Pregnant Wife Saved A Stranger At Midnight — By Dawn, His Real Name Destroyed Her Husband-thuyhien

Grant Whitmore stopped halfway down the front steps when the man in the navy suit lifted his hand.

The rain had weakened to a gray mist, but the driveway still shone black under the mansion lights. Water dripped from the iron gate. My bare feet were numb against the curb. The coat around my shoulders was too large, heavy with warmth and the faint smell of cedar, hospital soap, and rain.

The stranger’s men did not rush. That made them more frightening.

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One moved toward the guardhouse. Another opened a leather folder. A third stood beside the first SUV with one hand resting near his earpiece, watching Grant the way a bank vault camera watches a thief.

Grant tightened the belt of his robe.

“Who are you?” he asked.

The man beside me did not look at him first. He looked at my face, then at my belly, then at the red marks on my arms where the guards had carried me.

His jaw shifted once.

“My name is Nathaniel Cross,” he said.

Grant went still.

Not startled. Not confused.

Still.

The kind of still that comes when a man recognizes the edge of a cliff under his shoe.

Paige appeared behind him in my green silk robe. She had one hand at her throat, fingers pressing into the fabric like she could hide inside it. Grant’s mother, Eleanor, came out next, wrapped in a cream cardigan, her silver hair untouched by the rain.

“Nathaniel Cross?” she repeated, softer than Grant had spoken.

The man beside me finally turned toward them.

“You know the name.”

Grant’s mouth opened, then closed.

I had heard that name before, but only through Grant’s locked office door. Cross Harbor Capital. The private fund Grant had chased for eighteen months. The one he said would make Whitmore Development untouchable. The one he needed for the waterfront hotel project in Stamford, the $312 million deal that had already eaten three loans, two lawsuits, and every decent part of his temper.

At 6:11 a.m., Nathaniel Cross took one step toward the mansion gate.

Grant stepped down fast.

“Mr. Cross, there’s been a misunderstanding.”

Nathaniel glanced at me again.

“Your wife was barefoot on the curb.”

“She had an episode.” Grant’s voice turned smooth. Investor smooth. Dinner-party smooth. “She’s pregnant. Emotional. She picked up some man from the road and created a medical scene under my family name.”

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