My Empire, My Son, My New Love

My Empire, My Son, My New Love

Benjamen Ernst

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While I was fighting for my life in the delivery room, my husband was on the front page of every tabloid, caught in a scandalous affair. He never came to see me or our newborn son. Instead, he whisked his actress mistress away to a luxury resort in the Swiss Alps, dismissing his betrayal as a mere "business arrangement." When his mistress brazenly appeared in my home, she taunted me, claiming my husband wished I had died in childbirth. Then, she revealed a paternity test claiming my son wasn't his. My husband believed her. He believed the lies of the woman who secretly snuck into our nursery to pinch and bruise our helpless, sleeping baby. He took her side, shielded her from me, and even tried to take my son away to raise with her. I had lost my parents and my brother, and now I was losing everything else. I was an orphan, a betrayed wife, and they were trying to take the only thing I had left: my child. But they underestimated me. They thought Kane Powell was the most powerful person I knew. They were wrong.

Chapter 1

While I was fighting for my life in the delivery room, my husband was on the front page of every tabloid, caught in a scandalous affair.

He never came to see me or our newborn son. Instead, he whisked his actress mistress away to a luxury resort in the Swiss Alps, dismissing his betrayal as a mere "business arrangement."

When his mistress brazenly appeared in my home, she taunted me, claiming my husband wished I had died in childbirth. Then, she revealed a paternity test claiming my son wasn't his.

My husband believed her. He believed the lies of the woman who secretly snuck into our nursery to pinch and bruise our helpless, sleeping baby.

He took her side, shielded her from me, and even tried to take my son away to raise with her.

I had lost my parents and my brother, and now I was losing everything else. I was an orphan, a betrayed wife, and they were trying to take the only thing I had left: my child.

But they underestimated me. They thought Kane Powell was the most powerful person I knew. They were wrong.

Chapter 1

My body was a battlefield, raw and aching, stitched back together in a sterile white hospital room. The doctor had whispered words like "complications" and "miracle," clinging to life felt like a war I barely won. But the real fight, the one that truly ripped me apart, began with a hushed nurse' s words: "Mr. Powell' s affair is everywhere. Front page news."

The irony was a bitter, metallic taste in my mouth, far worse than the lingering phantom pain of childbirth. While I almost died bringing his child into the world, Kane, my powerful tech CEO husband, was making headlines for his betrayal. My vision blurred, the buzzing of the ventilator a cruel rhythm to my shattered reality.

My family, what little remained of it, tried to shield me from the brutal truth. My father, gone too soon. My mother, lost to the darkness of depression. My only brother, a tragic memory. I was an orphan, now a betrayed wife, barely a mother. They murmured about "fabricated rumors" and "media sensationalism," but the cold, hard fact of it seeped into my bones, a chilling certainty.

Kane had been quick to act. Not to my side, not to comfort me or meet his newborn son. No, he was protecting her. Cristy Taylor, the young actress with her carefully cultivated vulnerability and wide, innocent eyes. He whisked her away to a secluded luxury resort in the Swiss Alps, a fortress built to shield his mistress from public scrutiny. He even had the audacity to dismiss his infidelity as a "business arrangement," a phrase that echoed with the hollow sound of his empty promises.

When he finally graced my hospital room with his presence, his face held a strange mix of exhaustion and irritation. There was no remorse in his eyes, no profound relief that I was alive. He looked like a man utterly inconvenienced.

"Anastasia," he said, his voice flat, devoid of the warmth I once craved. "We need to talk."

My throat was raw, but my voice, though weak, was steady. "About what, Kane? Your... 'business arrangement' ?"

He flinched, a flicker of something in his eyes – not guilt, but annoyance. "It' s not what you think. It' s complicated." He always said that when he was lying.

"Complicated?" I forced a dry laugh, a painful rasp. "It looked pretty straightforward in the tabloids."

He straightened, his CEO persona snapping into place. "You' ve been investigating me?" His tone was accusatory, as if my search for the truth was the real crime.

"No, Kane," I said, my gaze unwavering. "The world has. And it found this." My hand, trembling slightly, reached for the tablet on the bedside table. I tapped the screen, turning it towards him. It displayed a leaked photo, clear and undeniable: Kane, his arm wrapped around Cristy, their faces close, laughing. There was no business in that laugh, no professional distance in that touch. Only a raw, undeniable intimacy.

His jaw tightened. "It' s nothing. A setup."

