
My Husband’s Mistress Stole My Baby and My Throne
Chapter 4
The world tilted sideways as I collapsed to my knees, blood pooling beneath me on the cold concrete floor. Valentino's face blurred above mine, his mouth opening and closing like a fish gasping for air. Miley's triumphant smile was the last thing I saw before darkness swallowed me whole.
I drifted in and out of consciousness, aware of voices arguing nearby.
"She's losing the baby!"
"It's just stress—"
"Get out of my way!"
A familiar scent cut through the fog—Cooper's cologne, subtle and reassuring. Strong arms lifted me, cradling me against a broad chest. Through half-lidded eyes, I saw him disable the security camera with a quick tap on his phone.
"System error," he muttered, his voice tight with controlled fury. "Just long enough."
The guard at the door never saw him coming. One precise strike to the temple, and the man crumpled silently to the floor.
"Hold on, Savanna," Cooper whispered, his breath warm against my ear as he carried me through a service corridor. "Just hold on."
The cold night air hit my face as we emerged from the building. I felt the soft leather of a car seat beneath me, heard the engine roar to life.
"Where are we going?" I managed to ask, my voice barely audible.
"Somewhere safe," Cooper replied, his knuckles white on the steering wheel. "Dr. Cross is waiting."
The drive passed in a haze of pain and fading consciousness. By the time we reached the clinic—a nondescript building with no signage—I was beyond caring about secrecy or protocol.
Dr. Helena Cross met us at the door, her silver hair pulled back in a severe bun, her eyes sharp with professional concern.
"Get her into Exam Room 1," she instructed her assistant. "Now."
The examination table was cold beneath me. Dr. Cross's hands were gentle but efficient as she checked my vitals, drew blood, ordered an ultrasound.
"I'm sorry, Savanna," she said finally, her voice soft but direct. "You're losing them both."
Both. The twins. My babies.
Something inside me shattered into a thousand pieces.
---
I woke to sterile white walls and the steady beep of monitors. Cooper sat beside my bed, his head bowed, hands clasped so tightly his knuckles were white.
"The twins," I whispered.
Dr. Cross entered, checking my chart with practiced efficiency. "The procedure went as well as could be expected. You're stable now."
"But they're gone."
"Yes." No false sympathy, no platitudes. Just truth.
A cold, hollow void opened inside me—deeper than grief, darker than pain. I stared at the ceiling, tears drying on my cheeks before they could fall.
"I should have moved faster," Cooper said, his voice rough with emotion. "I knew something was wrong when you didn't check in last night."
"You came when it mattered," I replied, my fingers finding the scar on my shoulder—the permanent reminder of what I'd sacrificed for Valentino in Alaska.
Cooper's eyes met mine, and I saw the question there: What now?
I touched my empty stomach, then my scarred shoulder. The grief inside me crystallized into something hard and sharp—diamond-bright rage.
"No more defense," I said, my voice steady despite the storm within. "We attack."
---
Cooper's safe house was a modest cabin nestled among towering pines, miles from Seattle's skyline. The isolation suited my purpose.
With trembling fingers, I opened my father's locket and removed the Tiger Tally. The micro-SD card slid into my laptop's reader with a satisfying click.
"Ghost access confirmed," the screen read.
I navigated through the encrypted network my father had built—a shadow infrastructure within Aegis Defense that even Valentino didn't know existed. Every camera, every sensor, every smart device in his world was now mine to command.
"He thinks he's taken everything from me," I murmured, fingers flying across the keyboard.
Cooper watched from the doorway, his expression grim but resolute.
"What are you doing?" he asked.
"Not shutting it down," I replied, a cold smile forming on my lips. "I'm haunting it."
First, the penthouse sound system. I programmed it to play the distinctive howl of arctic winds—a sound only Valentino and I remembered from Alaska. Random intervals, impossible to predict or silence.
Next, the temperature controls in his office. A gradual drop, just enough to make him uncomfortable without triggering a system alert.
"Will it work?" Cooper asked.
I thought of Valentino's growing paranoia, his dependence on sleeping pills since our return from Alaska.
"He'll start hearing things," I said softly. "Seeing things. The wind will follow him everywhere."
As I typed the final commands, I imagined Valentino waking in the night, cold and disoriented, listening to the ghostly howl of arctic winds through his state-of-the-art sound system.
Sleep would become elusive. Pills would become necessary.
And I would be there—a ghost in his machine—watching him unravel thread by thread.
The tiger had awakened. And it was just beginning to roar.
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