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Elena's Point Of View
I stared at him like I didn’t understand English. Like the air around me had collapsed into silence, and I had no oxygen left to breathe.
The dining room was quiet. Too quiet. The type of quiet that didn’t feel peaceful, but surgical. Like the kind of silence you’d hear just before the first incision of a knife.
The walls were white. The table was glass. And my husband… Graham Sinclair sat across from me in his three-piece suit like we were discussing stock options, not the destruction of our marriage.
And then he said it. Again.
“It’s an open marriage, Elena. It’s the only solution that makes sense.”
I blinked slowly, my spine rigid in the sleek gray chair, arms folded on my lap like I was back in boarding school, being punished for speaking too loud.
My lips parted, a soft exhale leaving me, but the words didn’t come. I couldn’t find them. Because what do you even say when the man you’ve been married to for five years calmly, coolly tells you he wants to sleep with other women?
Wants you to sleep with other men. Wants to share your marriage bed with the entire goddamn world.
“I’m sorry,” I croaked, finally. “What did you just say?”
He didn’t even flinch. His eyes were as cold as ever, those perfect, storm-cloud gray eyes that once made me fall so stupidly in love. Back when I thought I mattered to him. Before the ring. Before the tests. Before the cruel quiet began.
“You heard me,” he said simply, swirling the wine in his glass like this was casual. Like we were just chatting over dinner. “It’s either this… or we file for divorce.”
My stomach dropped. Hard.
“But… Graham…” My voice cracked, heart pounding like it was trying to claw its way out of my chest. “The last doctor we went to said there’s a solution. That I can get pregnant. We just need more time. You promised…”
He cut me off with a flick of his hand, calm and uninterested. “I’m not asking, Elena,” he said sharply. “I’m just letting you know.” I sat there frozen, eyes burning. “So you’ve made the decision already.”
He raised a brow. “I’ve made the decision to stop wasting both our time. We’ve tried. We’ve waited. Five years of failure is enough. And I want a child, Elena. Not when you’re forty. Now.”
His words hit harder than any slap. “Failure…” I repeated, stunned. “Is that what I am to you?”
Graham leaned back in his chair, crossing one leg over the other. His fingers tapped lazily against the stem of his wine glass.
“Emotionally? No. Biologically? Yes.” I choked on my breath. “You arrogant, heartless…”
“Don’t,” he said, his voice suddenly razor-sharp. “Don’t make this emotional. It’s not. This is about logic. About legacy. I need an heir. I need someone who can carry the Sinclair name. You can’t, so I’m adjusting.”
Adjusting.
Like I was a broken piece of furniture. “Graham,” I said, my voice trembling, “I’m your wife.”
“And?” he challenged coolly. “That means I should sacrifice my future because of your defective womb?”
My whole body stilled.
I stared at him, at the man I once called my soulmate, and for the first time, I saw nothing human in his eyes. Just cold calculation.
My mouth was dry. My chest tight. “You never even considered adoption, or surrogacy…”
“Surrogacy is an option. But not with you as the genetic mother.” His tone cut like acid. “If I wanted to breed failure, I’d buy a dog with hip dysplasia.”
I stood up so fast my chair screeched across the floor. “How dare you talk to me like this!”
He didn’t even blink.
“Sit down, Elena. Screaming won’t change your blood.”
I was shaking now. With rage. With pain. With the sting of being reduced to less than a woman in the eyes of the man I once gave my whole life to.
“You’re sleeping with someone already, aren’t you?” I accused, voice sharp. “This isn’t about a child. You just want to fuck whoever you want and blame me for it.”
He stared at me like I was stupid. Like I was beneath response.
And then, calmly… cruelly,.he said,
“If you agree to the terms, I’ll make sure you’re taken care of financially. I won’t throw you out like trash. You’ll still have your title. You’ll still be my wife… legally.”
My lips trembled. “You mean I’ll be your puppet.” He tilted his head. “If that’s how you want to frame it.” My mind was spinning. My heart in shreds. “You’re joking, right?”
“No.” He said. Not a flinch. Not a blink. As if what he just said wasn’t a blade to my throat. “I need an heir, Elena. My mother has been asking questions. My father’s growing impatient.”
