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When His Mistress Came Pregnant to My Door Novel Cover

When His Mistress Came Pregnant to My Door

Elena’s life is upended when her husband’s pregnant mistress appears at her doorstep, insisting she relinquish her marriage. Amidst the heartbreak of infidelity, Elena realizes the affair masks a sinister conspiracy tied to her family history. While navigating a volatile divorce and looming dangers, she must expose the depth of her husband's lies. This intense tale follows her quest for truth and justice in a world of deception and revenge.
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Chapter 2

They moved me back into the main house on a Tuesday.

Colt carried my small bag himself. Patricia stood at the foot of the third-floor stairs in pearls and a navy cardigan, watching the procession the way a woman watches movers handle a piano. The bedroom they returned me to was the one I'd shared with my husband for four years. Same duvet. Same lamp. Same framed print above the dresser. Someone had even put fresh flowers on the nightstand. White peonies, the kind I used to like.

"Welcome home," Colt said.

I looked at the peonies. I looked at the door, which had a new lock on the outside that hadn't been there before. I looked at my husband.

"Thank you," I said.

My voice came out small and dry, like a thing I had not used in weeks. That was deliberate. I had been practicing.

---

The baby arrived on a Thursday.

He was three weeks old by the time he crossed the Atlantic — a small, warm shape inside a cream blanket, asleep against the chest of a woman in a black uniform who was not his mother. Colt had pressured Briar into signing the custody papers from her London flat. I learned this from Patricia, who delivered the information at dinner with the satisfaction of a woman closing a property deal.

"That woman finally saw reason," she said, slicing her chicken. "Money tends to clarify these situations."

The nanny's name was Gloria Tran. Mid-thirties, soft-spoken, an accent I couldn't quite place. She held the baby with both hands cupped under him like she was carrying water. I watched her from across the foyer and made a careful note of the way her shoulders dropped a half-inch when Patricia spoke to her, and rose again when Patricia walked away.

The night nurse came on shift at eight. Diane Marsh. Late twenties, tired eyes, a hospital lanyard still clipped to her bag from whatever day job she was working between rotations. When I passed her in the upstairs hall, she smiled the professional smile of a woman who had been instructed not to engage with me. I smiled back and let her pass.

I was permitted to move through the house now. I was not permitted to be alone in it. Colt or Gloria or Diane was always within sight, always pleasant, always there. I went down to the kitchen for water and someone was at the counter. I went to the library for a book and someone was dusting. The cage had simply grown new walls made of people.

I understood. I had expected this.

---

I began the next morning.

I did not eat breakfast. I sat at the table and looked at the eggs and did not pick up the fork. When Colt asked if I was all right, I did not answer. I let my eyes drift to the window and stay there. He waited a full minute before he tried again. I let that minute pass like weather.

At lunch I lifted a glass of water and let my hand shake. The glass slipped. It did not shatter — it was thick crystal — but the water spread across the tablecloth in a slow dark circle, and I watched it without moving, and when Patricia said my name twice I turned my head as if her voice came from another room.

That night I did not sleep. I sat by the window in our bedroom and looked at the streetlight and did not move when Colt got into bed behind me. He said, "Fiona, come to bed." I said nothing. He said it again. I said nothing. After a while he stopped saying it.

For a stage actor, silence is the most expensive instrument in the kit. You have to earn it. You have to make the audience believe the silence costs you something.

I made him believe.

For twelve days I gave him a woman coming apart at a rate just slow enough to look real. The trembling hands. The half-eaten meals. The long blank stare at the wallpaper above the breakfast sideboard. I lost six pounds I could not afford to lose and I let him see me lose them. I let him find me one morning sitting on the bathroom tile in my nightgown with my hair unbrushed, looking at nothing. I let him put a robe around my shoulders and lift me up. I let his hands be gentle.

On the thirteenth day, he brought in the psychiatrist.

Dr. Aaron Vance. Mid-fifties, soft cardigan, the warm professional kindness of a man whose loyalty had been bought a long time ago. He sat across from me in the morning room with a notebook on his knee and asked how I was feeling.

"Tired," I said. It was the first word I had spoken aloud in nine days. I let it crack a little in the middle.

He wrote that down.

I gave him grief in measured doses. I gave him guilt — well-placed, plausible guilt, about my father's heart, about the fight I had picked. I gave him a flicker of shame about the divorce I had demanded. I gave him exactly enough to be a case study, and not one detail more.

He came twice a week. By the third visit I was eating again. By the fifth I was sleeping through the night. By the seventh I was asking, in a small soft voice, whether the baby was healthy.

Dr. Vance smiled. He told Colt I was making remarkable progress.

Colt thanked him at the door. I watched the handshake from the top of the stairs and understood that I had passed.

---

The first time I held the baby, I waited until Patricia was watching.

We were in the nursery. Gloria had just finished a feeding. The baby was warm and damp at the temple and made a soft snuffling sound against my collarbone. I looked down at him and let my face do the thing faces do when a woman who has lost everything is given something small and breathing to hold.

"Hello," I whispered. "Hello, sweet boy."

His name was Theodore. Theo. Colt had chosen it without asking me. I said it now like I had chosen it myself.

Patricia, in the doorway, made a sound that might have been approval.

I began asking her questions after that. Feeding schedules. Whether the pediatrician preferred the morning or afternoon visits. Which detergent was gentlest on the swaddles. She answered each one with the brisk pleasure of a woman whose authority has finally been recognized. I wrote her answers down in a small notebook I made sure she saw.

A week later, I went to Colt's office in the evening.

He was at his desk. The picture frame on it was still slightly crooked. I stood in the doorway the way I had stood the night I asked for a divorce, and I waited until he looked up.

"I was selfish," I said.

My voice was barely a voice. He had to lean forward to hear it.

"I wanted a divorce because I was thinking about myself. About my pride." I let my eyes drop to the carpet. "The family matters more than that. Theo matters more than that. I'm — I'm sorry, Colt."

He was quiet for a long time.

I did not look up. Looking up too soon would have ruined it. I kept my eyes on the carpet and let my hands stay very still at my sides and I counted, internally, the seconds of his silence the way I used to count beats in a monologue.

Then I heard him stand.

He crossed the room. He put his hand under my chin and tilted my face up the way a man tilts up a thing he owns to inspect it. He looked at me for a long moment, searching, and I let him find exactly what he needed to find.

"I knew you'd come back to me," he said.

He believed it. He had to. The whole architecture of his life depended on it.

I leaned my forehead against his chest so he would not see my eyes.

I was already writing the next scene.

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