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When His Mistress Came Pregnant to My Door Novel Cover

When His Mistress Came Pregnant to My Door

I was making coffee when the doorbell rang. Not the buzzer from the street — the actual bell, which meant someone had already come through the gate. I set down my mug and walked to the front door in my socks, still half-inside the morning, still thinking about the audition callback I'd never made, the script I'd left in a box in the hall closet three years ago. I opened the door. She was standing on the stoop like she owned it. Eight months pregnant, maybe more. Wearing a camel coat that had probably cost two thousand dollars and looked like she'd slept in it for a week. Her hair was dark and loose, her makeup the kind that starts the day perfect and ends it like a bruise. She was beautiful in the way that certain women are beautiful — aggressively, as a form of argument. She looked at me the way you look at furniture you're deciding whether to keep.
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Chapter 3

I started with Gloria.

Not because she was the weakest link. Because she was the most honest one. You can work with honest. Honest people don't hide their wounds — they just don't know anyone's been watching them.

I watched her for three weeks.

I watched the way her jaw tightened every time Patricia walked into the nursery and rearranged the swaddle Gloria had just folded. The way she'd go very still when Patricia said 'the help' at the dinner table, not even bothering to lower her voice. I watched her stand in the kitchen one afternoon holding a grocery receipt that Patricia had slid back across the counter with two words written on it in blue ink: *itemize this.* Gloria stood there for a full minute, looking at that receipt. Then she folded it in half and put it in her pocket and went back upstairs without a word.

That pocket. That folded receipt. That was everything I needed to know.

I started small. A comment here, a sigh there. Nothing that could be repeated and traced back. We'd pass in the upstairs hall and I'd say, quietly, 'You're so patient with her. I don't know how you do it.' And then I'd keep walking. I didn't wait for a response. Waiting for a response turns a comment into a conversation, and conversations leave edges. I just let it land and walked away.

The second week I sat with her in the nursery while she did the afternoon feeding. I watched her hold Theo and I said, almost to myself, 'You're so good with him. Better than anyone in this house, honestly.' I let a beat pass. 'It's a shame that doesn't seem to count for much around here.'

Gloria looked at me. I looked at Theo.

The third week I didn't say anything at all. I didn't need to. I had already built the room. All I had to do was wait for the right moment to open the door.

I opened it on a Wednesday morning.

Patricia was at breakfast when I came downstairs. I sat across from her with my coffee and waited until there was a natural pause in the silence — the kind that invites filling — and then I said, in a tone of careful, reluctant concern, 'I'm sure it's nothing. But I thought you should know — Gloria's been saying some things to Diane. About the family.' I shook my head slightly. 'I probably shouldn't have mentioned it.'

Patricia set down her fork.

I picked up my coffee cup and looked out the window at the garden.

I heard Gloria's footsteps on the stairs twenty minutes later. I heard Patricia's voice from the dining room, clipped and final, the way a door sounds when it's been locked rather than closed. I heard Gloria's voice rise — once, twice — and then crack open into something that had been building for months. There were tears in it. There was fury in it. There was the sound of a woman who had swallowed too much for too long and had finally run out of room.

The front door closed at 9:47 a.m.

Colt came down at ten, irritated, asking what had happened. I stood in the kitchen doorway with my hands wrapped around my mug and let my face arrange itself into something soft and troubled.

'I don't know exactly,' I said. 'I think it had been building for a while. I'm so sorry — I should have said something sooner.' I paused. 'I can manage Theo's schedule for now. Until you find someone new. I'd like to, actually.'

He looked at me for a moment. Then he nodded and went back upstairs.

I turned back to the kitchen counter and let out a slow, quiet breath.

One down.

---

Diane Marsh worked the night shift like a woman running from something. Which she was. I'd seen the loan statements — not because I'd gone looking, but because she'd left her bag open on the kitchen counter one night and the top envelope had a number on it that explained everything about the circles under her eyes and the way she flinched slightly every time her phone buzzed.

I didn't rush her. Rushing is for people who are afraid of time. I had learned, in that storage room on the third floor, that time was the one resource I had in abundance.

I started with tea.

Two in the morning, when the house was quiet and Theo had just gone back down and Diane was standing at the counter in that particular stillness of someone too tired to move but too wired to sleep. I'd come downstairs in my robe and put the kettle on without asking. I'd set a mug in front of her and sit across the table and not say much. Just be there. Just be a person in the room who wasn't watching her or testing her or requiring anything from her.

She was grateful for it in the way that exhausted people are grateful for small things. I could see it in the way her shoulders dropped a fraction when I came in. In the way she'd start talking — about the night shift, about the commute, about the other family she worked for on weekday mornings who had three kids under four and a mother who left passive-aggressive notes on the refrigerator.

I listened. I asked questions. I remembered the answers.

On the fourth week, I sat down across from her at two in the morning and slid an envelope across the table.

She looked at it. She didn't touch it.

'Three hundred,' I said. My voice was low and even. 'Cash. No record of it anywhere.' I wrapped both hands around my mug. 'All I need is for you to let me know when Colt leaves his office unlocked. That's it. Nothing else.'

The kitchen clock ticked. Somewhere upstairs, Theo made a small sound and went quiet again.

Diane looked at the envelope for a long time. Long enough that I counted seventeen seconds in my head. Long enough that I knew she was doing the math — not just the money, but the risk, the loyalty she owed to a man who had hired her through an agency and never once learned her last name.

She picked up the envelope.

She didn't look at me when she did it. She just folded it once and slid it into the front pocket of her scrubs and picked up her tea.

I picked up mine.

We sat there in the quiet kitchen for another few minutes, not talking, the way two people sit when they've just agreed on something that doesn't need to be said out loud.

The cage had new walls made of people, Colt had decided.

He hadn't considered that people have doors.

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