MasukAria's pov
My husband is not a cheater.
My husband is not a cheater.
Those words kept ringing in my head like a broken record. I held onto them like they were the last solid thing in a world that suddenly felt shaky.
I know my husband. He could be thoughtless, yes. He forgot things, He put work first far too often but cheating? Being with someone else?
No. He would never do that to me.
I kept whispering it to myself as I walked into the hotel lobby.
If you really believed he wouldn't do that to you…..then why are you here?
The question came from that small voice in the back of my head. The one I usually ignored.
But this time, I didn’t have an answer.
I guess four years of being slowly forgotten will do that to a person. Create cracks Letting doubt creep in.
If I had gotten this text four years ago, I would’ve blocked the number and laughed about it in bed with him. We probably would’ve ended up having sex just to prove how ridiculous it was.
But that version of us felt far away now. Like someone else's story.
I reached the door. Room 303.
My hand hovered over the wood, fingers trembling. The number stared back at me like it knew something I didn’t.
I was about to knock, to put an end to this ridiculous doubt, when I noticed the door was already open enough to invite me in. Or warn me to stay away.
I stood there, frozen, every nerve buzzing. My chest rose and fell too fast, like my lungs couldn’t decide if they wanted air or not.
Please… let this be nothing. Let this be a mistake. Let him still be mine.
I pushed the door gently, and it gave way without resistance.
At first, it was quiet. The kind of silence that almost convinced me I’d been wrong to come. But then I heard it.
The rhythm of skin against skin.
A woman’s moan, breathless and needy.
The bed creaking in a steady, merciless tempo.
Each sound was a knife, sliding deeper, twisting.
The bedroom door inside the suite was slightly open. Just enough to give me a glimpse if I leaned forward. I told myself to turn around, to leave before the truth branded itself into me forever.
But I didn’t.
I took that one step.
And I saw.
Marcel.
My husband.
Standing behind her—his secretary. His hands gripping her waist, his body pressed into hers. He was inside her.
For a moment, my brain refused to understand what my eyes were showing me. It was like staring at a stranger who happened to wear my husband’s skin.
But then he slowed. His movements faltered, like he felt the air shift, like he knew I was there.
Panic shot through me and I backed away from the door, heart hammering so loud I was sure he could hear it.
My hand flew to my mouth. I swallowed so hard it hurt, tears already stinging at the back of my eyes.
A part of me had expected this.
No one changes overnight. No one becomes a stranger for no reason.
But God, I never thought we’d get here.
Not us.
Memories flooded me in fragments—his promises, our wedding vows …everything. Each one shattered in my chest, splintering into dust
I didn’t even run. I didn’t scream. I didn’t throw anything. I just walked like my legs were carrying someone else’s body.
My arms wrapped around my stomach. That scar beneath my clothes pulsed like it knew.
It’s the part of me that never lets me forget what I lost. What I’ll never have. The piece of me that makes me feel broken. Barren. Incomplete. Like I’m not enough. Like I’ll never be enough.
I kept walking. One foot in front of the other. Until their sounds were nothing but an echo behind me.
I reached the door and pulled it closed.
Firm. Final.
And then I stood in the hallway, staring at nothing.
I tried to take a step but the floor tilted ,my vision blurred and I couldn't breathe
My chest was tight, I pressed my hand to the wall to steady myself but it didn’t help.
Before I could hit the ground, someone caught me.
Strong arms wrapped around my waist, steadying me.
“Breathe,” he said gently, his voice calm and even. “I need you to do that for me. Just breathe. Count with me.”
His voice anchored me. We counted together, slowly, as I tried to take deep breaths in and out. My chest still felt tight, but I followed his voice like it was the only thing keeping me upright.
Before I could fully understand what was happening, my head started spinning. Everything went fuzzy, and I let the darkness take me.
~~~~~
I woke up with a groan, my body heavy and unfamiliar.
I turned my head slowly and saw a nurse by the IV stand, adjusting the drip.
“Oh my, you're finally awake,” she said, sounding relieved. “Give me just a minute to get the doctor.”
She walked to the door, then paused as it opened from the other side .
“She’s awake, Doctor.”
The words echoed through my mind, but my heart sank as everything from last night came rushing back. The hotel. The room. What I saw. What I couldn’t unsee.
I sat up slowly, my whole body aching like I had run through a storm.
“Good morning, Mrs. King,” the doctor said kindly, stepping into the room.
“Good morning,” I replied quietly. My voice sounded far away, like it belonged to someone else.
“Please…..what happened to me, Doctor?”
I needed to know. I needed to hear something that made sense. Because right now, nothing in my world did
He gave me a small smile. “Oh, it’s nothing serious Just stress and exhaustion. You need to rest, try to relax.”
I nodded slowly, not fully absorbing his words. My eyes shifted to the side when I noticed movement near the door.
Someone was standing there, just watching me.
I turned fully to look.
It was Aiden.
Before I could even begin to process why he was here or what that meant, the doctor’s next words froze everything inside me.
“It’s not good for you. Or the baby.”
I nodded out of habit.
Then his words clicked.
Wait.
I blinked, and my heart skipped a beat.
I looked up at him, confusion etched on my face.
“Excuse me?”
