Mag-log inI gave up my surgical career to be his wife. He gave our anniversary night to his ex. Three years of cold shoulders, public humiliations, and a husband who believed every lie Celeste whispered. I endured it all—until I discovered I was carrying his child. I left without a word. No fight. No tears. Just divorce papers and an empty mansion. Now I’m Dr. Victoria Preston again. The renowned heart surgeon they said I’d never be. My brother helped me disappear. My best friend made sure the divorce was airtight. And I’m raising my daughter in peace. But Nathaniel Preston isn’t the same man who signed those papers. He’s seen my face on every medical journal. He’s lost sleep staring at the sonogram I left behind. And when he finally finds me, his eyes are no longer cold, they’re burning with obsession. He says he’ll win me back even if it takes the rest of his life. But Celeste isn’t done. She wants my child, my reputation, my life. And Nathaniel’s mother is helping her. They thought I was the docile wife who would break. They never met Dr. Victoria Preston.
view moreThe champagne arrives with a silver flourish. The waiter gestures toward a man at the bar who raises his glass. I do not return the smile. My eyes stay on the empty chair across the table.
Three years of marriage. Nathaniel Preston has never missed an anniversary dinner. Tonight, the chair stays empty. I check my phone for the tenth time. No messages. No calls. Just the cold screen reflecting my own face back at me. I wore the emerald gown because he once said green made me look like a queen. That was before Celeste Winthrop slithered back into his life. Before she started appearing at every event, wearing the same dress as me, touching his arm like she still had the right. The restaurant doors open. My heart jerks. Celeste walks through in emerald silk cut exactly like mine. Her smile is slow, deliberate. She heads straight for my table and slides into Nathaniel’s seat without waiting for an invitation. The waiter pours her a glass of the champagne meant for our anniversary. She tells me Nathaniel is tied up. He asked her to come. His exact words were to tell me he would make it up next year. Next year. I stare at her dress, at her smug face. She has what I have tried to hold for three years. His attention. His time. His loyalty. I reach for my purse. My voice comes out steady, though my hands shake beneath the tablecloth. I tell her to enjoy her evening. She laughs and says she always does. She signals the waiter for the Dom Pérignon, adding that I never had a taste for finer things anyway. The laughter follows me out the door. I walk five blocks before I stop. My heels ache. My chest heaves. The city lights blur through tears I refuse to let fall. I lean against a brick wall and press my palm to my stomach. The nausea that hit me earlier is back. I thought it was stress. Now it rolls through me again, stronger this time. My phone buzzes. I look down. Nathaniel’s message is short. Clinical. He says something came up and not to wait up. Something came up. That has been the story of my marriage. Celeste came up. His mother’s schemes came up. His company came up. I was never the priority. I was the wife he tolerated, the woman he married because it was convenient and because Celeste rejected him first. I scroll through our recent messages. A week of silence. Two weeks before that. His replies are one word, if I get any at all. My thumb hovers over the call button. I almost press it. I almost beg him to explain why he sent her to our anniversary dinner, why he let her wear the same dress, why he humiliated me in front of half the city. I do not press it. Instead, I open my purse and pull out a business card I have kept hidden for months. Lena Chen, Esq. Divorce and Family Law. I got it six months ago, after Celeste first moved into the guest house. I told myself it was just in case. A safety net I would never use. Tonight, it feels like a lifeline. I dial. Lena answers on the second ring. Her voice is warm, alert despite the late hour. I tell her I need to see her tomorrow. I do not explain. She does not ask. She has been my best friend since college. She has seen the bruises on my pride for years. She says she will clear her schedule. Then she asks if I am okay. I look up at the night sky. The stars are faint, washed out by city lights. I tell her I will be. I hang up and hail a cab. The ride to the mansion takes twenty minutes. I watch the city slide past, neon signs and darkened windows, people laughing outside bars, couples holding hands. Normal lives. Lives where husbands do not send their exes to anniversary dinners. The cab pulls up to the gates of the Preston estate. The iron bars are ornate, imposing. I type in the code. The gates swing open. The mansion is dark except for the foyer light. Nathaniel’s car is not in the garage. Of course it is not. He is still with Celeste, or at the office, or anywhere but here. I