LOGINI woke up feeling like something was sitting on my chest.
It wasnt emotionally or physically, It was heavy and was pressing weight that hadn’t been there when I fell asleep and still didn’t leave when I sat up. My head felt thick and my stomach was doing that same slow, unsettled rolling it had been doing for day,like bad weather that couldn’t decide whether to stay or pass. I had been telling myself it was stress. Twelve days of living in a hotel room on bad coffee and broken sleep, while building a legal case against one of the most powerful families in New York. Stress felt like the obvious explanation. I’d been under pressure before but my body answered with headaches, a poor appetite of a few sleepless nights but this just felt like an extreme version of that,that was what I told myself. By mid-morning, the heaviness still hadn’t gone,a headache had settled right behind my eyes, pulsing every time I tried to look at the laptop screen. Eventually, I had to admit that building my case would go a lot better if I could actually see straight,I needed something for the headache maybe something for the nausea too. There was a pharmacy attached to a small medical clinic four blocks from the hotel not the one near the corner that I'd been avoiding since the woman behind the counter had seen me twice already this week and had the particular recognition in her eyes of someone who read the news and placed faces,I didn't need that not today, not for this. This one was quieter and I had no connection to,it is tucked into the ground floor of a building that also housed a dentist and an accountant, the kind of block that minded its own business because everyone on it was too busy minding their own to care about anyone else's. I pulled on my coat and went. ********** The clinic pharmacy offered a walk-in consultation service….a nurse available for minor ailments. No appointment needed, the sign said. I hadn’t planned on seeing anyone,I ust needed painkillers, maybe something for the nausea, and then I wanted to get back to my room and move on with the day. But the pharmacist, an older woman with reading glasses hanging around her neck looked at me for a moment when I walked up to the counter. She looked at my face the way certain experienced medical people look at faces, not socially but professionally, reading something there that I hadn't announced. "What can I help you with today?" she asked. "Headache," I said. "And nausea, I've had both for a few days, I think it's stress-related, I just need something to take the edge off so I can function." She nodded slowly and asked me a few questions……when the headache started, where exactly it was located, whether I'd been eating and sleeping regularly. I answered honestly. She listened, still doing that reading thing with her eyes. Then she said, "Before I recommend anything, I'd like you to step into the consultation room for just a moment." I blinked. "It's really just a headache…." "I know," she said with a small smile. Her voice was kind but firm, like someone used to getting people to listen. "It'll only take a few minutes." I followed her into a small, tidy room with two chairs, an examination table, and a faded blood pressure chart on the wall. She took my blood pressure first and it was slightly elevated,then she looked up from her notes. "When was your last menstrual cycle?” I opened my mouth to answer and stopped. The question hung in the air,I stared at her for a moment, then started counting backward from the weeks,the dates and the last few chaotic days of my life and as the numbers settled into place, something cold slipped through me because I hadn't thought about it before now not even once. I had been so consumed by everything else….the divorce, the investigation, the letters, the threats, the endless search for proof.Every waking moment had been spent trying to stay one step ahead,I was so busy surviving that I never stopped to count backward. I counted now. For a moment, neither of us said anything. "I think..." I began then the words died halfway out. I swallowed and tried again. "I'm not sure." The nurse looked at me over her reading glasses with an expression that was not unkind. "Would you be open to taking a test?" she said. "Just to rule it out, before we recommend anything." I almost laughed….the reaction came from pure disbelief,not because it was funny but because the idea felt impossible. So impossible that for a second, I didn't know how else to react. "That's not..." I began,I shook my head. "I don't think that's necessary,It was only one night.One time,with my……." I stopped myself from saying ‘husband’ because he wasn't that anymore. "With someone. Weeks ago,I really don't think…." "Probably not," she said. "But I’d rather be careful because some of the medication I'd give you for nausea isn't safe during pregnancy." She offered a small smile. "It's just a precaution. Five minutes and we'll know.” She was so calm about it, so completely free of drama,that refusing suddenly felt like making a bigger deal out of it than it was. "Fine," I said. ******** She gave me the test and directed me to the bathroom across the hall. I kept telling myself it was a formality. Just something they had to rule out before giving me medication and sending me back to my day. One night didn't automatically mean anything,It had been one night, plenty of people had one night and nothing came of it. I followed the instructions then set the test on the edge of the sink,washed my hands then I fixed my eyes on the framed watercolor hanging on the wall with flowers and soft colors. The kind of picture no one actually noticed unless they were trying very hard not to think about something else. I waited the required time then I picked up the test and looked down. For a second, my brain didn't understand what I was seeing. Two lines. I picked it up and looked more closely not because I hadn't seen it, because I had. My eyes understood before the rest of me did and some stubborn part of my mind seemed to believe that if I looked again, the answer might be different. It didn't. I sat down on the closed toilet lid and just held it. One night. One night in a penthouse kitchen eating sandwiches and talking about real things, followed by a few hours that had felt like the first genuinely true thing that had ever happened to me and now this. Now two lines on a test in a clinic bathroom four blocks from a hotel room I couldn't really afford, while the man responsible believed I was the worst decision he'd ever made. The irony was so large and so complete that I couldn't find the edges of it. I sat there for longer than I should have. Then something shifted. It wasn't a decision so much as a realization,a quiet certainty that appeared beneath all the shock and confusion. Everything else could wait,there was only one thing I knew for sure. He deserves to know. Not because I wanted anything from him,not because it changed anything between us and not because it gave me an advantage. I would tell him because he had a right to know, whatever had happened between us, whatever lies he believed, he was this child's father and no matter how much he had hurt me, and I couldn't live with myself if I kept that from him. I stood up,straightened my coat and looked at myself in the mirror. My eyes were wet and my jaw was tight. I didn't look ready for this, but that didn't seem to matter then I opened the door and walked back across the hall. The nurse looked up when I came back in,her eyes met mine and lingered for a second.She understood immediately but she didn't make a big thing of it and didn't offer pity or surprise,she simply reached for her notepad and waited for me to sit down. "Okay," she said gently. "Let's talk about what comes next." I sat down in the chair across from her. Outside the small window, the city moved through its afternoon without knowing or caring that everything had just changed. I wrapped both hands together in my lap. ‘Two of us now,’ I thought. I didn't feel less alone but I felt less small. And for right now, in this small clean room with the blood pressure poster on the wall and the kind nurse across from me and two lines on a test that had changed the entire shape of my future, I didn't need to think any further than that. Not yet.I woke up feeling like something was sitting on my chest.It wasnt emotionally or physically, It was heavy and was pressing weight that hadn’t been there when I fell asleep and still didn’t leave when I sat up.My head felt thick and my stomach was doing that same slow, unsettled rolling it had been doing for day,like bad weather that couldn’t decide whether to stay or pass.I had been telling myself it was stress.Twelve days of living in a hotel room on bad coffee and broken sleep, while building a legal case against one of the most powerful families in New York.Stress felt like the obvious explanation. I’d been under pressure before but my body answered with headaches, a poor appetite of a few sleepless nights but this just felt like an extreme version of that,that was what I told myself.By mid-morning, the heaviness still hadn’t gone,a headache had settled right behind my eyes, pulsing every time I tried to look at the laptop screen.Eventually, I had to admit that building my c
I hadn't planned on writing to him.For eleven days, I'd been focused and disciplined, building my case one careful piece at a time and keeping my attention on what I could prove instead of what I felt, because feelings were expensive,you could afford them when you had a home, a family, and somewhere safe to fall apart when they became too heavy but right now, I had none of that.I had none of those things right now so I pushed the feelings aside and focused on the work instead.But it was 1am on a Tuesday and I had been staring at the water stain on the ceiling for two hours and somewhere across this city Jason Crane was sleeping in a penthouse that still smelled like the night we spent together ,and he believed truly believed that I had betrayed him before our wedding day was over.That was the one thing I couldn't push aside. Not the divorce, not the headlines, not even my family's silence but the idea that he was walking around with a version of me in his head that had never exis
