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My Husband Left Me for His Sick Mistress Novel Cover

My Husband Left Me for His Sick Mistress

For three years, I endured a loveless marriage to my billionaire husband. Everything shattered when he demanded a divorce to nurse his dying first love, discarding our vows for her sake. Crushed by his abandonment, I eventually walked away to rebuild my life and pride. Yet, just as I found my footing, he reappeared to plead for another chance. I now face a difficult choice: can I forgive his betrayal, or are some hearts truly beyond repair?
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Chapter 1

At six in the morning, the penthouse was a hush of pale gray light. The marble under my bare feet was cold. I sat on the edge of the bathtub with the test stick in my hand and watched the second pink line darken until there was no more pretending.

Eight weeks. Maybe nine.

My thumb found the inside of my left wrist and pressed there. A small habit. A way to hold myself in one piece. I did it without thinking, the way some people pray.

I looked up at the mirror across from me. The woman in it had hair still damp at the temples, no makeup, a face two years older than the one Dutton Kelly married. I tried to picture telling him. I tried to picture his face when he saw the test, when he saw the small black-and-white printout I would tuck inside a card. He liked that little Italian place on Sixty-Third with the candles in old wine bottles. I could book the corner table. I could wear the navy dress he once said suited me.

For a moment I let myself believe it.

The thing I had built with him was hollow. I knew that better than anyone. But maybe a child could fill it. Maybe a real, living thing could grow inside the shape of what we pretended to be, and the pretending could become true. People said it happened. People wrote songs about it.

I laid my hand flat on my stomach. Still flat. Still mine.

'Hi,' I whispered. The word felt foolish in the marble quiet. I said it again anyway.

Dutton's side of the bed was already empty when I came out. It had been empty when I went to sleep too. I told myself he had an early flight.

***

He didn't come home that night. Or the next. Or the one after that.

I called the office on the second day. Adele Young picked up on the first ring, the way she always does. Her voice is the same temperature as bottled water.

'Mrs. Kelly. Mr. Kelly is in meetings until late. He asked me to drop off the Henderson files at the penthouse. Is seven all right.'

It wasn't a question. Not really. Adele doesn't ask questions.

'Seven is fine,' I said.

She came at seven exactly. She is always exact. She wore a charcoal blazer and the kind of low heels that make no sound on hardwood. She set the folder on the entryway console, slipped the blazer off her shoulders because the foyer was warm, and laid it over the back of the chair while she fished a second envelope out of her bag.

'These need his signature by Friday,' she said. 'I've flagged the pages.'

'Thank you.'

'Goodnight, Mrs. Kelly.'

She left. The blazer stayed.

I stood in the foyer for a long minute after the elevator chimed shut. Then I walked over and picked it up, meaning to hang it for her. The fabric was warm where her body had been. And under the warm there was a smell.

Dutton's cologne. The cedar one. The one I bought him in Milan two Christmases ago because he said he liked how it lingered.

It clung to the inside of her collar like it had been there a while.

I didn't move for a moment. I just stood with the blazer in my hands and let the foyer light catch on the seams.

Then I folded it. Carefully. The way I'd been taught to fold things in college, sleeves in first, then the bottom up to meet the shoulders. I set it on the chair in a neat square. I didn't smell it again. I didn't need to.

I pressed my thumb to my wrist and walked into the kitchen and poured a glass of water I didn't drink.

***

On the fourth night the elevator opened and Dutton came in with his coat still on and his keys still in his hand.

I was in the living room. I had not turned on the lamps yet. The city threw enough light through the windows to see by, that bruised blue glow that New York gets just before it commits to dark.

He didn't take his coat off. That was the first thing. In two years he had never once spoken to me with his coat still on.

'Raya.'

'Dutton.'

His face was the face I fell for at that corporate gala two and a half years ago. The line of his jaw. The small mole below his left eye that I had spent months pretending not to look at. He stood in the foyer the way he stood in his boardroom, weight even, hands loose. A man about to restructure something.

'I want a divorce,' he said.

The sentence had no buildup. He delivered it the way he delivered quarterly numbers.

'Arabella's back in the city,' he said. 'She's not well. She needs me.'

He did not sit down. He did not come closer. He did not look once at my stomach, which was still flat and held a secret eight weeks old that I had been planning, just yesterday, to wrap in a card.

My thumb went to my wrist. Pressed.

I watched him from the dim half of the room and waited for the part of me that was supposed to break. It didn't come. What came instead was a strange, level clearness, like the moment after a glass falls and before it hits the floor.

'All right,' I said.

He blinked. Just once. He had been ready for something else.

'I have one condition,' I said.

'Name it.'

'Sole custody. Of any child.'

His mouth moved into the small, dismissive shape it makes when a clause is too easy to argue. 'Raya, there is no child.'

'Hypothetically.'

'Fine.' He waved his hand once, the way he waves away a line item. 'Of course. Yes.'

He was already somewhere else. I could see it in him. He had said the hard sentence and the rest was logistics.

'I'll have my attorney look at the papers,' I said.

'Good.' He paused, as if he might say something more, and didn't. He turned back toward the elevator. His coat had not come off the entire time.

The doors closed. The penthouse hummed in his absence the way empty rooms do.

I stayed where I was for a long time. Then I walked into the bedroom and opened the drawer and took out the small white card I had bought yesterday afternoon. Cream paper. Gold edges. I had not written in it yet.

I tore it once down the middle. Then again. I dropped the pieces into the wastebasket without watching them land.

***

A week later I sat across from my attorney in a glass-walled office on Madison and signed my name on each tabbed page. My handwriting did not shake. My attorney was a careful woman in her fifties with reading glasses on a chain.

'Raya,' she said, when I reached the last page. 'Are you certain.'

'Yes.'

She waited. She let the pen rest.

'I have to ask one more time,' she said gently. 'Are you certain.'

'Yes.'

I handed the pages back. I pressed my thumb to my wrist under the table where she could not see, and I felt, very faintly, the place where a heartbeat that wasn't mine had begun to keep its own time.

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