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You Lost Me, Desmond Vaughn
You Lost Me, Desmond Vaughn
Author: Miss. X.

His Affair

Author: Miss. X.
last update publish date: 2026-06-18 19:10:21

The kitchen smelled of rosemary and regret.

Genevieve Vaughn stood at the marble island, her hands dusted with flour, her eyes fixed on the lamb roasting in the oven. The clock read 6:47 PM. Forty-three minutes until her husband was due home, forty-three minutes until she would sit across from him and pretend their marriage wasn't suffocating her.

She had dismissed the nanny an hour ago and the housekeeper too. For once, she wanted to do this herself because tomorrow was their fifth anniversary, and somewhere beneath the layers of ice that had formed between them, she still believed there was warmth buried deep enough to uncover.

Five years.

The rumors had started two years ago, whispers at galas, sympathetic glances at charity events. Poor Genevieve can't give him an heir. What use is a wife who can't do the one thing she's meant to do?

She had smiled through all of it, held her head high, returned home to an empty bed and a husband who had stopped looking at her the way he used to.

Desmond had been warm once and attentive. During the first two years of their marriage, he had made her believe their forced union could blossom into something real. He brought her flowers, held her hand under the table at family dinners and whispered promises in the dark that made her heart race.

Then the tests came back and everything changed.

"Your hormone levels are concerning, Mrs. Vaughn. The likelihood of conception is... minimal."

She remembered the drive home and the silence that came with it. Desmond's jaw tight, his knuckles white on the steering wheel. He hadn't looked at her for three days after that appointment. When he finally did, something in his eyes had dimmed.

He blames her.

The thought knifed through her chest even now. He never said it outright but she saw it in the way he pulled away from her touch. Heard it in the clipped responses, felt it in the cold distance that had grown between them like a wall of ice.

And his mother; Isabella Vaughn, had made her displeasure known in a thousand small cruelties. A sigh at the dinner table, pointed comment about a friend's new grandchild. A lingering glance at Genevieve's flat stomach that said everything words could not.

"The Vaughn name needs an heir, Genevieve. Surely you understand the gravity of that."

She understood that in Isabella's eyes, she was a failure. A wife who couldn't do the one thing wives were supposed to do.

Genevieve pressed her palm against her abdomen, willing herself not to cry. She had cried enough in the shower, in the bathroom, at parties and in the darkness of her bedroom while Desmond slept in the guest room—always the guest room now.

Tonight would be different, she would try again. She had prepared his favorite meal and worn the dress he used to compliment. Lit candles and dimmed the lights. She would remind him of who they used to be before the tests. Before became nothing more than a barren wife in a marriage of convenience.

The doorbell rang.

Genevieve glanced at the clock. 6:52 PM. Desmond wouldn't ring the bell, he had his own key. She wiped her hands on her apron and walked to the foyer.

A courier stood at the door, an official-looking envelope in his hand. "Delivery for Mr. Desmond Vaughn. Signature required."

"Can I sign for him?"

"I'm afraid not, ma'am. This is marked confidential."

Her heart stuttered. "Who sent it?"

He glanced at the label. "St. Catherine's Medical Center."

The same fertility clinic she had visited. The same clinic that had delivered the news that had shattered her world.

"I'll call my husband. Please wait."

She dialed Desmond's number, voicemail. She tried again, voicemail.

"I'm sorry. He's not answering. Can you leave it with me?"

The man hesitated. "Ma'am, I really shouldn't..."

"I'm his wife; Genevieve Vaughn. You can note that I accepted delivery on his behalf."

He studied her, then relented. "Fine. Sign here."

She signed, accepted the envelope, and closed the door.

Is he sick? Is that why he's been so distant?

She walked back to the kitchen and set the envelope on the island. Her hands were shaking. The lamb was almost ready, everything was perfect. She shouldn't open his mail. It was wrong.

She opened it anyway.

Inside was a thick medical report—prenatal charts, ultrasound images, blood test results. She flipped through the pages, confusion mounting. Why would Desmond have prenatal reports? He was a man.

Olive; the name appeared on the first page. Patient: Olive Morrison. Gestational age: 12 weeks.

The room tilted, Genevieve gripped the counter.

Olive Morrison.

She knew that name. She had seen her in the background of one of Desmond's business photos, draped across his arm, touching him. Smiling at him like she owned him.

Her husband had gotten another woman pregnant.

The irony hit her with brutal clarity. She was the one who couldn't conceive. She had endured years of shame and Isabella's cold disapproval. And all the while, Desmond had been building a family with someone else.