“And what if I say no?” I asked, then he looked me dead in the eye.
“Then we divorce. I’ll find someone else. Someone fertile. And this entire five-year experiment will be written off as a regret.”
Tears stung my eyes, but I refused to let them fall. I wouldn’t give him that satisfaction.
“You never loved me,” I whispered.
He shrugged. “Maybe I tried. Maybe I just wanted to. But we are where we are, Elena. It’s better to be honest than to keep playing pretend.”
I clutched the edge of the table to stay upright. “There’s no honesty in betrayal,” I said hoarsely. Graham finally stood, straightening his cuffs, brushing imaginary dust off his sleeve.
“It’s not betrayal if you consent.”
He turned to leave the room. “You have until Friday to decide.”
“Graham,” I called, my voice breaking. “Don’t do this.”
He paused at the doorway.
And without turning, said the last thing I’d ever expect from a man who once held my face and told me I was his world:
“This is me… choosing my world.” And just like that, he was gone. The silence he left behind wasn’t just quiet, it screamed.
My knees buckled, and I sank slowly onto the nearest chair, fingers gripping the edge like it could stop the room from spinning. My eyes burned. But no tears came yet.
My mind reached for something… anything to keep me from falling apart. And it landed on him.
Not the man who walked out the door, but the one who once stood under soft golden lights, hands trembling as he lifted my veil.
The air had smelled of peonies and clean linen. Graham’s hands had been warm… nervous, even, as he tucked a strand of hair behind my ear, his thumb grazing my cheek with reverence.
“I promise you the world, Elena,” he’d whispered with that crooked smile that made my heart leap. “Everything I own, everything I am. You’re it for me.”
He’d kissed my forehead that day like I was made of glass, like loving me was something sacred. His voice had cracked during the vows. And when he looked at me, he didn’t see a wife, he saw a forever.
We danced under a thousand fairy lights, barefoot and tipsy on champagne and hope. He’d held me close and murmured against my ear, “If we never had a child, I’d still love you till my last breath. You’re enough, Elena. Always.”
But that was before.
Before the tests. Before the hushed conversations. Before the way he started looking through me instead of at me.
The sound of my own shallow breathing dragged me back to the cold, sterile room. The same chair I was still clinging to. The same man who had just left.
The warmth of that day felt like a cruel dream now. My throat tightened. And for the first time since he said it, my lips finally moved.
A whisper. Broken.Fragile. “What changed?”
“What happened to the man I married?”
Roman's Point Of View I slammed the car door harder than necessary, the sound cutting through the quiet like a final punctuation to everything that had just happened. For a second, I didn't start the engine. I just sat there. Hands resting on the steering wheel, fingers curled loosely around the worn leather. My breathing came steady, measured… a deliberate contrast to the storm I'd just walked away from. Eyes fixed ahead, I stared through the windshield, but the road before me remained a blur of unfocused shapes and shadows. My gaze drifted to the passenger seat. The file sat there, its manila surface catching the late afternoon light. Neat. Untouched. Too pristine for something that had just dragged an entire family through hell and back again. I reached over and tapped it once with my fingers, the gesture almost reverent, then leaned back into the seat. The leather creaked beneath my weight, a familiar sound that usually brought comfort. Not today. "Damn."
