The Price of His Nineteen-Year-Old Mistress

The Price of His Nineteen-Year-Old Mistress

A Li

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My husband, Christopher Kramer, was Manhattan's most notorious playboy, famous for his seasonal affairs with nineteen-year-old girls. For five years, I believed I was the exception who had finally tamed him. That illusion shattered when my father needed a bone marrow transplant. The perfect donor was a nineteen-year-old named Iris. On the day of the surgery, my father died because Christopher chose to stay in bed with her instead of taking her to the hospital. His betrayal didn't stop there. When an elevator plunged, he pulled her out first and left me to fall. When a chandelier crashed, he shielded her body with his and stepped over me as I lay bleeding. He even stole my dead father's last gift to me and gave it to her. Through it all, he called me selfish and ungrateful, completely oblivious to the fact that my father was already gone. So I quietly signed the divorce papers and vanished. The day I left, he texted me. "Good news, I found another donor for your dad. Let's go schedule the surgery."

Chapter 1

My husband, Christopher Kramer, was Manhattan's most notorious playboy, famous for his seasonal affairs with nineteen-year-old girls. For five years, I believed I was the exception who had finally tamed him.

That illusion shattered when my father needed a bone marrow transplant. The perfect donor was a nineteen-year-old named Iris. On the day of the surgery, my father died because Christopher chose to stay in bed with her instead of taking her to the hospital.

His betrayal didn't stop there. When an elevator plunged, he pulled her out first and left me to fall. When a chandelier crashed, he shielded her body with his and stepped over me as I lay bleeding. He even stole my dead father's last gift to me and gave it to her.

Through it all, he called me selfish and ungrateful, completely oblivious to the fact that my father was already gone.

So I quietly signed the divorce papers and vanished. The day I left, he texted me.

"Good news, I found another donor for your dad. Let's go schedule the surgery."

Chapter 1

Emily Porter's POV:

My father died because my husband, Christopher Kramer, chose to comfort his new favorite, a nineteen-year-old girl, instead of ensuring she made it to the hospital to donate the bone marrow that would have saved his life.

In Manhattan, Christopher Kramer was a name that glittered like the city's skyline. He was the golden-boy heir to the Kramer real estate dynasty, a man whose life was chronicled in gossip columns and business journals with equal fervor.

His reputation preceded him. He had a specific, almost clinical preference: young, innocent college girls, usually around nineteen.

They were a seasonal bloom in his life, arriving with the fall semester and withering by spring break. These girls, often scholarship students dazzled by his charisma and wealth, would be lavished with gifts, paraded at parties, and then, just as quickly, discarded. Their tenures were as predictable as the changing of the guard at Buckingham Palace-a brief, glittering spectacle, followed by an abrupt and final exit.

The city buzzed with stories of his conquests. The NYU art student who was given a gallery show and then ghosted. The Columbia literature major who received a first-edition collection of classics before finding her apartment keys no longer worked. It was a cruel, well-oiled machine, and Manhattan watched with a detached sort of fascination.

Then, there was me.

I was Emily Porter, a gig-economy worker juggling three jobs to put myself through a community college program. I wasn't from their world of penthouses and pedigrees. I was from a world of late-night shifts, instant noodles, and the quiet, fierce love of my father, a retired high school English teacher.

And I, too, was nineteen when Christopher Kramer' s world collided with mine.

The force of his attention was terrifying and intoxicating. It was a whirlwind romance that scandalized Manhattan's elite and left my own small world breathless.

The playboy, the prodigal son, was suddenly, impossibly, reformed.

He cut ties with his parade of college girls. He bought out entire flower shops just to fill my tiny apartment with my favorite lilies. He learned to cook my father' s favorite stew, sitting patiently in our cramped kitchen while my dad, Jerald William, lectured him on Shakespeare. He even gave up his beloved sports cars because I got carsick easily.

He proposed on one knee in the middle of Times Square, the giant screens that usually advertised luxury brands displaying a single, blinding question: "Emily Porter, will you marry me?"

I became the fairy tale everyone whispered about. The working-class girl who had tamed the untamable beast.

For five years, he was the perfect husband. Devoted, doting, and fiercely possessive in a way that I mistook for profound love. He built a fortress of affection around me, and I believed, with every fiber of my being, that I was his one and only, the exception to his cruel rule.

The illusion shattered when my father got sick.

Acute myeloid leukemia. The words from the doctor felt like a death sentence. The only hope was a bone marrow transplant. We searched the global registry, but no match was found. Despair began to set in, a thick, suffocating fog.

Christopher, my perfect husband, stepped in like a savior. He used the Kramer fortune to launch a massive, city-wide donor drive, funding testing kits and plastering my father's story on billboards. He held me while I cried, whispering, "I'll save him, Emily. I promise."

