Billionaire Demanded A DNA Test In The Hospital, Then The Report Broke Him-kieutrinh

The anniversary party looked perfect from the balcony.

Two hundred people moved through our Miami penthouse with champagne in their hands, saying my name like I had built the view myself.

I had chosen every orchid, every linen, every piece of music, because Carter Hayes believed beauty was proof of control.

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His mother Gloria walked through the rooms inspecting my work with the tight smile of a woman looking for a flaw.

Carter found me near the glass rail just before sunset and placed his hand on my lower back.

“You outdid yourself,” he said, warm enough for anyone watching to believe him.

I smiled because that was what I had been trained to do in that marriage.

I was eight weeks pregnant, and I had spent three days carrying the news around like a candle I was afraid to breathe on.

After the guests left, I found Carter in our bedroom packing a suitcase.

He said he had to go to New York for a deal.

I told him I was pregnant before I could lose my nerve.

For one second, his face went blank.

Then he kissed my forehead, told me it was wonderful, and said we should not tell anyone until the first trimester was over.

He left twenty minutes later.

For three days, he barely called.

On the fourth day, I found a receipt in his jacket pocket from the Fontaine Hotel in Miami Beach.

The room service order was for two.

Champagne.

Chocolate-covered strawberries.

The date was three days before our anniversary party, when Carter had told me he was working late.

I called his office and got polished excuses.

I called Daniel, Carter’s younger brother, and asked where the New York property was.

Daniel paused before he told me the deal was in Boston.

I drove to the Fontaine with my hands shaking on the wheel.

Carter came out into the afternoon sun with his hand on Brooke Sullivan’s lower back.

Brooke had been my college roommate, my best friend, the woman with my spare key and half my secrets.

She laughed up at him, glowing in a loose dress, one hand resting on a stomach that was much farther along than mine.

I did not scream.

I grabbed a parking meter and watched my marriage drive away.

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