tree was just visible, the one Lily called her climbing tree.

I set her down on the cot and pulled the blanket over her legs.

"Mama." She looked around with careful, curious eyes. "Are we sleeping here?"

"For a little while."

"Like camping?"

I smoothed her hair back from her forehead. My wrist left a faint red mark against her temple and I shifted my hand so she wouldn't feel the swelling.

"Yeah," I said. "Like camping."

She considered this, then nodded, satisfied, and tucked the rabbit under her chin.

I sat on the edge of the cot beside her and looked at the small square window. The oak tree. The grey morning sky pressing down on everything.

Downstairs, I could hear Gemma laughing at something. Low and easy, like she was already home.

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