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Just A Vessel: The Surrogate's Escape Novel Cover

Just A Vessel: The Surrogate's Escape

After six years, Alex discovers a soul-crushing truth: her Mafia Don husband, Gavyn, used his ex-lover's eggs for their twins. When that woman returns, Alex is discarded by her family and left to die in a rigged explosion. Gavyn chooses his first love, leaving Alex behind. However, she survives by bribing her assassin with stolen millions. Two years later, Alex is engaged to a rival kingpin, and a regretful Gavyn is desperate to win her back.
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Chapter 1

I went to the bank to set up a trust fund for my twins, only to have the manager look at me with pity.

"Mrs. Dunlap, the trust requires the *biological* mother's signature."

I froze. I *was* their mother. Or so I thought.

That day, I learned my husband, the most powerful Mafia Don on the coast, had used his ex-lover’s frozen eggs.

For six years, I wasn't his wife. I was just the incubator.

When his "true love," Iliana, returned from exile, my life disintegrated.

My children, poisoned by her lies, pushed me down the stairs and called me "just the nanny."

Gavyn didn't help me up. He stepped over my bleeding body to take his "real family" out for ice cream.

But the ultimate betrayal happened on a windswept cliff.

Staged by Iliana, we were both tied up, allegedly rigged to explode.

Forced to choose who to save, Gavyn didn't hesitate.

He cut Iliana loose.

"You did this to yourself, Alex," he said, driving away with the children, leaving me to die.

He thought he was leaving behind a corpse.

He didn't know I had skimmed ten million dollars from the household accounts.

"Cut me loose," I told the hitman, transferring the money. "And tell him the ocean took me."

Two years later, the Don is on his knees in my garden, begging for a second chance.

Too bad he has to get through my new fiancé first—the head of the rival cartel.

Chapter 1

Alex POV

The bank manager slid the rejection letter across the mahogany desk, and in that single, fluid motion, the foundation of my six-year marriage didn't just crack; it disintegrated.

I sat frozen in the plush leather chair of the First National Bank, the aggressive air conditioning suddenly biting into my skin like the chill of a morgue.

I had come here to secure trust funds for my twins, Kennith and Kaelynn—a surprise for their sixth birthday.

It was supposed to be a formality.

I was Alexandra Dunlap. Wife of Gavyn Dunlap, the *Capo dei Capi* of the entire eastern seaboard.

My signature usually moved mountains. Or, at the very least, it moved millions without a blink of an eye.

"I don't understand," I said, my voice steady despite the tremors radiating through my hands.

Mr. Henderson adjusted his glasses, studiously refusing to meet my gaze.

"Mrs. Dunlap, the trust requires the biological mother's signature for the initial setup, per the Family's internal protocols regarding lineage verification."

"I *am* their mother," I stated, the words tasting like ash on my tongue.

He hesitated, then reluctantly turned his computer screen toward me.

"According to the birth certificates on file with the State and the Syndicate registry... you are the legal guardian via marriage."

My eyes scanned the document on the screen.

Biological Father: Gavyn Dunlap.

Biological Mother: Iliana Dudley.

The room lurched.

Iliana Dudley.

The ghost.

The woman whose name was never spoken within our estate, yet whose presence lingered like the cloying scent of stale perfume on a vintage coat.

She was Gavyn's first love, the daughter of a rival associate who had supposedly betrayed the code and vanished years ago.

I was the replacement.

I was the twenty-two-year-old virgin chosen from a loyal family to settle my father's gambling debts.

The memories of the IVF clinics flooded back.

The daily injections. The hormones. The invasive procedures Gavyn had insisted upon, claiming he wanted to ensure "genetic perfection" and minimize risks.

He had lied.

I wasn't the mother.

I was the vessel.

I was the incubator.

I stood up, my legs feeling numb, as if they belonged to a stranger.

"Thank you, Mr. Henderson," I whispered.

I walked out of the bank and into the gray drizzle of the city, ignoring my security detail's frantic attempts to open the car door for me.

I needed to see him.

I needed to see the man who had shared my bed for six years, the man I had learned to love despite his coldness, despite the blood that permanently stained his hands.

I hailed a taxi, giving the address to the Dunlap Tower.

It was a fortress of glass and steel that pierced the skyline, a monument to Gavyn's untouchable power.

He ran the city's unions, the ports, and the shadows between the streetlights.