Graham's Point Of View "I've had enough of this nonsense." The words emerged quietly, almost conversational in their delivery. They didn't need volume to carry weight. Everything about the way he stood… spine straight, shoulders relaxed, the way the gun rested in his hand like a natural extension of his arm, the way his eyes swept across the room without urgency, without panic, without the slightest flicker of doubt. That was enough. I froze for half a second, my muscles locking involuntarily. Not out of fear, though my heart hammered against my ribs. Out of disbelief. This situation had spiraled further than I'd anticipated, further than any of us could have imagined. Way further. And the worst part, the detail that made my stomach turn? We had walked straight into it, blind and arrogant. "Graham—" My mother's voice trembled, a hairline fracture running through her usually steady tone. That alone was enough to snap me back to the present moment. I moved, ad
Graham's Point Of View"He says he's here for the files." The words settled into the room like oil dropped into water… thick, heavy, spreading slowly, impossible to ignore. They hung in the air between us, carrying a weight that made my chest tighten. I frowned immediately, turning fully toward the man at the door. My pulse quickened despite my attempt to remain composed. "He's outside right now?" My voice came out sharper than I intended, edged with something between disbelief and anger. The staff member nodded, his discomfort evident in the way he shifted his weight. "Yes, sir. He refused to leave. I told him to come back tomorrow, but he insisted on waiting." I glanced at my father, half-expecting him to dismiss the intrusion entirely. He didn't hesitate. "Let's go." Of course. No questions. No second thoughts. No pause to consider what this might mean or who might have sent this stranger to our door. Just straight into confrontation, as if the night hadn't already unravel
Graham's Point Of View "Do you think Elena is behind it?" The question didn't hit me the way it should have. It didn't shock me. Didn't anger me. It just… settled. Heavy. Expected. Like a stone dropping into still water, sending ripples I'd already anticipated. I didn't answer immediately. Instead, I studied him, really looked at him. At the way his eyes had narrowed again, sharp and calculating, like everything had already shifted from anger to strategy. To suspicion. To blame. It was a familiar transformation, one I'd witnessed countless times throughout my life. My father never stayed vulnerable for long. I exhaled slowly, my gaze dropping briefly to the signed documents on the table before lifting back to him. The papers seemed to mock us both, sitting there so innocuously despite the chaos they represented. I paused. Because the answer wasn't simple, and he wouldn't accept anything complicated. Not right now. Not when everything was burning around us and he needed
Graham's Point Of View"I'll sign it."The moment the words left my mouth, something in the room shifted. Not dramatically. Not loudly. Just enough.My father's shoulders eased slightly, like a tension he'd been holding finally found a place to settle. The lines around his mouth softened, though his expression remained carefully controlled."Now you're talking sense," he said.His tone carried approval, but it wasn't warm. It was the kind of approval you gave a business decision, not a person. The kind that made you feel like a chess piece moved correctly across the board.My mother didn't waste time. She pushed the papers closer to me across the desk, the sound of them sliding against the polished wood loud in the silence. Her movements were precise, practiced, she'd orchestrated far more significant transactions than this."Good," she said softly, though her voice held an edge of finality. "Let's not drag this any further."I stared at the documents. My name was still there, printed
Graham's Point Of View"These are divorce papers." The words didn't register immediately. They hung in the air, suspended, as though my mind needed a few extra seconds to catch up with what my ears had just heard. It felt like being underwater… everything muffled, distorted, moving too slowly. My gaze dropped to the documents in my mother's hand. Then back to her face. Then back to the papers again. "No." The word came out under my breath. Barely audible. "That's not…" I took a step forward, reaching for them, but my hand stopped midway. My fingers trembled slightly, hovering in the space between us. Because I already knew. Before even reading a single line, something in my chest had already accepted it. That hollow, sinking feeling, the one you get when your body understands what your mind refuses to acknowledge. My mother watched me carefully, her expression a mixture of concern and something else I couldn't quite name. Pity, perhaps. "Graham?" I didn't answer. I
Elena’s Point Of ViewThe morning sun spilled through the windows, golden and warm, painting the apartment in hues of amber and rose. I stretched, my body aching from the emotional storm of the night before, but my heart felt lighter than it had in years. The couch cushions were still rumpled from
Elena’s Point Of ViewThe tears came without warning.One second, I was talking… voice steady, hands clenched in my lap, and the next, my chest was heaving, my vision blurring, my entire body shaking with sobs I couldn’t stop. It was like something inside me snapped, like the last thread holding me
Jaxx’s Point Of ViewThe door clicked shut. A sound so small, so final, it echoed through the suite like a gunshot.I didn’t move.Didn’t breathe.Just stood there, my fingers still curled around the edge of the drawer where I’d kept her car key, my gaze fixed on the space she’d occupied seconds ag
Elena’s Point Of ViewThe room was quiet. Too quiet.The kind of quiet that hummed in your ears, that pressed against your skin like a living thing, heavy with the weight of everything unsaid. I lay there, still as stone, my breath shallow, my fingers curled into the sheets beneath me. The city lig







