My Husband Threw Me Out Of The Mansion My Father Secretly Owned-hamyt - Chainityai

My Husband Threw Me Out Of The Mansion My Father Secretly Owned-hamyt

The rain started after the first champagne toast.

I remember that because the windows behind Gregory turned silver, and for one strange second I thought the weather had come to warn me.

That morning, I had been kneeling on the bathroom floor with a pregnancy test in my hand.

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Two pink lines stared back at me after three years of doctors, calendars, whispered prayers, and months where Gregory would not look at me after another negative result.

I pressed my palm to my stomach and whispered hello to a child no one else knew existed.

Then I hid the test under the lining of my jewelry box, beneath the empty space where my anniversary pearls used to be.

Gregory was hosting one of his grand dinners that night.

He called them investor evenings, but they were really performances.

The mansion had to glow.

The marble had to shine.

The guests had to see him as a self-made man standing inside an old family estate, even though I had learned to hear something false in the way he told that story.

He said his grandfather built the house.

He said his grandmother planted the roses.

He said the Ashford name had been tied to those three acres for four generations.

I believed him because wives believe many things before they learn the cost.

By noon, a private investigator had already handed me photographs of Gregory and Iris Montgomery at a hotel.

Iris was his consultant, the woman I had welcomed into my kitchen, the woman I had once asked whether she took cream in her coffee.

In the photos, Gregory held her like he had not held me in a year.

In the same envelope were reports about his company, and those reports said the empire he bragged about was cracking from the inside.

I should have called a lawyer.

Instead, I put on the blue dress he used to love and decided to tell him about the baby after dinner.

I wanted my child to know I had tried.

Guests arrived in black cars, laughing under umbrellas while valets jogged through the rain.

I smiled at people who had probably known about Iris for months.

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