I breezed past the armed guards in the lobby; they knew better than to stop the Don's wife.

The elevator ride to the penthouse office felt like an eternity spent inside a coffin.

When the doors slid open, the floor was empty, save for the low murmur of voices drifting from his office.

The door was ajar.

I stepped closer, my heels sinking into the thick carpet, silencing my approach like a predator—or a ghost.

"She tried to open a trust today." Gavyn's voice was a low baritone rumble, a sound that usually made my stomach flutter. Now, it churned the bile in my throat.

"Did she see the registry?" A woman's voice.

Smooth. A French accent.

Iliana.

"It doesn't matter," Gavyn replied, followed by the sharp clink of ice against glass. "Alex is docile. She does what she is told. She raised them well, Iliana. They are ready for you now."

I pressed a hand over my mouth to stifle a sob.

"I don't want them calling her 'Mom' anymore, Gavyn," Iliana purred. "It's confusing for them. Now that I'm back... now that my 'exile' is officially over..."

"Patience," Gavyn said. "Alex served her purpose. She gave me heirs when you couldn't be here. She kept the seat warm. We will transition her out quietly. A payoff. A property in the Hamptons. She'll take it."

*Served her purpose.*

*Kept the seat warm.*

I wasn't his wife.

I was a long-term employee.

I turned around and walked back to the elevator.

I didn't scream. I didn't burst into the room.

In Gavyn's world, outbursts got you killed. Silence bought you time.

I went home to the estate, a sprawling mansion that felt more like a mausoleum than a home.

I walked through the heavy front doors, water dripping from my hair onto the pristine marble foyer.

"Mommy!"

Kaelynn and Kennith were at the top of the grand staircase.

They were beautiful children, possessing Gavyn's dark eyes and sharp jawlines.

My heart ached just looking at them. I had wiped their tears, kissed their scraped knees, sat awake for nights when fevers burned their skin.

"Hi, babies," I said, my voice cracking.

They didn't smile.

Their expressions shifted instantly. They looked at each other, a silent, dark communication passing between them that I wasn't privy to.

"You look like a wet rat," Kennith said.

He was six years old.

"Kennith," I scolded gently, stepping onto the first stair. "That is not how we speak."

"Miss Iliana says you look plain," Kaelynn added, crossing her arms with an attitude far too old for her small frame. "She says you're just the nanny who stayed too long."

The air left my lungs as if I’d been punched.

"Kaelynn, come here," I said, reaching out a trembling hand.

She recoiled.

"No! We don't want you!" she screamed.

She lunged forward.

It wasn't a playful shove.

It was a push fueled by a malice a child shouldn't possess.

I lost my footing on the slick marble stairs.

The world tilted violently.

My shoulder slammed into the banister, and my head cracked against the stone pillar at the bottom with a sickening thud.

Pain exploded behind my eyes.

I lay on the floor, gasping, warm blood trickling down my temple.

Laughter.

I heard laughter.

I looked up through hazy vision to see my children—the children I had birthed, or so I thought—giggling at the top of the stairs.

The front door opened behind me.

Gavyn walked in.

He was followed by a woman. Tall, blonde, striking.

Iliana.

Gavyn stopped. He looked down at me, sprawled on the floor, bleeding.

There was no panic in his eyes. No worry.

Just a flicker of annoyance, as if I were a piece of furniture that had been knocked over.

"Get up, Alex," he said coldly. "Stop making a scene."

"Daddy!" Kaelynn squealed, running down the stairs, stepping over my legs to get to him. "She fell! She's so clumsy!"

Gavyn scooped her up.

Iliana stepped forward, her heels clicking ominously on the floor near my head.

She looked down at me with a smirk that chilled my blood.

"Poor thing," she said, her voice dripping with venom. "Maybe she needs a rest. A permanent one."

"Can we go for ice cream with Real Mom now?" Kennith asked, tugging on Iliana's hand.

*Real Mom.*

The words were a dagger in my heart, twisting, severing the last thread of hope I had held onto.

Gavyn looked at me one last time.

"Clean yourself up," he ordered. "We are going out."

He turned his back on me.

He walked out the door with Iliana and the children, a perfect family portrait that had no space for me.

I lay on the cold marble, the blood pooling beneath my cheek.

"Okay," I whispered to the empty room, surrendering to the darkness.

"I grant your wish."

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