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When His Mistress Demanded My Fourth Miscarriage, I Revolted Novel Cover

When His Mistress Demanded My Fourth Miscarriage, I Revolted

The rain fell softly on Woodlawn Cemetery, each droplet like a tear from heaven. I stood motionless before Michael's headstone, my fingers tracing the cold, wet marble. Two years. Two years since I lost my brother, my protector, my best friend. "I miss you," I whispered, my voice barely audible above the gentle patter of rain. "Every single day." The memorial flowers in my hands—delicate silk creations in Michael's favorite blues and whites—felt heavy with meaning. I'd spent hours crafting each petal, each leaf, channeling my grief into something beautiful, just as Sarah had taught me during those dark days after his death. I knelt in the wet grass, not feeling the cold seep through my jeans—another quirk of my condition. Congenital insensitivity to pain. A blessing and a curse.
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Chapter 2

I stepped into our Manhattan penthouse with my heart hammering against my ribs. The dash cam recording played on loop in my mind, each word a knife twisting deeper. Nathan. My husband. The man who held me through three miscarriages had caused them. The man who comforted me after Michael's death had murdered him.

The elevator doors closed behind me with a soft chime. Our home—our beautiful, perfect home with its floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking Central Park—suddenly felt like an elaborate stage set. A backdrop for the most horrific performance imaginable.

"Lily?" Nathan's voice called from the kitchen. "Is that you, sweetheart?"

Sweetheart. The endearment turned my stomach.

I took a deep breath, steadying myself. I couldn't let him suspect that I knew. Not yet. Not until I had evidence, a plan, a way out.

"Yes," I called back, forcing lightness into my voice. "Just got back."

He appeared in the hallway, wiping his hands on a dish towel. His smile—that smile I'd once found so reassuring—now seemed predatory.

"How was the visit to Michael's grave?" he asked, approaching to kiss my cheek.

I fought the urge to recoil. "It was... hard. It's always hard."

His eyes—were they always this calculating?—studied my face. "I know, baby. I wish I could take the pain away."

You caused it. You orchestrated every moment of my suffering.

"I'm just tired," I said, stepping past him. "I think I need to lie down."

"Of course." His hand brushed my arm in what once would have felt like comfort. "I'll bring you some tea."

I nodded, not trusting myself to speak again, and retreated to our bedroom. Once alone, I pressed my palms against my eyes, fighting back tears. I couldn't break down. Not now. Now, I needed to be stronger than I'd ever been.

I heard Nathan moving around in the kitchen. How many times had he prepared something for me with poison hidden inside? How many of our unborn children had he murdered for Elena's benefit?

Elena. The name burned in my mind. I'd met her several times—Nathan's "old friend" who occasionally joined us for dinner. Had she been laughing at me the entire time? Planning with Nathan how to harvest my next lost child?

I needed proof. Something tangible beyond the dash cam recording that could easily be dismissed as corrupted or manipulated.

Moving quietly, I slipped into our guest bathroom—the one I rarely used since my en-suite was more convenient. Nathan kept some of his toiletries here when we had overnight visitors. I opened the medicine cabinet, searching through aftershave bottles and razor blades.

Then I saw them—tucked behind a box of bandages. Three small unlabeled glass vials containing a clear liquid. They were nestled among my prescription prenatal vitamins that should have been in our main bathroom.

My hands trembled as I carefully extracted one. No prescription label. No pharmaceutical markings. Just clear liquid in a medical-grade container.

The drug is undetectable in standard tests. Four months in, I administer a higher dose...

I pulled out my phone and took several photos from different angles, making sure to capture how they were hidden among my vitamins. Then, with extreme care, I replaced everything exactly as I'd found it.

Returning to our bedroom, I unlocked the antique jewelry box Nathan had given me for our first anniversary. I removed the false bottom—a secret compartment I'd discovered months ago but never had reason to use—and placed the photos I'd printed from my phone inside. I locked the drawer and slid the key into my pillowcase.

That night, while Nathan slept beside me, I began my journal. In a small notebook disguised as a daily planner, I documented everything: the dash cam recording, the vials I'd found, the times Nathan insisted on preparing my prenatal shakes or vitamin regimen.

I noted how he always seemed to know exactly when I took my medications. How he'd casually inquire if I'd remembered my vitamins. How he'd watch me swallow them, that small, satisfied smile playing at the corners of his mouth.

I wrote until my hand cramped, the pages filling with the horrific truth of my marriage. When I finally stopped, dawn was breaking over Manhattan.

Beside me, Nathan stirred in his sleep, his arm unconsciously reaching for me. I lay rigid, staring at the ceiling, wondering how many more days I would have to share a bed with my brother's murderer, my children's killer.

And as his fingers brushed against my arm, I made a silent promise to myself, to Michael, to my lost babies: I would survive this. I would escape. And somehow, someway, Nathan Cross would pay for what he had done.

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