"A setup that involves you flying her to the Alps the moment the news breaks?" I countered, my voice gaining strength. "A setup where you' ve been spending more time with her than with your wife, who just almost died giving birth to your child?"

He glared, then sighed, running a hand through his perfectly styled hair. "She' s had a difficult life, Anastasia. Financial struggles. She needed guidance, protection."

My heart, already fractured, splintered further. "A difficult life?" My voice was barely a whisper, thick with unsaid pain. "My father died suddenly, leaving me orphaned. My mother succumbed to depression, and my only brother... gone in an accident. I have faced true loss, Kane. Where was your protection then? Where was your sympathy when I needed it most?"

He stood there, silent, his face a mask of calculated indifference. He had no answer because he had never seen me, not truly. Not the girl who fought through unimaginable grief. Not the woman who chose him, above all others. He' d never seen past the Harvey name, the wealth, the connections.

Then, he turned. Just turned. Without another word, he walked out, leaving me in that sterile room, the newborn cries of our son echoing the emptiness in my chest. He left me, broken and bleeding, for a woman he claimed was a "business arrangement."

My private estate became my sanctuary after I was discharged. My son, my tiny miracle, was the only light in the suffocating darkness. I moved there, locking myself away, trying to heal. But the peace wouldn' t last. Not with Cristy Taylor still breathing the same air. I remembered Kane' s words, years ago, when he' d first started pushing for us to have a child. He' d spoken of legacy, of heirs, of our combined power. Now, it felt like another one of his calculated manipulations.

One afternoon, the calm of my estate shattered. My security detail, usually impenetrable, faltered. Cristy Taylor, brazen and bold, bypassed them all, appearing in my living room like a venomous mirage. She wore a confident smirk, her designer dress a stark contrast to my worn robe.

"Anastasia," she purred, her voice dripping with false sweetness. "You' re still here? I thought you' d have taken the hint by now." She glanced around my meticulously kept home, as if already claiming it. "Kane is done with you. It' s time for you to step aside."

I looked at her, truly looked at her, this ambitious girl who thought she could steal my life. My eyes, steady despite the rage boiling beneath my skin, met hers. "Step aside?" My voice was calm, almost dangerously so. "You think you can just waltz in here and take what' s mine?"

She laughed, a brittle, grating sound. "He doesn' t want you anymore, Anastasia. He barely tolerates you. He' s always complaining about how cold you are, how you never truly understood him." She leaned in, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper, brimming with triumph. "He told me he hasn' t been truly happy in years. With me, he' s happy."

My jaw clenched. "And you think you' ll make him happy by demanding I leave my own home, the home I inherited, the home I built?" I scoffed. "You' re a fool, Cristy, if you think you can replace me. I am Anastasia Harvey. And this is my life."

She took a step closer, her gaze hardening. "Oh, but he does want me. And soon, he' ll want my child, too. He told me he wants to try for a family with someone who truly loves him." Her words were a calculated strike, designed to wound, to break.

My breath hitched. My son, in the nursery upstairs, was barely a week old. The image of her, holding my baby, the thought of her raising him, twisted my stomach into knots.

"Get out," I snarled, my voice low and venomous. "Get out of my house before I have you thrown out."

She smirked, undeterred. "Or what? You' ll cry to your husband? He won' t care. He told me... he told me he wished you' d never come back from the delivery room."

The words hung in the air, a final, brutal blow. My vision flickered, a primal scream trapped in my throat. This woman, this child, dared to threaten my child, dared to mock my pain, dared to suggest Kane wished for my death. The pain was replaced by a cold, searing fire. No more tears. No more fear. Only a chilling resolve.

"Get her," I commanded, my voice echoing through the silent mansion, a steel edge to every syllable. My security detail, now alert, moved swiftly. "Make sure she never steps foot on a Hollywood set again. Leak everything. Every dirty little secret. Every manipulation. Her career is over."

Cristy' s triumphant smirk vanished, replaced by a look of wild, desperate terror. "No! You can' t! Kane would never let you-"

But it was too late. My loyal men advanced, their faces grim, their purpose clear.

"You think Kane Powell is the only powerful man I know?" I whispered, my voice dripping with icy contempt. "You just made the biggest mistake of your pathetic life, Cristy. You messed with my child."

Her scream was cut short as they dragged her away, a muffled, desperate sound. The silence that followed was deafening, a prelude to the storm I knew was coming.

My hands, still trembling, slowly formed into fists. The game had changed. And I was ready to play.

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