
My Son Wished His Father’s Mistress Was Mom
Chapter 2
The last guest had finally left, leaving behind only the hollow echo of their laughter and the wreckage of our carefully planned party. I stood in the doorway of our bedroom, watching Damon loosen his tie with practiced precision.
"We need to talk about what happened today," I said, my voice steadier than I felt.
Damon glanced at me, his expression already closed off. "It was just a kid being honest, Mina. Don't overreact."
"A kid doesn't throw his mother's birthday cake in the trash," I said, fighting to keep my voice level. "Beau wouldn't have done that if—"
"If what?" Damon's tone sharpened. "If Adalyn hadn't been here? If she hadn't shown him what a real celebration looks like?"
I stared at him, incredulous. "That's what you think this is about? Competition?"
"Isn't it?" He turned away, pouring himself a nightcap. "You've always been jealous of Adalyn. She's just better with kids, Mina. Better at a lot of things."
The words hit like a physical blow. I clenched my fists, nails digging into my palms. "She manipulated our son into rejecting me. And you let her."
"Enough." Damon drained his glass. "I'm tired of your paranoia."
Down the hall, I could hear Kyra's voice rising in frustration.
"Shawn, we need to talk," she was saying, her tone tight with restraint.
I moved closer to the door, straining to hear.
"About what?" Shawn's voice was distracted, followed by the unmistakable sound of scrolling through a phone.
"About today. About how you treated me in front of everyone."
"You're being uptight again." Shawn's sigh crackled through the wall. "Adalyn gets it. She's a free spirit, not some boring society wife who gets offended over nothing."
I pressed my forehead against the cool wood of our bedroom door, suddenly too exhausted to fight anymore.
---
Two weeks later, I woke with fire in my lungs and ice in my veins. The world tilted sideways as I tried to sit up, my body refusing to cooperate.
"Ma'am?" Our housekeeper's concerned face swam into view. "You need a doctor."
The hospital lights were too bright, the antiseptic smell burning my nostrils as nurses moved around me with practiced efficiency.
"Mrs. Alexander, we're admitting you for pneumonia," a doctor explained gently. "Your fever is dangerously high."
I nodded weakly, reaching for my phone. Damon needed to know.
The first call went straight to voicemail. Then the second. And third.
On the fifth attempt, he finally answered.
"What is it?" His voice was annoyed, background noise suggesting he was at some social event.
"Damon, I'm in the hospital," I managed, my voice barely audible over the oxygen mask. "Pneumonia. I need you."
A pause. Then: "Adalyn cut herself on some paperwork. She's hysterical about infection."
My heart stuttered. "I have pneumonia, Damon."
"I know, I know." He sounded distracted. "Look, I can't leave right now. She needs me."
"She needs you," I repeated, the words hollow in my chest.
"I'm transferring fifty thousand to your account," he continued, already moving on. "Get the best doctors, whatever you need."
The line went dead.
I lay there, staring at the ceiling as machines beeped around me. The fever wasn't what made me cry.
---
The Met Gala arrived in a flurry of cameras and couture. Kyra had spent months designing her gown—a delicate creation of silver silk that complemented her dark hair perfectly.
"You look beautiful," I told her as we stood in her dressing room.
She smiled, though it didn't reach her eyes. "Thanks. At least one of us will shine tonight."
But as we descended the grand staircase, Shawn appeared at the bottom, his expression cold.
"Kyra's staying home tonight," he announced.
"What?" Kyra froze mid-step. "Why?"
"You looked tired earlier," he said with a shrug. "Besides, Adalyn needs a date. Her dress is already in the car."
I watched my sister's face crumble as Shawn turned away, already reaching for his phone to text Adalyn.
Hours later, alone in our penthouse, Kyra sat cross-legged on her bed, laptop balanced on her knees as the livestream played.
"And here comes Shawn Alexander," the commentator's voice bubbled with excitement. "With... that's not his wife! That's Adalyn Stevens!"
The camera zoomed in on Adalyn's gown—silver silk with intricate beadwork that mirrored Kyra's design.
"Who are you wearing tonight?" the reporter asked Shawn.
"My sister-in-law designed it," Shawn replied smoothly. "Though not this sister-in-law."
Adalyn giggled, leaning into him as he placed his hand possessively at her waist.
"And where's your wife tonight?" the reporter pressed.
Shawn's smile didn't falter. "Not feeling well. Adalyn stepped up to save the night."
Kyra's hand trembled as she closed the laptop, tears streaming silently down her face.
That night, at 2 AM, we met in the library. No more words needed to be said.
"We start documenting everything," I said quietly, opening my laptop. "Every conversation, every incident."
Kyra nodded, her eyes hardening with resolve. "In the cloud drive. Where they can't find it."
As we began to type, a strange calm settled over us. This wasn't just about survival anymore.
It was about evidence.
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