

Chapter 1 of My Husband Denied My Pregnancy to Protect His Mistress
The penthouse bathroom was dead silent. The only sound was the faint hum of New York City traffic fifty floors below. I sat on the edge of the marble bathtub, staring at the small plastic stick in my trembling hand.
Two pink lines.
I was pregnant. A fragile, warm spark of hope ignited in my chest. I pressed a hand to my flat stomach. For three years, I had been Axel Richardson’s perfect, invisible wife. I managed his chaotic CEO schedule. I curated his strict diet. I kept his massive penthouse running like clockwork. I did it all because I loved him, and because my older sister, Jane, had abandoned him at the altar.
I was the dependable younger sister. The stand-in. The placeholder.
But looking at those two pink lines, everything felt different. This baby was real. This baby was ours. Surely, Axel would finally see me now. We were going to be a real family.
I smiled at my reflection in the mirror. I smoothed down my dress and rehearsed the words in my head. *Axel, we’re going to have a baby.* I tucked the test into my pocket and walked down the long, quiet hallway toward his study.
I pushed open the heavy mahogany door. Axel sat behind his massive desk. He wore a crisp white shirt with the sleeves rolled up to his forearms. His dark hair was perfectly styled, but his jaw was tight. He was typing furiously on his laptop. He didn’t even look up when I walked in.
“Axel,” I said softly. “I have something to tell you.”
“Make it quick, Violet,” he muttered, his eyes glued to the screen. “I have a board meeting in an hour.”
I took a deep breath. My heart fluttered against my ribs. “I'm pregnant.”
The clicking of his keyboard stopped. The silence in the room suddenly felt suffocating. Axel slowly lifted his head. His dark eyes met mine, but there was no joy in them. There was no surprise. They were completely blank.
He didn't smile. He didn't stand up to hug me.
Instead, he opened his top desk drawer and pulled out a thick manila folder. He tossed it onto the polished wood and slid it across the desk toward me.
“Sign these,” he said flatly.
I stepped forward and looked down. The bold black letters at the top of the first page made the blood drain from my face. *Petition for Dissolution of Marriage.*
Divorce papers.
“What is this?” I whispered. My voice sounded hollow.
“Jane is back from Paris,” Axel said. His tone was perfectly steady. Cold. “She landed this morning. I’m bringing her home.”
The spark of hope in my chest died instantly, turning to ash. “Jane?” I choked out. “Axel, I just told you I’m pregnant. I'm carrying your child.”
Axel leaned back in his leather chair. A cruel, mocking smirk touched the corner of his mouth. “Nice try, Violet. But that's impossible.”
“What do you mean?”
“I had a vasectomy four years ago,” he said smoothly. “Before we even got married. I never wanted kids.”
The room tilted. A vasectomy? He was lying. I managed every single detail of his life. I handled his medical files, his doctor's appointments, his prescriptions. I knew for a fact he never had that surgery. He was lying straight to my face just to strip me of any leverage. He was implying I was a cheater, just to throw me away for Jane.
“You're lying,” I said. My hands balled into fists at my sides.
“Am I?” He raised a dark eyebrow. “I suggest you figure out who the real father is. Because it isn't me. Just sign the papers, Violet. Leave quietly. Don't make this ugly.”
I stared at the man I had loved in silence for seven years. I waited for the tears to come. I waited to fall to my knees and beg him to believe me. I waited for my heart to break.
But the tears never came.
Instead, something inside me snapped. The pathetic, devoted Violet shattered into a million pieces. A strange, icy calm washed over my skin. The heat in my chest vanished, replaced by a freezing clarity. I looked at his handsome, arrogant face, and suddenly, I felt absolutely nothing.
“Okay,” I said quietly.
I didn't argue. I didn't cry. I turned around and walked out of the study.
That evening, I stood alone in the massive kitchen. The sun dipped below the Manhattan skyline, casting dark shadows across the marble counters. On the stove sat a pot of organic ginger-chicken broth. I had spent two hours making it. It was perfectly bland, tailored specifically for Axel’s severe, stress-induced stomach ulcer.
I stared at the soup. I thought about the years I spent tiptoeing around his moods. I thought about the spicy, flavorful foods I gave up just to match his boring diet. I thought about all the unpaid labor, the quiet sacrifices, the invisible devotion.
I grabbed the handles of the heavy pot. I walked over to the sink and flipped the switch for the garbage disposal. The machine roared to life. I tipped the pot and watched the pale broth and tender chicken slide down the drain. The blades ground it all away in seconds.
I turned off the disposal and dropped the empty pot into the sink. It made a loud, satisfying clatter. I didn't wash it. I didn't prep his morning vitamins. I didn't lay out his suit for tomorrow.
The subservient wife was dead.
The next morning, I woke up early. I didn't go to the kitchen. I didn't brew his specific dark roast coffee. I took a long, hot shower and dressed in a sharp black trench coat and a pair of leather boots.
When I finally walked into the living area, Axel was standing by the empty kitchen island. His tie was loose. He was glaring at the cold, empty coffee maker.
He looked up as I walked in. His jaw clenched. He noticed the absence of his routine immediately. He was waiting for me to apologize. He was waiting for me to rush over, panic, and start the machine like a good little maid.
I didn't even break my stride. I walked right past him to the entryway and picked up my purse.
“There's no coffee,” Axel said. His voice had a sharp, irritated edge.
I paused with my hand on the doorknob. I turned and met his gaze across the room. I didn't shrink. I didn't look away. My expression was perfectly calm. Unreadable.
“I know,” I said.
I opened the door and walked out, letting it click shut behind me.
Read the Full Novel on

















