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After His Mistress Took My Baby, I Took Everything Novel Cover

After His Mistress Took My Baby, I Took Everything

After her husband and his mistress commit the ultimate betrayal by stealing her newborn, a devastated mother is driven by an intense need for justice. Refusing to remain a victim, she channels her grief into a ruthless strategy to dismantle her husband's vast empire. This high-stakes journey of retribution follows her as she seeks to reclaim her life and seize everything from those who shattered her family and stole her child.
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Chapter 2

The Range Rover was parked in the same spot it was always parked. Level B2, column seven, the far end where the overhead light had been flickering for six weeks and nobody had fixed it.

I came down after eight. Long day. The Hartwell account had needed two hours of hand-holding, and I'd given them three. I had the client file tucked under my arm and my keys already out, and I was thinking about nothing in particular—just the elevator ride up and whether there was anything left in the fridge worth eating.

I opened the rear door.

Stopped.

Black silk. Folded. Centered on the back seat like something in a display case.

I stood there for a moment. The flickering light buzzed above me. My keys were still in my hand.

It was a slip. The kind of thing that costs three hundred dollars and comes in tissue paper. It was folded the way you fold something when you want someone to know you folded it.

I looked at it for a long time without touching it.

Then I put my client file on the roof of the car, opened my purse, and pulled out a plastic evidence bag—I'd started keeping them there two weeks ago, after the gala, the way you keep an umbrella once you understand the weather. I photographed it first. Four angles. Then I turned the bag inside out over my hand, picked up the slip without touching it directly, and sealed it.

I sent the photo to Ivey before I pulled out of the garage.

She responded in under a minute. *Good. Keep it.*

I kept it.

I said nothing to Xavier.

---

Wednesday evening. I was at the kitchen island with a contract spread open in front of me and a cold cup of coffee I kept forgetting to drink when I heard his key in the lock.

And then a second voice.

High. Warm. Practiced.

'—I know it's late, I just wanted to drop these off, I didn't want to wait until tomorrow—'

Callie came in just behind Xavier, a thin folder in one hand and a smile that had already taken the room's temperature. She was wearing her coat still, like someone who intended to leave shortly. She did not leave shortly.

Xavier set his bag down. 'You remember Callie. From the office.'

'Of course,' I said.

Callie smiled at me. Warm, soft, slightly apologetic in a way that wasn't actually apologetic at all. 'I hope it's okay. He said you wouldn't mind.'

'It's fine,' I said.

Xavier pulled two glasses from the cabinet and poured himself a drink. He did not ask me if I wanted one. Callie moved to the kettle like she already knew where it was. Maybe she did.

I went back to the contract.

'The Whitmore meeting,' Xavier said, somewhere behind me. I heard the clink of ice. 'Callie's going to take point on the Thursday call.'

I looked up. 'That's my account.'

'I know, but she's been doing the groundwork on their expansion side, so it makes sense—'

'I've had Whitmore for three years, Xavier.'

'It's not a big deal.' His voice had that slight edge it got when he thought I was being difficult in front of someone. 'It's one call.'

Callie was making tea she didn't intend to drink. She had her back to us, her shoulders loose. She wasn't tense at all. I noted that.

I went back to the contract.

A few minutes passed. Small talk I didn't participate in. The kettle clicked off.

Then Callie drifted toward my end of the island. She moved the way she always moved—light, unhurried, like she belonged wherever she happened to be standing.

'Oh.' She stopped. Her eyes dropped to my left wrist. 'Is that jade?'

I looked at the bracelet. 'Yes.'

'It's beautiful.' She leaned in slightly. 'It looks old. Is it—can I see?'

I should have said no. I don't know why I didn't. Maybe because you don't refuse a person who is already reaching.

Her fingers closed around the bracelet. She lifted my wrist, tilted it toward the light. 'It's so delicate,' she said. 'Where did you get it?'

'It was my mother's.'

'Oh, that's so lovely—' And then her grip loosened. A small sound, almost surprised. 'Oh—'

The bracelet hit the marble.

The sound it made was not loud. It was very small and very final. A crack, and then the soft scatter of pieces across the floor.

I was off the stool before I knew I was moving. Down on one knee on the cold tile, my hands already gathering.

The clasp was in three pieces. The jade had broken in four places—clean breaks, the kind that don't go back together. A small chip had skittered under the island. I found it with my fingers.

Callie's voice came from above me. 'Oh my God. I'm so sorry. It just—it slipped, I didn't mean to—' A wobble in her voice. Exactly the right amount. 'Delaney, I'm so sorry. I feel terrible.'

I kept gathering the pieces.

I had a velvet pouch in my purse. I carry it for earrings sometimes, for small things that need protecting. I found it without looking up, opened it, and placed each fragment inside.

I did not speak.

Callie was still apologizing. Xavier had come around the island. I could see his shoes.

'Del.' His voice, quiet. 'It was an accident.'

I pulled the drawstring on the velvet pouch closed.

Stood up.

'I know,' I said.

---

After Callie left—twenty minutes later, the thin folder still on the counter—I set the velvet pouch on the kitchen island in front of Xavier.

He looked at it. Picked it up. Turned it once in his hand, the way you'd handle something someone had handed you that you weren't sure what to do with.

'It was an accident, Del,' he said. 'She felt awful about it.'

'She felt awful,' I repeated.

'She's already nervous about the new role. You making her feel worse isn't going to help anybody.'

I looked at him for a moment. At his face. The face I had watched across tables and in half-dark rooms for six years. He was being reasonable. He was being calm. He had no idea what he was holding in his hand.

I took the pouch back.

'Okay,' I said.

I went to the bedroom. I opened the bedside drawer and set the pouch inside, next to my phone charger and the small notebook I'd been writing things in—dates, incidents, the quiet accumulating record of the last several weeks.

I closed the drawer.

Picked up my phone.

Opened Ivey's thread.

I typed four words: *Accelerate the filing.*

Her response came in two minutes, just a single word.

*Done.*

I set my phone face-down on the nightstand. Through the bedroom wall I could hear Xavier pouring another drink, the familiar sound of the cabinet, the ice.

I pressed my right hand flat against my stomach. Just for a second.

Just once.

Then I lay down in the dark and waited for morning.

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