She called at seven in the morning.I was already awake because sleep was still doing that thing where it arrived late and left early, like a bad houseguest who didn't understand the arrangement. I'd been lying in the dark since five, running through everything I knew and everything I still needed to know, the way you replay a route in your head before a long drive to make sure you haven't missed a turn.The phone buzzed on the pillow beside me and I reached for it, I saw the name on the screen it was my sister Sloane.I stared at it as it rang two times then I answered."Serenity."Her voice was different,that was the first thing I noticed before the words and before anything she actually said, I heard what was missing,the softness was gone.The careful sisterly warmth, that particular tone she'd spent years perfecting, the one that made her sound like she was always slightly worried about you in the most loving possible way,all of that was gone.What was left was flat and deliberat
The legal aid clinic was in a converted townhouse about three blocks from the university.Outside, it didn’t look like much, just a dark green door, a small brass plate with the name on it, and two steps up from the sidewalk.It was the exact kind of place you’d walk right past without really noticing unless you were specifically looking for it,I found myself wondering if that was entirely the point whether the people who came here preferred it that way, choosing a door that didn’t announce itself to the world, I was officially one of those people now.The attorney who saw me was young, likely in his late twenties, with that deeply tired look that doesn’t come from age but from carrying too many cases at once while still managing to care about all of them . His name was Marcus Webb. By ten in the morning, he already had a yellow legal pad half-filled,he listened to my story without interrupting.I didn’t realize how much I needed that until it actually happened.When I finished, he l
Dana's office smelled like old books and strong coffee.... not the cheap kind, but the real kind that filled a room and made it feel lived in and the kind that told me someone here paid attention to the little things.The rich aroma hit me the moment she opened the door, and something in my chest loosened without permission and enough to notice, I hadn’t felt safe in eight days.She didn’t say anything when I walked in,she just stepped aside and let me enter and that was her way, no unnecessary ceremony, no soft welcome, just open space where you could sit down and speak.Her office looked exactly like I remembered from my university days… organized chaos,stacks of files sat everywhere, messy at first glance until you realized they actually had a system. Two monitors glowed with dense spreadsheets I didn’t even pretend to understand yet.On the edge of the desk was a coffee mug that read… I Survived Forensic Accounting. It was a gift from a former student, she’d told me once not becau
The notification popped up before I could stop it. I’d been doing fine all these while four days of discipline, news alerts turned off, social media deleted. My phone was reduced to what it was supposed to be calls, messages, documentation, nothing more. I was building something carefully, and I couldn’t afford distractions but muscle memory betrayed me then I opened the wrong app, and there it was.Then I saw a photograph of Jason Crane and Sloane Grayson at the Whitmore Charity Gala on black tie and flash lighting,the kind of image designed to look effortless even though nothing about it ever is.Sloane stood beside him in a champagne-colored dress, her hand resting on his arm with the ease of someone who had practiced the gesture long enough for it to look natural.Jason was in his suit which I recognized immediately,he had worn it before, on the morning of the wedding, before everything fell apart.The caption below the image was “New York’s Most Powerful Couple?” It was a quest
Everywhere went silent across the dining table where nobody moved and nobody spoke, Sloane's smile completely frozen on her face. Jason looked at her for a long moment before finally setting down his glass and saying calmly, "If circumstances had been different, I would still have married the woma
Three months earlier."Congratulations, Serenity, you're getting married."The fork slipped from my fingers, clattering loudly against my plate,the dining room fell dead silent while I stared across the table at my father. "Excuse me?"Dad didn't even look up,he just calmly dabbed his mouth with a
I don't even remember how I got out of Jason’s office.One minute I was looking at the man I loved handing me divorce papers the next, I was trapped inside the elevator, staring at my reflection in the mirrored walls.The woman looking back at me was a stranger,her lipstick was smeared,her eyes wer
Twenty-four hours. That was how long I lasted as Mrs. Crane, I stared at the papers on Jason’s desk. I kept waiting for the words to scramble into a joke, but they just sat there, heavy and permanent.DIVORCE AGREEMENT.My throat went completely dry just a few hours ago. I'd woken up in his bed w







