
My Husband’s Mistress Tried to Kidnap Our Daughter
My Husband’s Mistress Tried to Kidnap Our Daughter Chapter 1
The microphone stand was slick with my own nervous sweat. I breathed out the final note of the jazz standard, the mournful melody instantly swallowed by the clatter of cheap beer pitchers and the buzzing neon of The Rusty Anchor. Stepping off the sticky, two-foot stage, my only thought was the hospital bill folded in my back pocket.
Then, a heavy hand clamped onto my shoulder, fingers digging brutally into my collarbone.
"Your old man's time is up, songbird," a raspy voice breathed into my ear, smelling of stale tobacco and malice. "We're collecting."
My heart hammered against my ribs. "I just need another week—"
"You don't have another minute."
Suddenly, the stifling air in the dive bar dropped ten degrees. The thug's grip loosened, then vanished entirely. I spun around, rubbing my bruised shoulder, and found myself staring at a man who belonged in a different universe.
Dylan West. I knew the face from the covers of financial magazines—sharp jawline, predatory eyes, and a charcoal suit that cost more than my father's entire defunct company. He didn't raise his voice; he didn't have to. The sheer gravity of his presence commanded the room.
He dropped a cashier's check onto the beer-stained table. "Take it and get out," Dylan commanded, his voice a low, velvet threat. The thug took one look at the zeros and scrambled for the door.
Dylan turned his piercing gaze to me. He slid a crisp manila folder across the damp wood. "Your father's debts are erased. Your mother's heart surgery is fully funded." He stepped closer, smelling of expensive cedar and frost. "In exchange, you marry me. Tonight."
My trembling fingers hovered over the thick paper. "Why me?"
A muscle feathered in his jaw. "Let's just say I have a vested interest in the Martin family."
I pictured my mother's pale, frail face against the hospital pillows. I picked up the pen. The scratch of the ink felt like a death sentence, but I was too desperate to care.
Three weeks later, the blinding flashbulbs of Manhattan paparazzi replaced the dive bar's neon. The Plaza Hotel was a suffocating sea of white tulle and imported orchids. To the world, it was the romance of the century—the billionaire saving the fallen heiress.
Beside me, Dylan played the perfect groom. But as we posed for the cameras, his hand rested on the small of my back, his fingers digging into the heavy silk of my gown. It wasn't an embrace; it was a brand. A reminder of ownership.
When we moved into his penthouse, a gleaming black Steinway grand piano waited in the center of the cavernous living room.
"For your music," he murmured, kissing the crown of my head.
I melted against him, mistaking his gilded cage for a sanctuary. But the bars closed quickly. When I mentioned inviting my old bandmates to see the studio, Dylan's eyes darkened.
"They're a liability now, Clare," he said smoothly, adjusting his platinum cufflinks. "The press will tear them apart, and by extension, you. I'm isolating you for your own protection."
I swallowed the lump in my throat and nodded. I told myself this was what love looked like—fierce, protective, all-consuming.
A month later, the Arctic cold bit at the glass ceiling of our private igloo in Alaska, but inside, the fire roared. The Northern Lights bled neon green and violet across the velvet black sky, washing the room in an ethereal glow.
I sat on the edge of the fur-draped bed, watching Dylan pour two glasses of rare amber whiskey. He handed me a crystal tumbler, his knuckles brushing mine. The contact sent a jolt up my arm.
For a fraction of a second, the calculating billionaire vanished. He looked at me—truly looked at me—and the ice in his eyes thawed. His thumb reached out, gently tracing the line of my jaw. My breath hitched. He leaned in, the heat of his skin radiating against the chill of the room, his gaze dropping to my lips. It was the first time he looked at me with raw, unfiltered desire, devoid of his usual control.
Bzzzt.
The harsh vibration of his phone on the nightstand shattered the quiet.
Dylan froze. His hand hovered inches from my face. Reluctantly, he glanced at the glowing screen. From my angle, I caught a fleeting glimpse of the notification.
Sarah. My half-sister.
Don't forget the plan, the preview text read.
I blinked, my mind struggling to process the words. But I didn't need to understand the text to understand what happened next. As Dylan stared at the screen, the warmth completely drained from his face. The man who had been about to kiss me vanished, replaced by a glacial mask. He withdrew his hand as if I had burned him.
"Dylan?" I whispered, my voice trembling.
He set his whiskey down with a sharp clink, turning his back to me. "I need to take this. Go to sleep, Clare."
He grabbed his coat and walked out into the biting Alaskan night, the heavy door clicking shut behind him. I sat alone under the dancing lights, the whiskey burning my throat, suddenly feeling colder than the ice outside.
My Husband’s Mistress Tried to Kidnap Our Daughter of Contents
New Release Novels

