And then, a miracle. A perfect match was found.

Her name was Iris Lindsay. A scholarship student at NYU.

She was nineteen.

The first time I saw her, she was standing in the hospital lobby, looking fragile and overwhelmed. Christopher had brought her. She wore a simple white dress, her hands nervously clutching the strap of her backpack. She looked up at Christopher with wide, adoring eyes, her voice a timid whisper as she thanked him for the opportunity to help.

The coincidence of her age-that magical, cursed number-sent a shiver down my spine, but I quickly dismissed it. This girl was saving my father' s life. She was an angel.

The surgery was scheduled. My father, Jerald, was moved into a sterile isolation ward, his immune system systematically destroyed by chemotherapy to prepare for the transplant. He was vulnerable, defenseless, waiting for the gift of life that Iris held within her.

The day of the surgery arrived, a cold, sterile Tuesday. The window for the transplant was terrifyingly small. Once the chemo protocol was complete, my father' s body was a blank slate, unable to fight off the slightest infection. The new marrow had to be introduced within a critical timeframe.

Hours ticked by. My father's vitals, displayed on the monitor beside his bed, began to waver. The beeping of the machine grew more erratic, a frantic soundtrack to my rising panic.

He was crashing. His body, stripped of its defenses, was failing.

I frantically called Iris. No answer. I called again. And again. My hands shook so badly I could barely hold the phone. Each unanswered ring felt like a hammer blow to my heart.

The phone rang a dozen times before she finally picked up. Her voice was small, laced with a strange, breathy hesitation. "Hello?"

"Iris, where are you?" I screamed, my voice cracking. "The hospital just called. My dad's in critical condition! You need to get here now! The surgery, it has to happen now!"

"I... I can't," she stammered, her voice trembling. "I'm scared, Emily. The thought of the needles... it's just... too much."

"Scared? Iris, this is about my father's life-"

Before I could finish, a familiar, lazy voice cut through the line from her end. The sound of it made my blood run cold.

"Baby, who are you talking to? Come back to bed."

It was Christopher.

My Christopher. My husband.

A wave of nausea washed over me. The world tilted on its axis. My ears were ringing, a high-pitched scream that drowned out the frantic beeping of the heart monitor in the background of my own call.

I hung up. I didn' t need to hear another word. I ran. I ran out of the hospital waiting room, my mind a blank, howling void. I hailed a cab, my voice a strangled rasp as I gave the address-the address to the five-star hotel suite Christopher kept for "visiting business partners."

His black Bentley, the one he' d bought because it had the smoothest ride for me, was parked brazenly out front.

I used my key card, my hand trembling so hard it took three tries to open the door. The suite was a sprawling expanse of glass and minimalist furniture. And there, on the plush sofa, was the scene that would forever be burned into my memory.

Iris Lindsay, the fragile, timid girl, was nestled in my husband' s arms. She was wearing one of his silk shirts, the sleeves rolled up to her elbows. Her head rested on his chest, her expression one of blissful contentment.

Christopher was stroking her hair, his touch impossibly gentle, the same way he used to touch me. He was whispering something in her ear, his lips brushing against her temple.

"Don't worry about the surgery," I heard him murmur, his voice a low, soothing rumble. "We can just postpone it. A few days won't make a difference. The most important thing is that you're happy."

He leaned in and pressed a soft kiss to her forehead. The same proprietary, tender kiss he had given me thousands of times. The one he' d told me was reserved only for me.

Iris giggled, a sweet, cloying sound. "You're so good to me, Christopher. I don't know what I'd do without you."

"You don't have to," he whispered back. "I'll take care of everything."

At that moment, my phone rang again. The shrill sound cut through the haze of my horror. I looked at the caller ID.

It was the hospital.

I answered, my throat tight.

"Mrs. Kramer," the doctor's voice was heavy, somber. "I'm so sorry. We did everything we could, but..."

He didn't need to finish.

"Mr. Porter passed away just a few moments ago."

The world went silent. The sounds of the city, the hum of the hotel's air conditioning, even the beating of my own heart-it all just stopped.

My phone slipped from my numb fingers, clattering onto the marble floor.

The sound made them look up.

And in that moment, as I stood in the doorway, a ghost at the feast of my own destruction, I finally understood.

The fairy tale was over. It had never been real at all.

I was just another season, and spring had finally arrived.

My world didn't just shatter. It ceased to exist. I swayed on my feet, the darkness at the edge of my vision rushing in to swallow me whole. The last thing I saw was Christopher' s face, his expression shifting from gentle affection to annoyance at the interruption. He hadn't even registered the magnitude of what had just happened. He couldn't.

Because to him, it didn't matter.

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