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The Abandoned Wife And Her Secret Heir Novel Cover

The Abandoned Wife And Her Secret Heir

I was staring at a high-resolution photo of my husband burying his face in another woman’s neck when his text came through. "Pizza or Thai?" He wasn't just cheating. The photos showed him playing house with a woman named Serena and a little boy who had his exact nose. He had told me he wasn't ready for children, yet here he was, giving his world to a secret family. When I confronted them at his company gala, Serena didn't apologize. She smirked, ripped the wedding ring off my finger, and shoved me hard. I hit the floor with a sickening crunch. Pain exploded in my stomach. "Help me," I gasped, clutching my belly. "My baby." Michael looked at me. Then he looked at Serena and the boy. He made his choice. He turned his back on his bleeding, pregnant wife and escorted his mistress out the emergency exit to avoid a scandal. He left me there to die. He didn't know that the "son" he was protecting was a rental—a prop Serena hired to trap him. And he didn't know that the baby he left to die on the gallery floor was the only real child he would ever have. I didn't go home to cry. I sent him a receipt for a cremation service for "Baby Boy Hayes," withdrew half our savings, and vanished. He thinks he's free. He has no idea I'm still alive, and I’m taking his real son with me.
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Chapter 6

Liv POV

My phone buzzed against the floorboards. Again.

It was Michael. It was always Michael.

He wasn't used to silence. Silence was a language he refused to learn, an insult he couldn't abide. He was a man who commanded boardrooms and controlled narratives, and my refusal to engage was driving him slowly insane.

I didn't block him. Not yet. I needed to see his desperation. It was the only fuel keeping me upright.

*Michael: We need to talk. Properly. Stop hiding behind lawyers.*

I stared at the screen. Hiding. He called it hiding. I called it survival.

I was sitting on the floor of my new, temporary apartment. It was small. It smelled like Lemon Pledge and stale air. It was perfect because he had never stepped foot inside it.

A loud banging on the door made me jump.

My heart hammered against my ribs. He found me. Of course he found me.

"Liv! Open the door!"

His voice was muffled by the wood, but the arrogance was clear as a bell.

I stood up, my knees cracking slightly. I smoothed down my sweater. I walked to the door and opened it.

Michael stood there. He looked disheveled. His tie was loose, the knot pulled askew. He looked like a man who was losing control of his most valuable assets.

"You can't just disappear," he said, pushing past me into the room without an invitation.

He looked around the small living room with a sneer. "This is ridiculous. Come home."

"I don't have a home," I said. "You sold it for a lie."

He spun around. "I signed your papers. I gave you what you wanted. Now stop this tantrum."

Tantrum.

He grabbed my shoulders. His grip was tight. Too tight.

"I made a mistake," he said. "But we have a history. You can't just throw that away because I slipped up. Men slip up, Liv. It happens."

I looked at his hands on my shoulders. I felt nothing but revulsion.

"You didn't slip," I said, my voice cold. "You jumped."

He shook me, just a little. "I'm trying to fix this. Why make it so hard?"

I needed him to leave. I needed air. I couldn't breathe with him sucking all the oxygen out of the room.

"I'll think about it," I lied. "Just go. Give me space."

He relaxed instantly. His shoulders dropped. He thought he had won. He thought he had worn me down.

"Okay," he said, smoothing my hair. I flinched. "Take a few days. I'll be waiting."

He left.

I locked the door and leaned against it, exhaling a breath that felt like it had been trapped in my lungs for hours.

My phone pinged.

It wasn't Michael. It was my mother.

*Elizabeth: I have the report. You need to see this. Check your email.*

I opened the attachment.

It was a report from the private investigator my mother had hired. Photos. Timestamps.

There was Serena. She wasn't at a park with Jason. She wasn't at a school.

She was in a grimy alleyway behind a dive bar on the east side.

She was handing an envelope of cash to a man. A man with tattoos on his neck and a cigarette hanging from his lip.

The man was holding Jason.

He handed the boy to Serena with the casual indifference of handing off a sack of flour.

I zoomed in on the text below the photo.

*Subject: Serena Vance. Interaction with known associate, Mark 'Rat' Ratzlaff. Transaction observed: Weekly payment for 'rental' of minor child.*

The world stopped spinning. Gravity seemed to double, pinning me to the floor.

Jason wasn't Michael's son.

Jason wasn't even Serena's son.

He was a prop. A rented prop used to extract money from a guilty man.

I grabbed my coat.

I knew where that bar was. The timestamp was from twenty minutes ago. They might still be there.

I drove like a maniac. I checked my rearview mirror only once and saw familiar headlights keeping pace, but I didn't care.

I parked around the corner. I saw Michael’s car across the street. He had followed me. He never really left.

I walked into the alley.

It smelled of urine, old beer, and rot.

Serena was there. She was arguing with the man.

"I told you, he needs to be clean!" Serena hissed. "Michael noticed dirt under his fingernails last time."

"Then pay me extra for a bath," the man spat back. "The kid is fussy. I want more."

"You'll get it when the divorce settlement comes through," Serena said. "Just keep him quiet."

"Is that all he is?" I asked.

My voice was quiet, but it echoed off the damp brick walls.

Serena spun around. Her eyes went wide.

"Liv," she stammered. "What are you doing here?"

The man looked at me, then at Serena. He grabbed Jason's arm. "Who's this?"

"The wife," Serena said. Her shock turned into a smirk. "The ex-wife."

"And who is he?" I pointed at the man. "The casting director?"

Michael stepped out from the shadows behind me.

His face was gray. He looked like he was going to vomit.

"Michael," Serena squeaked. She tried to step in front of the man. "Baby, it's not what it looks like."

"I heard you," Michael whispered. "Rental?"

He looked at Jason. He really looked at him.

The boy didn't run to Michael. He didn't call him Daddy. He clung to the man's leg and looked at Michael with the blank stare of a stranger.

"You lied," Michael said. His voice broke.

"I did it for us!" Serena screamed. "Because I love you! You wouldn't leave her unless there was a child! I had to give you a reason!"

I felt bile rise in my throat.

I stepped forward. I held up my phone with the email open.

"She's been paying him for months," I said to Michael. "With your money. The money you stole from our accounts."

Michael looked at me. His eyes were hollow, stripped of all their arrogance.

"Liv," he said.

"Don't," I said. "Just look at what you bought with our marriage."

I threw the printed report at his feet.

"You wanted a family so bad you destroyed ours for a rental," I said.

I turned to walk away.

Serena lunged at me. "You ruined everything!"

She didn't touch me. Michael caught her wrist.

But the damage was done. The truth was out. It was ugly, and it was breathing, and it was standing in a dirty alleyway.

"It's over," I said.

And this time, I meant it.