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My Husband’s Mistress Was Carrying His Rival’s Child Novel Cover

My Husband’s Mistress Was Carrying His Rival’s Child

The crystal chandeliers of the Waldorf Astoria were still burned into my retinas when the harsh, fluorescent lights of New York Presbyterian’s VIP wing took over. The transition was violent—one second Maddox was standing beside me in a bespoke tuxedo, bidding on a Chagall at the silent auction, and the next, he was a crumpled heap of velvet and bone on the marble floor. Now, the steady, agonizing beep of the heart monitor was the only sound in the sterile suite. Dr. Evans stood at the foot of the bed, his face a mask of practiced clinical empathy. "End-stage renal failure," he said, the words dropping into the room like lead weights. "His kidneys are shutting down. Without a transplant, Maddox doesn't have much time." I stopped breathing. The air in the room suddenly felt too thin, too cold. I looked down at my husband of eight years.
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Chapter 1

The crystal chandeliers of the Waldorf Astoria were still burned into my retinas when the harsh, fluorescent lights of New York Presbyterian’s VIP wing took over. The transition was violent—one second Maddox was standing beside me in a bespoke tuxedo, bidding on a Chagall at the silent auction, and the next, he was a crumpled heap of velvet and bone on the marble floor.

Now, the steady, agonizing beep of the heart monitor was the only sound in the sterile suite.

Dr. Evans stood at the foot of the bed, his face a mask of practiced clinical empathy. "End-stage renal failure," he said, the words dropping into the room like lead weights. "His kidneys are shutting down. Without a transplant, Maddox doesn't have much time."

I stopped breathing. The air in the room suddenly felt too thin, too cold. I looked down at my husband of eight years. Maddox’s skin, usually flushed with the vibrant, arrogant heat of a man who owned the world, was a terrifying, ashen gray. His hand lay limp in mine, the fingers feeling like crushed ice.

From the corner of the room, a sharp, dismissive scoff cut through the heavy silence.

Ainsley Wright, Maddox’s mother, stood rigidly by the window. She adjusted her vintage Chanel pearls, her eyes raking over me with the same disdain she had harbored since the day Maddox proposed. "Well," Ainsley clipped, her voice echoing off the linoleum. "At least that substantial trust fund of yours came with compatible organs. We just received the blood work. You're a perfect match. It seems you're finally being useful to this family, Lydia."

I didn't even flinch at the venom. I was entirely immune to Ainsley’s cruelty, my entire universe narrowed down to the rising and falling of Maddox’s chest. I twisted my platinum wedding band—a frantic, nervous habit—before dropping to my knees beside his bed.

I gripped his icy fingers, pressing them hard against my lips. The heat behind my eyes spilled over, hot tears tracking down my cheeks and dripping onto his knuckles.

"I'll do it," I breathed, my voice trembling with a desperate, suffocating devotion. I looked up into Maddox’s half-open eyes, needing him to see the absolute totality of my love. "I’d give you both of them if I could. I would die for you, Maddox. You know that, right? Whatever it takes. You're going to be fine."

Maddox looked down at me. His thumb twitched, weakly brushing against my tear-stained cheek. "I know, Lyds," he whispered, his voice raspy. "I know you would."

***

A week later, the suffocating terror of the hospital was temporarily masked by the scent of truffle risotto and expensive lies.

Briella Shaw, my best friend since boarding school, had insisted on hosting a private "Good Luck" dinner at her Upper East Side penthouse. The ambient lighting was low and amber, casting warm, deceitful shadows across the mahogany dining table.

"To Maddox," Briella said, raising a glass of vintage Barolo. Her voice dripped with a sugary sweetness, her manicured fingers delicately twirling a lock of her blonde hair. "And to my brave, beautiful Lydia. The ultimate lifesaver."

I smiled, leaning into Maddox’s side. He was sitting upright tonight, though he still smelled faintly of the metallic tang of illness beneath his signature cedarwood cologne.

"Thank you, Brie," I said, my chest aching with genuine gratitude. I didn't know how I would have survived the last seven days without her constant texts and comforting hugs.

Briella reached into her designer handbag and slid a sleek velvet box across the table. "A good luck charm. For the surgery next week."

Maddox flipped the lid open. Inside sat a heavy, stainless steel Patek Philippe timepiece. It was breathtakingly expensive. The dim light caught the polished metal as Maddox lifted it from the velvet, turning it over to inspect the back.

I leaned in closer, my shoulder pressing against his. Engraved into the steel in elegant, sweeping script were two sentences:

*For the time we’ve earned. The wait is almost over. — B*

It was an odd phrasing. Heavy. Intimate.

I glanced up, and in that fraction of a second, the world shifted on its axis. Maddox was looking at Briella. It wasn't a look of casual gratitude. His eyes were dark, burning with a silent, conspiratorial heat. Briella met his gaze, her lips parting slightly, a faint flush creeping up her neck. It was a current of raw electricity, a tug-of-war of hidden meanings that completely bypassed me.

My stomach tightened. A cold, sharp spike of intuition pierced through the warmth of the wine. My fingers instinctively went to my wedding ring, twisting the platinum band until it bit into my skin.

*Stop it,* I scolded myself, shoving the sudden nausea down. *You're being paranoid. He's dying. She's just being supportive. It means waiting for the surgery to be over.*

"It's beautiful, Brie," I said, forcing my voice to remain steady, though it felt thick in my throat. "Thank you for being here for us. For everything."

"Oh, honey," Briella coosed. She reached across the table, her hand covering mine. Her nails dug just a fraction too hard into my knuckles. "You know I love you. I'm right where I'm supposed to be."

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