Aria’s POVWarmth.That was the first thing that pulled me from sleep again—soft, enveloping warmth that felt foreign and safe at the same time. My body was heavy, like I’d been dragged through an ocean and left to dry on the shore. My eyelids fluttered open slowly, the room coming into focus in hazy pieces.Sunlight filtered through half-drawn curtains, painting golden stripes across the hotel bed. The sheets were tangled around my legs, crisp and clean, smelling faintly of detergent and something warmer—him.I shifted slightly, my cheek brushing against the pillow. My throat was raw from crying and I didn't even want to imagine how puffy my eyes would be if I looked in a mirror. Everything from last night crashed back: the bridge, the fall that didn't really happen, his arms pulling me up, the confession that had torn out of me. I’d cried myself to sleep against his chest and he’d held me until I stopped shaking.And now…I turned my head.The bathroom door was cracked open, s
Aria’s POV “Would you please stop screaming.” The words cut through the rush of wind and the roaring in my ears. I opened my eyes. For a second, my brain refused to process what I was seeing. I wasn’t on the rail anymore sure, but I wasn’t falling either. I was... hanging. Suspended over dark, endless water, my feet kicking uselessly at nothing. My heart slammed so hard against my ribs it hurt. I sucked in a sharp breath and almost choked on it. I slowly lifted my gaze. Blue eyes stared back at me. Not soft blue. Not bright. Dark blue—deep and cold, like water at midnight. The kind that swallowed up the light instead of reflecting it. But more than the water below me, more than the height, more than the fact that I was one weak grip away from dying—what terrified me was the smile on his face. It wasn’t cruel. It was calm. “Are you CRAZY?!” I screamed, my voice breaking as panic finally took full control. He didn’t flinch. Didn’t even tighten his grip. “Keep ye
ARIAOne month.That’s how long it’s been since I left the hospital.I can walk now—slow, shaky, with a limp on bad days, but enough that the hospital finally agreed I could leave and “start putting things in order.”In other words, gather the three hundred and four thousand dollars I owe them.It’s cute, really. They trust me enough to leave. I don’t even trust myself anymore.The first place I went was the insurance company.Just like the head nurse said—they acted like they’d never heard of me. Not my case. Not my parents’ names. Nothing.They smiled at me like I was confused, like I’d mixed up my identity with someone else’s.So I went to the next place.The bank.~~~“Please look again,” I begged, gripping the counter so tightly my hands shook. “My parents can’t have zero dollars. It’s not possible.”The woman didn’t bother hiding her annoyance. She tapped her long nails on the desk, eyes flat, bored, already done with me.Bitch.“And I’m telling you,” she said slowly, like I
ARIASomething is wrong.I know it.I can feel it deep in my bones, the way you feel the shift in weather before rain.But one thing is certain: I can’t stay in this hospital anymore.I can’t spend the rest of my life a cripple either.“You’ve got this, Aria.”Aiden’s voice cuts through my thoughts. He’s at the other end of the mat with his arms wide open, like he’s ready to catch me even if I fly at him full speed—except right now, two steps feel like a marathon.The first time I managed those two steps, he was so proud I cried like a baby.My fingers tighten on the parallel bars until my knuckles burn. My legs ache, sharp and deep, like they’re protesting every second I try to use them.“Let go of the bars,” he coaxes. “Even if you hop, I’ll catch you. I promise.”I shake my head. Too scared to even breathe properly.I hate this.No—I fucking hate this.I used to be a runner. I used to feel the earth fly beneath my feet. Now every step feels like I’m seven months old, wobbling throu
Two months laterAria’s POV“As I said before, we would call child services, but by the time you check out you’ll already be eighteen… of legal age… so it would be pointless.”The doctor’s voice felt far away, like he was speaking through water.Child services. Eighteen. Legal age.None of it mattered. None of it compared to the one thing he had told me already.My parents and my siblings died in the crash.Mum and dad were dead on arrival Olivia died a month ago and my brother a week before I woke up Gone. All of them.So it was just me now. Only me…Orphan at Seventeen He kept talking, flipping through my chart like it was any other Tuesday but he did was trying to sound sympathetic but I can tell he's been doing this he's whole life sharing bad news“I’ll run you through the current status of your body. Your legs were affected by the accident but not severely. You’ll be put on physiotherapy for about a month and everything should return to normal. There is also a ninety eight per
Aria’s POV — age 17 I could hear them from the hallway. My parents.. They were arguing again there voices overlapping, like they were both trying to win a war nobody even understood anymore. It was always about the same thing lately — his job as a Reporter …mom used to love it but now she hates it . I tried knocking but they didn’t hear it. Or maybe they did and just didn’t stop. My stomach twisted. Today was supposed to be peaceful. Today mattered. I took a breath, pushed the door open. They both froze mid-fight, mid-anger, mid-breath “Mom… you’re supposed to help with my hair,” I said, peeking in. My voice came out small even though I hated sounding small. She nodded, jaw tight, eyes still burning from whatever she was yelling seconds ago. I didn’t wait. I turned and rushed back to my room like stepping away could make me forget the shouting Once I got to my room I sat at the vanity table…looking at the Family photo on the table Dad was holding mom by the waist, they lo







