
When His Mistress Called My Husband Her Own
Chapter 1
The gray light of early dawn bled through the floor-to-ceiling windows of the Sullivan estate’s immaculate kitchen, casting long, skeletal shadows across the white marble countertops. I stood at the stove, a wooden spoon in hand, methodically stirring the simmering pot of beef consommé. It was Callum’s favorite.
With my free hand, I pinched the hem of my cashmere sleeve between my thumb and forefinger, smoothing the fabric in a slow, rhythmic motion. It was an old habit, a quiet tell from a past life when I still had emotions to suppress. Now, there was only the hollow, echoing clarity of a woman who had already attended her own funeral.
The rhythmic bubbling of the broth pulled my mind back to two days prior. I could still see the reflection of the crystal chandelier in the lacquered mahogany of the dining table, could still hear the precise, imperious cadence of my mother-in-law’s voice.
*“Thirty million dollars, Alessia,”* Mrs. Sullivan had said, her posture rigidly perfect, her eyes devoid of anything resembling warmth. *“Transferable immediately. In exchange, you will ensure my son is incapacitated enough to be delivered to Jazlyn’s hotel suite tonight. And then, you will take that child of yours and disappear.”*
She had expected me to weep. To throw the bone-china teacup. To fight for the scraps of my husband’s affection just as I had for the last ten years. But my love for Callum Sullivan hadn't just broken; it had starved to death in a freezing basement while I gave birth to our daughter alone.
I reached into the pocket of my apron and withdrew a small glass vial. My hand didn't shake as I uncapped it. I poured the clear liquid sedative into the boiling broth. It vanished instantly, leaving no trace.
Leaving the soup to cool, I dried my hands and pulled my phone from the counter. I opened my banking application, the blue light harsh against the gloom of the kitchen. A small loading circle spun for a fraction of a second before the screen refreshed.
*Available Balance: $30,004,210.50.*
A cold, quiet satisfaction settled in my chest. Mrs. Sullivan thought she was buying my absence. She didn't realize she was simply funding my escape.
I dialed the concierge of the St. Regis. "Yes, I need to confirm the penthouse suite booking for this evening," I said, my voice pitched low and steady. "Under the name Elena Vance. Yes, my husband will be arriving late."
Hanging up, I untied my apron, draped it over the back of a chair, and walked upstairs. The mansion was suffocatingly silent, a mausoleum of velvet and cold stone. In the master bedroom, I walked past the rows of designer silk gowns and the velvet jewelry boxes Callum had bought me in fits of belated, useless guilt. I didn't touch a single diamond. Instead, I pulled a battered canvas duffel bag from the back of the closet. I packed precisely: three changes of practical clothes for myself, four for my daughter, Nia, and her favorite worn rabbit plush. Everything else belonged to the ghost of Callum’s wife.
By noon, the dining room was flooded with pale winter sunlight. Callum sat at the head of the impossibly long table, drowning in his tailored charcoal suit. He looked up from his tablet as I entered, his dark eyes carrying that familiar, heavy exhaustion—a byproduct of managing his empire and managing Jazlyn's endless, theatrical crises.
I placed the porcelain bowl of soup in front of him. The steam curled between us, carrying the rich scent of rosemary and bone broth.
He picked up his silver spoon and took a slow sip. He paused, looking up at me. He pinched the bridge of his nose, a gesture he used when navigating a difficult negotiation.
"This is good, Alessia," he said, his authoritative voice softening into a clumsy attempt at warmth. "Really good. Thank you for making it."
I looked at the man I had spent a decade worshipping. I looked at the hands that had failed to catch me when I fell, the mouth that had defended another woman while I bled. I felt absolutely nothing.
I offered him a hollow, perfectly symmetrical smile. "You're welcome, Callum."
He hesitated, his dark eyes searching my face for the desperate, eager girl who used to beg for these scraps of approval. "I was thinking," he started, the words feeling foreign on his tongue. "Maybe this weekend, we could—"
"Excuse me," I interrupted, my tone glacial and polite. "I have a few things to finish upstairs."
I didn't wait for him to finish his sentence. I turned my back and walked out of the dining room.
Within ten minutes, I was walking down the back hallway, my duffel bag slung over my shoulder, holding Nia’s small, warm hand. She didn't ask questions; she just held on tightly, sensing the quiet shift in the atmosphere.
I strapped her into her car seat in the back of my modest sedan, tossed the bag into the trunk, and slid behind the wheel. As I turned the ignition, I didn't think about Callum, whose eyelids would already be growing heavy over his empty bowl. I didn't think about Jazlyn waiting in the penthouse.
I put the car in drive and pulled away. Through the rearview mirror, I watched the wrought-iron gates of the Sullivan estate close behind me. I didn't look back.
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