She thought she couldn't feel anything lower than she already had. She was wrong.

The doorbell rang again.

Genevieve forced her legs to move, opened the door. It was the same courier.

"I'm so sorry, ma'am. I delivered the wrong package. The one I gave you is meant for a different address. I need to take it back."

"Mrs. Vaughn," she repeated, hollow. "There is no other Mrs. Vaughn. I'm the only one."

The courier's face went pale. "Ma'am, I..."

"Is there a mistake?" Her voice was dangerously quiet. "Because the name on this report is Olive Morrison. She's not my husband's wife, I am. So is there a mistake?"

He swallowed hard. "I was instructed to send it here, ma'am. That's all I know."

Instructed to send it here.

Someone had wanted her to find this.

Her mind raced. It had to be Isabella.

Genevieve closed the door on the courier. She walked back to the kitchen. The lamb was still roasting and the candles were still lit. The table was still set for two.

She looked at the ultrasound image. At the tiny life that would never be hers.

And then she let herself fall apart.

Desmond arrived at 7:15 PM.

He walked into the dining room without a word, loosening his tie. The table was set and the candles were burning low. His wife was sitting in her chair, untouched plate in front of her, eyes red-rimmed and hollow.

"You didn't eat," he observed.

Genevieve looked up at him. "Who is Olive Morrison?"

The words fell like stones into still water. Desmond froze. For a moment, the mask cracked. She saw something in his eyes—panic, perhaps. Or guilt.

Then the mask was back. "Where did you hear that name?"

"The delivery. The medical report from St. Catherine's. You're going to be a father, Desmond. Congratulations."

His face went white. "You opened my mail."

"You got another woman pregnant." Her voice cracked. "While I was here and I was trying. While I was praying every night that I could be enough for you."

"Genevieve..."

"Don't." She stood up. "Don't you dare try to explain. I've been humiliated and blamed. I've been made to feel like I was broken for years. And all along, you—"

"I never blamed you." His voice was low. Defensive. "I never said those things."

"Your silence was enough."

He looked away. "She's pregnant. It's done. The child is mine, I have to claim it."

"Claim it." She laughed—a broken sound. "Like property."

"I have responsibilities."

"And I have nothing." Her voice rose. "I gave you everything, Desmond.

“It will be announced tomorrow”

“What will be announced tomorrow, Desmond? Tomorrow that's meant to be our anniversary?”

“I sacrificed everything, and now you're telling me that tomorrow on our anniversary, you're going to announce this to the world?"

He was quiet for a long moment. Then he met her eyes.

"The pregnancy will be announced tomorrow at the anniversary party. It's done, I've made arrangements."

The words hit her like a physical blow. She stumbled back, gripping the edge of the table.

"You're going to make me watch," she whispered. "You're going to make me stand there and smile while you announce your mistress and your child."

"You don't have to attend. It would be... uncomfortable for everyone."

Uncomfortable.

Her marriage of five years, her dignity and everything she had sacrificed. And he was concerned about being comfortable.

The last ember of hope inside her died.

"You're right," she said quietly. "I shouldn't attend. It would be... uncomfortable."

She walked past him. Her heels echoed against the marble floor. He said her name but she didn't stop.

In the foyer, she paused. Her phone was in her hand.

She wouldn't be the wife who watched her husband announce another woman's pregnancy. She would be the wife who left.

Tomorrow, he would announce his new family and tomorrow, she would announce her freedom.

But first she needed to make a call.

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  • You Lost Me, Desmond Vaughn    You had five years to fight for me

    Confusion clouded Genevieve’s face for a moment. She blinked slowly, wondering if she was still trapped in some exhausted dream. But then reality hit her like a splash of cold water, and every trace of softness vanished from her expression.Desmond stood frozen near the foot of the bed. Pure relief washed over him so strongly that his knees felt weak.For days he had tortured himself with every worst-case scenario. He’d imagined her hurt, alone, or worse — refusing to answer his calls because she hated him too much to care if he was losing his mind with worry. But nothing compared to the heavy weight that lifted from his chest the second her eyes opened.“Genevieve…” His voice came out as a whisper.He took one careful step closer, afraid any sudden movement might make her disappear again.“You have no idea how relieved I am to see you awake.”Alain stood quietly by the window, his face calm but his eyes sharp and ready. He turned to Genevieve, completely ignoring Desmond.“You can le

  • You Lost Me, Desmond Vaughn    Five minutes

    Desmond barely noticed the sterile white walls blurring by as he hurried down the corridor. He was moving so fast he almost collided with a doctor stepping out of a nearby room.“Mr. Vaughn,” the doctor said with a polite nod. The Vaughn family was well known here—major investors and longtime supporters of the hospital. But Desmond didn’t even hear him. He kept walking, his mind fixed on one thing.Room 517.His heart pounded hard against his ribs as he rounded the final corner and stopped short.There it was.He stood outside the door, breathing uneven, staring at the simple number on the wall. For the first time since Genevieve had left, the tight knot of uncertainty in his chest started to loosen. She was here. Close enough that he could finally see her. Whatever pain she’d been through, he needed to lay eyes on her himself.He reached for the door handle.Before he could grab it, the door swung open.Alain stepped out and nearly walked right into him.Both men froze.The silence b

  • You Lost Me, Desmond Vaughn    Second Chance

    The hospital room was wrapped in a quiet that seemed almost sacred.Afternoon sunlight filtered through the half-drawn curtains, bathing the room in a soft golden glow that stood in stark contrast to the sterile scent of antiseptic lingering in the air. The steady rhythm of the cardiac monitor echoed gently through the silence, accompanied only by the slow, measured drip of intravenous fluid flowing into Genevieve's arm.She hadn't moved.Her skin remained deathly pale, her dark lashes resting against cheeks still faintly streaked from tears she couldn’t remember crying. The blood pressure cuff hugged her upper arm, while the oxygen monitor on her finger blinked in quiet rhythm with each heartbeat. She looked so small, so breakable, swallowed by the crisp white sheets.Alain stood by the window, his jacket slung carelessly over a nearby chair. His sleeves were rolled to his forearms, tie hanging loose around his neck. Deep lines of exhaustion carved shadows beneath his eyes and along

  • You Lost Me, Desmond Vaughn    Isabella Vaughn

    The executive offices of Vaughn Holdings occupied the entire top floor of a gleaming glass tower that overlooked the city like a watchful sentinel. Ordinarily, the atmosphere hummed with effortless precision, every employee moved with quiet efficiency, every meeting began exactly on schedule, and every decision flowed from one office: the expansive corner suite belonging to Isabella Vaughn. This morning, however, something was wrong. The silence felt strained, brittle, as though the entire floor were holding its breath. Even the reception staff spoke in hushed voices, careful not to disturb the woman whose temper had grown increasingly unpredictable since the disaster at the anniversary gala. Isabella stood alone in her office, one hand resting lightly against the polished mahogany desk while the other slowly stirred a cup of untouched coffee. Her posture was rigid, her gaze locked on the security monitor mounted on the wall like a predator studying prey. "Play it again." The s

  • You Lost Me, Desmond Vaughn    Hidden truth

    The morning light was soft and forgiving, but Genevieve felt nothing but tension. She had barely slept. Every time she closed her eyes, she saw Desmond's face at the party, heard his voice announcing another woman's pregnancy, and felt the crushing weight of five years of lies collapsing around her. But now there was something else. Something that had planted a seed of doubt in her mind. She picked up her phone and stared at the message from the unknown number. "Mrs. Vaughn, you don't know me but I know you. I worked for your mother-in-law for three years. I have documents; proof of what she did to you. Please, if you want the truth, meet me. I'll be at The Corner Brew on Elm Street at 2 PM today. Come alone." She had read it a dozen times. The words hadn't changed. Proof of what she did to you. What did that mean? What more could Isabella have done? She had already destroyed Genevieve's marriage, humiliated her publicly, and replaced her with a younger woman carrying her husban

  • You Lost Me, Desmond Vaughn    The Aftermath

    The silence in Alain Sterling's mansion was a luxury Genevieve hadn't known she needed. She sat in the guest room—the same room she had stayed in countless times before, during the early years of her marriage when she and Desmond had fought, when she needed space, when she needed to breathe. It felt like coming home to a place that had always been waiting for her. But this time was different. This time, she wasn't going back. She stared at her phone, which buzzed incessantly with notifications. Her post had exploded across every platform. News outlets were running headlines, social media was ablaze with speculation, judgment, and sympathy. "Genevieve Vaughn Announces Divorce on Anniversary Night." "Desmond Vaughn Introduces Pregnant Mistress as Party Crumbles." "The Fall of the Vaughn Empire: Scandal Rocks Elite Family." She scrolled through the comments, her expression unreadable. Some praised her courage, others called her dramatic. A few accused her of seeking attention. She

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