I can't sleep. It's 2 AM, and I'm lying in bed listening to James breathe beside me, my mind spinning with questions I'm afraid to ask. The documents I found keep flashing through my memory like a slideshow of secrets. Fifty thousand dollars. New Life Fertility Clinic. Chicago. What was he buying? At 10 weeks pregnant, insomnia is supposed to be normal. The books say it's hormones, anxiety about becoming a mother, and the body's way of preparing for all those sleepless nights ahead. But this isn't pregnancy insomnia. This is the kind of sleeplessness that comes from living with secrets. I slip out of bed as quietly as possible and pad to the kitchen for some water. The baby is still too small for me to feel movement, but I find myself rubbing my barely-there bump anyway, a gesture that's becoming automatic. "It's okay, sweetheart," I whisper. "Mommy's just thinking." But it's not okay. Nothing about this is OK. I'm standing at the sink, staring at our dark backyard, whe
The sensation started weeks ago in the morning while I was making breakfast. A prickle at the back of my neck, like invisible eyes burning into my skin. I turn around, expecting to see James watching me from the doorway, but the kitchen is empty. Just my imagination. Has to be. At 10 weeks pregnant, everything feels different. My body is changing in ways I never expected, and maybe my mind is too. The pregnancy books all talk about heightened senses and increased anxiety. Maybe that's all this is. But the feeling follows me throughout the day. When I'm folding laundry in the bedroom, I catch myself glancing toward the window. When I'm reading in the living room, I keep looking over my shoulder. Even when I take a shower, I find myself peeking around the curtain, water dripping into my eyes. "You're being paranoid," I whisper to my reflection in the bathroom mirror. "First trimester nerves." But deep down, I know it's more than that. Living with James has taught me
The restless energy had been building for weeks now, clawing at Ace's insides like a caged wolf desperate for freedom. He stood at the floor-to-ceiling windows of his penthouse office, watching the city sprawl beneath him as dusk painted the sky in shades of amber and crimson. His reflection stared back dark hair slightly disheveled from running his hands through it, sharp jawline tight with tension, and eyes that glowed with an inner fire that had nothing to do with the setting sun. *She's close.* The thought had been a constant whisper in his mind for the past month, growing stronger with each passing day. His wolf paced restlessly beneath his skin, whining and pushing against the careful control Ace had spent thirty-two years perfecting. After decades of searching, of disappointment, of wondering if the Moon Goddess had forgotten to create his other half, the pull was finally here. "Alpha?" Marcus, his Beta, stepped into the office without knocking—a privilege ea
My stomach dropped. "Oh?" He nodded, sipping his coffee. "Poor girl looked exhausted. Said Zoe's been sleeping at the office." Was he lying? Had he somehow seen our text exchange? Or was it just a coincidence? "Actually," I said carefully, "Zoe texted last night. We're having lunch today." James's mug paused halfway to his lips. "Is that so?" "She's picking me up at noon." I took a bite of my sandwich, forcing myself to chew and swallow despite my churning stomach. "That's odd," he said, setting his mug down with deliberate precision. "Given what her assistant told me." "Maybe she managed to clear some time," I suggested, keeping my voice light. "You know Zoe always makes time for friends no matter how busy she is." James studied me for a long moment. "What are you two planning to talk about?" The question hung in the air between us. Something in his tone made my skin prickle. "Just catching up," I said with a shrug, hop
The journal became my sanctuary over the following weeks. While James worked in his home office, I poured my fears, suspicions, and memories onto its pages, trying to make sense of the fragments. *April 17: James brought home roses again today. Said they reminded him of me, beautiful but delicate. The way he said "delicate" made my skin crawl. Like I'm something that might break if handled too roughly. Or something that already has.* *April 20: Started going through old emails about our fertility journey. Found messages about the Chicago clinic, but nothing alarming. James caught me and got upset. Said it wasn't "healthy" to dwell on the past. Suggested we delete all the old treatment emails since they're "triggers." I pretended to agree but saved them to a separate account first.* *April 22: Morning sickness is finally easing. Eight weeks pregnant today. Baby is the size of a raspberry, according to my app. James wants to start buying nursery furniture already. W
The townhouse felt different when we returned the next day, smaller somehow, as if the walls had inched closer together during our absence. James hovered at my elbow as I climbed the front steps, his hand never leaving the small of my back. "Easy does it," he murmured, as though I might shatter if I moved too quickly. "I'm pregnant, not made of glass," I said, attempting humor but hearing the edge in my voice. He didn't respond, just guided me toward the living room couch where he'd arranged pillows and blankets in a nest-like formation. "I've got soup warming on the stove," he said, helping me sit. "And Mrs. Peterson stocked the fridge with those smoothies you like." "Thank you." I settled into the pillows, watching him fuss around me. "Don't you have that big meeting today?" He waved dismissively. "Rescheduled. Harrison can handle it." "But the Westlake project…" "Is not as important as you and the baby," he finished firmly. "Nothing is." The conviction in his voic