LOGIN
Eva's Pov:
The first thing I felt was silence.
The only sound that reached me was the steady, mechanical beeping of machines. My head throbbed, every inch of my body weighed down by a heaviness that felt more like chains than flesh, and beneath it all was a numbness that frightened me more than pain ever could.
It wasn’t the kind of silence that comforts, the kind that wraps around you like a blanket. No— this was hollow, sterile silence, the kind that belongs to hospital rooms where machines hum faintly and the air reeks of antiseptic. My eyelids resisted me, heavy as though they carried the burden of years instead of hours, but I forced them open.
White ceiling.
White sheets.
White walls.
Everything sterile.
Everything foreign.
It didn’t take long to realize where I was— lying on a hospital bed, surrounded by emptiness. My mind scrambled, desperate to stitch together the broken pieces of memory, but they slipped through my grasp like shards of glass.
I had hoped Ryan would be there— the first face I wanted to see, I hoped to see when I opened my eyes.
My husband.
My anchor.
My torment.
But there was no sign of him.
Instead, the last image that lingered in my mind was Shefali.
My Shifu, whom I lovingly called Fu.
My best friend.
My soul sister.
Her face had been the final one I saw, like a passing shadow, making me believe for a moment that I had died and crossed into heaven, where she waited.
But I don’t deserve her. Not after what I did years ago. Never once did I imagine she would leave me, leave this world, and go. I had clung to the hope that someday I would get the chance to apologize, to beg for forgiveness.
But perhaps I don’t deserve even that relief.
That's when it hit me......
Why was I even here?
What had happened?
Who brought me here?
My mind wandered, desperate, pushing further to recollect the events that had led me to this point.
And then came the ache. A dull, gnawing ache in my chest— not physical, but something deeper. Memory clawing its way back, demanding to be felt.
I tried to piece together the fragments, but they came in jagged shards. His voice raised, mine trembling.
Another fight.
Another storm.
Always the same refrain— his negligence, his absence, his indifference. His name dragged through tabloids, cozy pictures with another rising model splashed across social media. He had brushed it off as a PR stunt, a desperate attempt to stay in the limelight after his last two films had failed.
But I hadn’t cared about the scandal. I had begged him, not for money, not for gifts, but for something far simpler.
His presence.
His care.
His love.
No woman should ever be forced to beg her husband for love and care — least of all during pregnancy.
No woman should be trapped in the humiliation of seeing her husband’s name linked to yet another woman, splashed across headlines, while she stands helpless, powerless, enduring the sting in silence.
No woman should be hidden away like a dirty secret, treated as shame, erased from the world even after becoming a wife.
That has been my life since marrying Ryan Williams.
Years of it.
Each one filled with fragile hope that he might look at me differently, that he might love me again, that he might remember how to care.
But Ryan Williams— the man adored by millions— had no affection left to give me.
I shook my head, forcing the thoughts away. They weren’t good for me, not good for my baby. I tried to push further, to remember what had happened, to piece together the fragments that had led me here.
I remembered standing in our living room, my hands pressed against my swollen belly, eight months pregnant and exhausted.
My voice had broken as I told him I felt invisible. That while the world saw him as a star, I was fading into shadows. His mother’s taunts echoed even now— sharp words slicing me open, reminding me I was never enough, never worthy of their name.
And Ryan… he had laughed. Not cruelly, but dismissively. As if my pain was nothing more than a trivial inconvenience. He had thrown money at me, crisp notes fluttering across the table like confetti.
“Buy whatever you need,” he had said, his tone cold, detached.
What I needed was him.
But I dared not say it out loud.
Because love, in our marriage, had become a forbidden word.
I saw myself again, trembling, standing before him.
Every fight was the same.
Every wound reopened.
Every scar deepened.
My voice cracked as I told him he wasn’t there for me, that he hadn’t cared for me through the pregnancy, that his films mattered more than the child we had created. His eyes had been distant, glazed with exhaustion— or perhaps disinterest.
Every minute of that fight replayed in my mind now, like a cruel film reel.
The way my heart had pounded when I dared to speak.
The way his jaw had tightened, as though my words were an attack.
The way his mother had appeared, venom dripping, reminding me I was nothing but a burden.
I had tried to help him, countless times. But all I ever heard from him was the same bitter refrain— that I was his bad luck. That after marrying me, his career had collapsed. That I had jinxed his life.
I had tried to tell him it wasn’t me. That his choices of scripts, his stubborn insistence on acting when his true gift was music, were what dragged him down. His voice was his strength, his music his soul. But he never listened. He believed only looks mattered for an actor, not talent to act.
And me?
To him, I was nothing but an illiterate fool.
A plain, ignorant woman who didn’t understand the world. A shame he had to hide. He paid millions to erase every trace of us, every photograph, every mention— except for once.
Ryan’s absence from doctor’s appointments.
His mother’s constant reminders that I was replaceable.
The way he had chosen fame over family, applause over affection.
And yet, I stayed.
Because leaving him felt impossible.
Because I had built my life around the illusion of him.
And that illusion was my greatest vulnerability.
In our marriage, vulnerability was weakness.
And weakness was unforgivable.
And I was already too weak.
But lying here in this hospital bed, I felt something shift.
I closed my eyes, and the hospital room dissolved into memory.
My body felt unbearably heavy, my mind spiraling into fragments I couldn’t control.
Instinctively, my hand flew to my belly, desperate to feel the reassuring flutter of life within.
No… no… I can’t overthink. It’s not good for you, baby.
I whispered silently, caressing the curve of my stomach. But the silence inside me was deafening.
No movement.
No response.
Panic surged like fire through my veins.
Where is my baby?
What happened?
The emptiness clawed at me, terror rising until I could barely breathe. My chest tightened, my breath hitched, and my eyes darted wildly around the sterile room.
No one was there.
The silence mocked me, cruel and unrelenting.
And then, like a flood, the memories rushed back. The fight. Ryan’s voice sharp, mine breaking. His storming out of the house, leaving me shattered. My own steps carrying me outside, into the night, desperate for air, for escape.
The headlights.
The car.
Damon’s infamous car, Rolls-Royce Sweeptail— or so I thought.
But no… it wasn’t him.
It was her.
Shefali.
My best friend, who died years ago, the one I had abandoned when I chose a life with Ryan. She had died, and yet in that moment before impact or after impact I don't remember, but one thing I am certain of is that I saw her— clear as day, as if she had returned to haunt me.
It wasn’t possible.
It had to be a hallucination.
Stress twisting my mind, grief playing cruel tricks. My pulse raced, panic rising again. I pressed the emergency button, desperate, frantic. I had no memory of childbirth. Was my baby safe? I had no idea.
The need to see my daughter twisted inside me like a glass shard piercing my insides. I wanted to scream, to tear the silence apart, to demand answers.
And then, mercifully, the door opened.
A nurse entered, her face calm, her voice steady. She checked me, reassured me, and told me that I gave birth to a healthy and beautiful baby and that my baby was fine. But the fear didn’t leave. It lingered, coiled tight in my chest.
I had to see my baby girl and my son.
While something inside me whispered soon everything is going to change.
