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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 3

The silence in the penthouse following my announcement was a living thing, heavy and suffocating. Ainsley and Azalea stared at the sonogram of the phantom heartbeat like it was the Holy Grail. I didn't give them time to recover their equilibrium. The hook was set; now it was time to reel them in.

The next morning, I sat in the soundproofed, temperature-controlled office of Marcus Chen. Marcus was a shark in a bespoke Brioni suit, the kind of ruthless attorney who didn't ask moral questions, only financial ones.

"It's ironclad," Marcus murmured, his voice a smooth baritone as he slid a thick stack of legal parchment across his mahogany desk. "Buried under standard tax-shelter clauses for the unborn heir, this Post-Nuptial Agreement transfers immediate corporate voting rights and seventy percent of the Wright family’s liquid assets to you, acting in your capacity as the 'Guardian of the Heir.' Effective the moment the ink dries."

I traced the edge of the paper, the sharp cut of the page cool against my fingertip. "They won't read it. They're too arrogant, and right now, they're too desperate."

That afternoon, in the sterile chill of Maddox’s hospital suite, I played my part flawlessly. I kept my shoulders hunched, my hands resting protectively over my flat stomach. Ainsley stood by the window, her eyes darting obsessively to my midsection. Maddox looked grayish-yellow against the stark white pillows, his breathing a shallow, wet rattle.

"It's just a precaution," I whispered, my voice trembling perfectly as I slid the document onto Maddox's tray table. "For the baby's future. The trust officers warned me that if anything happens during the surgery... the estate taxes would gut the inheritance. This protects our child."

"A post-nuptial?" Ainsley sneered, though a hungry gleam flickered in her eyes at the prospect of securing the bloodline. "Josiah's lawyers should review this immediately."

"There isn't time," I said, letting a tear pool in my lower lash line. "The surgery is tomorrow. If you don't want to protect your grandson, Ainsley, I'll tear it up. I won't risk my baby's future for a family that doesn't want him."

Maddox coughed, a violent spasm that shook the bedframes. "Just sign it, Mother," he rasped, his eyes glassy with pain. "It's my kid."

Blinded by the promise of a grandson and the sheer agony of his failing organs, Maddox barely glanced at the dense legalese before scrawling his name. Ainsley hesitated, her aristocratic nose wrinkled in distaste, but the lure of the ultimate prize overrode her usual paranoia. She signed as the family guarantor. The trap snapped shut.

Two hours later, the rhythmic, mechanical hum of the dialysis machine was the only sound in the room. Maddox was heavily sedated, his head lolling to the side as thick tubes siphoned the toxins from his failing blood.

I stood over him, feeling nothing but the icy draft of the air conditioning. I took his limp, clammy hand, suppressing a shudder of revulsion, and pressed his thumb against the biometric sensor of his Macbook. A tiny click echoed in the quiet room, and the screen illuminated my face in a harsh blue glow.

I inserted a flash drive and began to dig. Maddox was arrogant, not careful. Behind a thinly veiled folder labeled 'Marital Assets,' I found the offshore routing numbers. Millions of dollars had been siphoned directly from my personal trust fund and the Wright corporate accounts, funneled into a Cayman shell company.

But it was the transaction memos that made my knuckles turn white.

*Nursery.*

Monthly wire transfers to Briella, dating back two entire years. Long before his kidneys started failing. Long before the Patek Philippe watch. He hadn't just been sleeping with her; he had been funding her lavish lifestyle with my money. I watched the progress bar on the screen fill with green as the files copied to my drive. The heat in my chest burned away the last remnants of the girl who had loved him.

Friday morning. The original day of the transplant.

Outside, the Manhattan sky was a bruised, violent purple. Inside the VIP bathroom, I stared at my pale reflection, unscrewing a bottle of over-the-counter caffeine pills. I swallowed four, dry, letting the bitter chalk coat my throat.

By the time the nurses wheeled me into the pre-op staging area beside Maddox, the caffeine had hit my bloodstream. My heart was a frantic jackhammer against my ribs. The monitors attached to my chest began to shriek, a rapid, piercing alarm of blinking red numbers.

"Heart rate is 160. Blood pressure is spiking dangerously," a nurse shouted, adjusting the cuff on my arm.

I forced my breathing to turn shallow and jagged. I gripped the aluminum rails of the gurney, squeezing my eyes shut as I let out a choked, breathless sob. "I can't breathe," I gasped, thrashing weakly. "The baby... please, my baby."

Dr. Evans materialized, his face tight with clinical alarm. "She's having a severe panic attack. The tachycardia is putting too much strain on her cardiovascular system. We can't risk the fetus or the viability of the organ. Postpone the surgery."

"No!" Maddox writhed on his bed, his voice a pathetic, reedy whine. His skin was slick with toxic sweat, his eyes bulging with primal terror. "You have to cut her open! Now! I'm dying!"

Ainsley rushed to his side, her face pale, completely ignoring my distress to coddle her son.

"I'm so sorry," I wept, letting the tears spill hot and fast down my cheeks as the orderlies began to wheel my bed backward, away from the surgical theater. "I just got so scared, Maddox. I'm so sorry."

But as I turned my head into the sterile white pillow, away from their frantic, desperate eyes, the corners of my mouth twitched. Beneath the hospital gown, my pulse was racing, but my soul was perfectly, terrifyingly still.

*Let him rot a little longer.*

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