Her Mother-In-Law Paid Her To Vanish. The DNA Report Came Back-Tep

“I’m Throwing a Baby Shower for My Son’s Mistress,” my mother-in-law smiled, handing me divorce papers and a $700,000 check. “You’re 34 and barren. Disappear.” I took the money, got on a plane to Paris—and quietly hired a PI. Six months later, on the day her “twin heirs” were born, DNA results hit her desk. At 7 a.m., my Paris doorbell rang. It was her, mascara smeared, whispering: “Caroline… name your price.”

The day Eleanor Mitchell threw a baby shower for my husband’s mistress was the day I finally understood that some families do not betray you in secret.

Some of them rent the flowers first.

Image

The house smelled like gardenias and vanilla icing, with a faint undertone of polished wood and money that had never learned to apologize.

Pale-blue ribbons curled around the staircase railing.

Silver crowns had been embroidered along the table runners.

On the fireplace mantel, beside framed Mitchell family portraits, someone had placed a pair of tiny white baby shoes as if the twins had already arrived to claim the room.

I stood near the edge of the living room in a cream dress Eleanor had chosen herself.

She had said it would look “soft” on me.

She had not said it would make me blend into the walls while she crowned another woman in front of everyone who mattered to her.

Amber Lawson sat in the center chair under the chandelier, blond hair brushed into soft waves, makeup flawless, one manicured hand resting on her eight-month belly.

She was twenty-eight.

She was carrying twin boys.

She was also carrying every secret Derek had refused to confess.

My husband stood beside her chair with one hand on the back of it, smiling at guests like he had done something brave instead of something ordinary and cruel.

For six years, I had been Mrs. Derek Mitchell.

For four of those years, I had lived inside calendars, injections, lab appointments, surgery consultations, insurance denials, and hope that kept arriving in small white envelopes and leaving in blood.

Derek had once sat beside me in a fertility clinic waiting room and rubbed circles into my wrist while the receptionist asked for another signature.

That was the man I married.

The man at the baby shower did not look toward me once.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *