My Pregnant Wife Called Me 17 Times While She Was Dying… I Rejected Every Call For My Mistress, And My Worst Enemy Ended Up With Everything.

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The music was so loud inside the private club in San Pedro Garza García that the walls seemed to breathe with the bass.

Champagne bottles sweated across the VIP table. Neon lights slid over black leather couches. Laughter bounced from one corner to another. The whole room smelled like expensive perfume, tobacco smoke, mezcal, and the kind of bad decisions rich men make when they think nothing can touch them.

And Mateo sat in the center of it all like a king.

His jacket was open. His tie was gone. His glass was never empty. Valeria, his mistress, was curled against him with one manicured hand resting on his chest, smiling the way women smile when they know a man is trying to impress everyone except the one person who matters.

Around him, his friends kept raising their glasses, feeding his ego, laughing too hard at everything he said.

Then his phone lit up on the table.

Wife.

Again.

It was the tenth call in less than thirty minutes.

Valeria let out a dramatic sigh and leaned closer, her lips brushing his ear. “Are you seriously not going to answer? She’s been calling all night. That ringtone is ruining the mood.”

Mateo looked down at the screen and laughed.

Not nervous. Not guilty.

Cold.

Careless.

“Leave her,” he said, taking another drink. “She’s dramatic.”

The men around him chuckled.

Mateo leaned back deeper into the couch, completely relaxed, completely certain the world would still be waiting for him tomorrow.

“You know how women get when they’re pregnant,” he said. “Everything is a crisis. She probably wants tacos at midnight or wants me to come home and rub her swollen feet.”

Valeria smirked. “So needy.”

Mateo picked up the phone, rejected the call, switched it to airplane mode, and tossed it onto the couch like it was nothing.

Then he tightened his arm around Valeria’s waist and lifted his glass high.

“To my last night of freedom before becoming a father.”

Everyone cheered.

No one in that room knew that several miles away, inside a silent mansion in the most exclusive part of the city, his wife was lying at the bottom of a marble staircase fighting to stay alive.

Camila was eight months pregnant.

She had only gotten up for a glass of water.

One dizzy step.

One hand that missed the railing.

One violent fall that turned the whole staircase into a blur of white stone, pain, and panic.

Now she was on the cold floor in her nightgown, her hair half across her face, one slipper missing, her phone cracked in her trembling hand.

Her body hurt in places she couldn’t even name. Pain kept tearing through her abdomen in brutal waves. Her baby, who had always kicked with a steady rhythm, was moving strangely now—jerking, then going still for terrifying seconds that felt too long.

“Mateo…” she whispered, barely able to breathe.

She pressed call.

Rejected.

She called again.

Voicemail.

Again.

Again.

Again.

Each failed call felt less like neglect and more like a sentence being handed down.

Tears slipped into her hairline as she tried to drag herself across the polished floor, but the pain shot through her so sharply that she cried out and nearly blacked out.

The mansion around her was enormous. Beautiful. Expensive. Empty.

The walls were high. The windows were sealed. The staff had been dismissed for the weekend because Mateo wanted privacy. Even the security gate was locked on night protocol. No ambulance could enter unless someone opened it from inside or remotely.

And Mateo was not answering.

Camila lay there shaking and understood something no wife should ever understand.

She might die in the house he had bought to impress other people.

Alone.

Begging for the man who had abandoned her.

With numb fingers, she unlocked her phone again. Her vision kept swimming. Her breathing turned shallow. Blood had started to spread beneath her hip in a dark, slow stain that made her heart pound harder.

She opened her contacts.

Names blurred.

Then one name came into focus.

Alejandro.

Mateo’s former best friend.

The man Mateo hated more than anyone in the world.

The man he had once called a brother, until Alejandro became richer, more respected, more disciplined, and impossible to control.

The man Mateo had forbidden Camila from speaking to ever again, because Mateo could never stand being around someone who saw through him.

Her thumb hovered for half a second.

Then she pressed call.

It rang once.

“Camila?” a deep voice answered, instantly alert. “What happened? It’s the middle of the night.”

“Alejandro…” she sobbed, the word breaking inside her throat. “I fell… the stairs… there’s blood… please help me… Mateo won’t answer… the baby…”

The silence on the line lasted less than a second.

Then his voice changed.

Not confused.

Not sleepy.

Terrified.

“CAMILA, listen to me. Stay with me. I’m coming right now.” She could hear movement, doors opening, men shouting in the background. “I’m bringing my medical team. I need you to keep talking. Do you hear me? Don’t close your eyes. Tell me where you are in the house.”

“In the foyer…” she whispered. “I can’t… I can’t feel…”

“You can. Stay with me. Put your hand on the baby if you can. Keep breathing. I’m six minutes away.”

Six minutes.

It sounded impossible.

But Alejandro was the kind of man who made impossible things happen when everyone else was still deciding whether it was worth trying.

Camila tried to answer him, but the phone slipped from her hand and clattered against the marble.

She placed one shaking palm over her stomach.

“I’m sorry, my love,” she whispered to her unborn child.

The chandelier above her blurred into white light. The cold floor seemed to disappear beneath her. Somewhere far away, Alejandro was still shouting her name through the phone.

Then everything went dark.
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And while Mateo was laughing in a private club with his mistress, thinking he still owned the night, the woman, the child, the mansion, and the future…

The man he hated most was already racing toward his gates with doctors, security, and enough power to rip open every lie Mateo had spent years building.

By sunrise, Mateo would discover that rejecting those 17 calls had not only cost him his wife’s last trust—it had handed his worst enemy the one thing Mateo had always believed could never be taken from him, and when he finally saw who was standing beside Camila’s hospital bed…

His worst enemy was standing beside Camila’s hospital bed… holding her hand like he had already decided he would burn the entire city down before he let her die again.

Mateo did not understand what he was seeing at first.

The hospital corridor smelled like antiseptic, rainwater, and coffee gone bitter from sitting too long on a burner. Nurses moved quickly past him. Security guards stood near the ICU doors with stiff postures and earpieces visible beneath their collars.

Not hospital security.

Alejandro’s security.

Mateo’s stomach tightened.

He had arrived forty-three minutes after finally turning his phone back on in the parking garage behind the club. Seventeen missed calls from Camila. Five from an unknown number. Three from the house security line.

And one message from Alejandro.

Get to Santa Elena Hospital. Now.

Nothing else.

No insults.

No threats.

That scared Mateo more than rage would have.

Now he stood outside the intensive care wing with yesterday’s whiskey still sour in his bloodstream and neon club lights still burned into his eyes.

Then he saw him.

Alejandro Reyes stood near the window at the end of the corridor in a black dress shirt with the sleeves rolled to his forearms, rain still darkening the shoulders from whatever storm he had driven through to get there. His jaw looked tight enough to crack teeth. A surgeon was speaking quietly beside him while Alejandro listened with the terrifying stillness of a man trying not to explode.

And through the small glass panel in the ICU door, Mateo saw Camila.

Pale against white sheets.

An oxygen line beneath her nose.

Machines blinking steadily beside her bed.

And Alejandro’s hand wrapped around hers.

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Not romantic.

Not inappropriate.

Protective.

Like he had been there through the worst of the night while Mateo had been drowning himself in champagne and applause.

Mateo pushed forward immediately.

“What the hell are you doing near my wife?”

Alejandro turned slowly.

The look in his eyes stopped Mateo cold.

No shouting.

No theatrics.

Just disgust so deep it felt almost calm.

“Your wife?” Alejandro repeated quietly.

Mateo glanced toward the ICU room again. “Move away from her.”

Alejandro took one step closer instead.

“She called you seventeen times.”

The words landed like a blade sliding between ribs.

Mateo swallowed hard. “I didn’t see—”

“She begged for help while bleeding on the floor of your mansion.”

A nurse nearby stopped moving.

Even the doctor beside Alejandro went silent.

Mateo lowered his voice sharply. “This isn’t your business.”

Alejandro’s expression changed then.

Not louder.

Worse.

“The baby almost died.”

Mateo felt the blood drain from his face.

For the first time since arriving, real fear entered him.

“The baby…” His throat tightened. “Is the baby alive?”

Alejandro stared at him for a long second before answering.

“Yes.”

One word.

Cold as stone.

“But your son lost oxygen for almost four minutes because your wife was unconscious by the time my team reached her.”

My team.

Not the ambulance.

Not emergency responders.

Alejandro.

Mateo looked through the glass again.

Camila was alive because the man he hated had moved faster than he had.

The realization twisted something ugly inside him.

“She asked for me,” Alejandro said.

Mateo snapped his head toward him. “What?”

“When she realized you weren’t coming,” Alejandro continued, voice low, “she called me.”

The hallway suddenly felt too narrow.

Too hot.

“You’ve been talking to her?” Mateo demanded.

Alejandro laughed once without humor.

“She needed someone reliable.”

Mateo lunged forward before he fully realized he was moving.

Security intercepted him instantly.

One guard caught his arm. Another stepped between them.

“Careful,” Alejandro said softly. “You’re already being watched by hospital administration after arriving intoxicated to intensive care.”

Mateo jerked against the guard’s grip. “Stay away from my family.”

Alejandro’s eyes hardened.

“Your family spent the night bleeding alone while you toasted yourself in a nightclub.”

Every word hit exactly where it needed to.

Mateo opened his mouth to answer, but the ICU door opened before he could.

A doctor stepped out holding a tablet.

“Mrs. Valdés is awake,” she said carefully. “But only immediate family for now.”

Mateo moved instantly.

The doctor blocked him with one arm.

“She specifically requested Mr. Reyes first.”

Silence.

Pure.

Violent.

Silence.

Mateo stared at the doctor like he had misheard her.

“What?”

The doctor glanced uncomfortably toward Alejandro. “She’s extremely distressed. We’re trying to keep her blood pressure stable.”

Mateo’s voice cracked. “I’m her husband.”

“And she asked for him.”

Alejandro did not smile.

That somehow made it worse.

He only walked toward the door with the controlled movement of a man carrying something fragile and dangerous at the same time.

Mateo watched him disappear into the ICU room.

Then he saw it through the glass.

Camila reaching weakly toward Alejandro the second he entered.

Not toward her husband.

Toward the man who answered the phone.

Mateo felt something inside him begin to collapse.

Because for the first time in years, he understood a truth rich men spend their lives trying to outrun:

The person who saves your family in their worst moment becomes impossible to compete with afterward.

And inside that hospital room, while dawn slowly broke over Monterrey and rain crawled down the windows like tears, Camila whispered something to Alejandro that Mateo could not hear…

But whatever she said made Alejandro go completely still.

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Then slowly, very slowly, he turned his head and looked back through the ICU glass directly at Mateo.

And the expression on his face was not victory.

It was war.