Ryan’s POV Astounded would be an understatement. This change in Eva… I had never seen anything like it. She was always the quiet, obedient one — never retorting, never arguing, never shouting. No matter how far someone pushed, she endured it. She never misbehaved, never talked back, especially not to my mother.If it had been anyone else in Eva’s place, they would have made my mom’s life — or Tessa’s life — hell, especially with the kind of support and soft spot Damon has for her. Both Tessa and my mom treated Eva miserably, yet she never once complained. That resilience, that patience… it was something I secretly admired about her.But today?Today was different. Tess ran away, yes, but that had more to do with her theatrics than Eva’s words. Still, I couldn’t ignore the look on my mother’s face — traumatized, shaken — after Eva’s outburst. I felt bad for Mom, but she was the one who brought up divorce and custody.The truth is, there was a time I wanted to get rid of Eva. What I ha
Eva's Pov:I sat quietly, watching Ryan and Caroline argue, their voices rising and falling like waves crashing against each other. To anyone else, it might have looked like a mother and son locked in a heated disagreement. But to me, it was something far more dangerous.A deep part of me whispered that this was just another performance. Another carefully staged drama meant to corner me, to manipulate me into surrendering — into agreeing to sign divorce papers and hand over custody of my children to Ryan and Tessa, or worse, to Caroline.The thought made my stomach twist. Caroline had already trapped me once, forcing me to sign a prenup under the guise of “family honor.”I was never sure if Ryan even knew about it. She had insisted that the only way she would allow Ryan to marry me was if I signed it discreetly, without anyone else knowing. It wasn’t just any prenup — it was cruel, humiliating, filled with conditions designed to strip me of dignity and power. And yet, I signed it. I s
Eva's Pov:It was almost laughable — watching them all make decisions for my daughter. Yes, Ryan may be her father, but he had barely been present throughout my pregnancy. His projects, his production company, his endless pursuits kept him away. I tried not to blame him; after all, he was the breadwinner of our family. But the truth remained — he hadn’t been there.And yet, hearing him and even his father speak a few words in my defense touched me. I hadn’t expected it.Caroline’s voice cut through the room, sharp and venomous.“Cole, what is wrong with you? I can understand Ryan having a soft spot for her, but you? You’re hurting Tessa. Look at that poor girl — she wishes to be with Ryan, even loves his children, ready to accept all his flaws and past mistakes. I’m doing this for our family, for our son. Ryan is our only son, and she”— her eyes flicked toward me with disgust —“is a stain in his life. Ryan deserves someone like Tessa. Perfect. Someone who can live up to our family’s
Eva's Pov:And just like that, the room fell silent again — cold, sterile, heavy with the weight of everything unsaid. I could feel it in my gut, a warning that something bad was about to unfold. But exhaustion pressed down on me, and I had no strength left to dwell on it. I let my eyes close, hoping for a brief escape.The door creaked open. I forced my eyes open, expecting Damon perhaps— or Ryan, though hope was a fragile thing. Instead, Ryan’s parents walked in, their faces etched with disappointment. Yet, to my surprise, they managed a smile. And then I saw him.My little boy.No wonder they smiled they loved to pretend like the loving gradparents around Eric.Eric rushed toward me, his small arms wrapping around me with a desperate strength only a child could muster.“Mommy…” he whispered, his voice trembling as tears streaked his cheeks.“You scared me, Mommy. Daddy said a car hit you… Daddy said Uncle D will punish the bad woman who hurt you.”His words broke me and healed me a
Eva's Pov:Honestly, “it broke my heart” was an understatement.I had just delivered a baby — His baby — was it wrong of me to expect my husband to be beside me?It had been almost half an hour since the nurse last checked on me, yet there was still no sign of Ryan.Tears slipped down my cheeks before I could stop them. I sat there, lost in thoughts, staring at the sterile white walls that seemed to mock my loneliness.A soft knock at the door stirred a flicker of hope inside me — maybe Ryan had finally come. But when the door opened, it wasn’t him.It was Damon.The man I least expected to have my back.Since Shefali’s death, he hadn’t been the same. It took time and effort to bring him back from that darkness, but now he was like the big brother I never had. He was also the reason I met Ryan — the reason I became Mrs. Ryan Williams instead of just another nameless woman in Ryan's life. Without Damon, my children would have been branded bastards by society.For that, I would always b
Eva's Pov:The first thing I felt was silence.The only sound that reached me was the steady, mechanical beeping of machines. My head throbbed, every inch of my body weighed down by a heaviness that felt more like chains than flesh, and beneath it all was a numbness that frightened me more than pain ever could.It wasn’t the kind of silence that comforts, the kind that wraps around you like a blanket. No— this was hollow, sterile silence, the kind that belongs to hospital rooms where machines hum faintly and the air reeks of antiseptic. My eyelids resisted me, heavy as though they carried the burden of years instead of hours, but I forced them open.White ceiling.White sheets.White walls.Everything sterile.Everything foreign.It didn’t take long to realize where I was— lying on a hospital bed, surrounded by emptiness. My mind scrambled, desperate to stitch together the broken pieces of memory, but they slipped through my grasp like shards of glass.I had hoped Ryan would be there—