walk through the front door and kick off my heels. The marble floor is cold beneath my feet. The house is too large, too quiet. I have always hated this silence. I climb the stairs to the master bedroom. Our bedroom. His side of the closet is immaculate, rows of suits in shades of charcoal and navy. My side is smaller, tucked away, as if I was always meant to be an afterthought. I unzip my dress and let it fall. I catch my reflection in the mirror. Hollow cheeks. Dark circles under my eyes. I look like a woman who has been losing for three years. The nausea hits again. I rush to the bathroom and lean over the sink, gripping the edges until the wave passes. I splash cold water on my face and look up. Something is wrong. Something more than stress. I open the medicine cabinet. My eyes land on a box I bought three weeks ago, telling myself I was being paranoid. I had not used it. I was too afraid of what it might say. I take it out now. My hands are steady as I tear the包装. I follow the instructions. Then I wait. The minutes stretch. I sit on the edge of the tub, staring at the small plastic stick on the counter. My mind churns through possibilities. If it is positive, everything changes. If it is negative, nothing changes. I am not sure which terrifies me more. I think about the last three years. The cold shoulders at dinner. The galas where Celeste clung to his arm while I stood alone. The night I overheard him tell her I was just a placeholder. The way his mother, Patricia, looks at me like I am dirt beneath her heels. The way Celeste’s schemes always work, always land, always leave me bleeding. I think about my career. The surgical fellowship I gave up because Nathaniel wanted a wife who stayed home. The research papers I published under his name because he said it would help the family brand. The respect I used to have before I became Mrs. Nathaniel Preston. I think about my brother, Marcus. He warned me. He said Nathaniel would never change, that Celeste would always be in the picture, that I was too good for this life. I did not listen. I was in love. Or I thought I was. Maybe I was just young and blind and desperate to be chosen. The timer on my phone buzzes. I stand. I walk to the counter. I pick up the stick. Two lines. Pregnant. I stare at the lines. They do not blur. They do not disappear. They are clear, unmistakable. There is a life inside me. A life that is half his. I place the test on the counter and sit back down. My legs feel weak. My chest feels tight. I press my hands to my stomach, flat and unchanged, but I know now that something is growing there. Something that will change everything. I should tell him. That is the first thought that surfaces. I should tell Nathaniel. Maybe this will fix things. Maybe he will finally see me. Maybe he will send Celeste away. Maybe his mother will stop her schemes. Maybe this baby will be the thing that makes him love me. The thought curdles in my chest. I remember the way he looked at me last week when I tried to tell him about the promotion I was offered at the hospital. He did not even look up from his phone. He said we would discuss it later. We never did. I remember the way Celeste smiled at me tonight, wearing my dress, sitting in my chair, drinking my champagne. She is not going anywhere. And Nathaniel will not send her away. He never has. He never will. A baby will not fix him. A baby will not make him love me. A baby will only give them another way to hurt me. I stand up. I walk to the bedroom. I pull out the small suitcase I keep in the back of my closet. I pack light. A few clothes. My passport. The savings account information Lena helped me set up last year. The folder with my medical credentials, the ones I earned before I became Mrs. Preston. I am not going to tell him. The thought comes clear and sharp. I am not going to tell Nathaniel about this baby. I am going to leave. I am going to disappear. I am going to be Dr. Victoria Preston again, the surgeon who was supposed to save lives, not the wife who could not save her marriage. My phone buzzes again. A message from Nathaniel. He says he will be home late. Do not wait up. I do not reply. I finish packing. I change into jeans and a sweater. I leave the emerald dress on the floor where it fell. Let him see it. Let him wonder. I take one last look around the bedroom. The bed we barely shared. The empty side where he should have been. The wedding photo on the nightstand, two smiling strangers who did not know what was coming. I walk out of the room. I walk down the stairs. I walk through the foyer and out the front door. I do not look back. I call Lena. She answers on the first ring. I tell her I am leaving tonight. She asks if I am sure. I say yes. She says she will meet me at the airport. I call Marcus next. His voice is rough with sleep, but he is awake the second he hears mine. I tell him I need a place to stay. Somewhere no one can find me. He says he will have everything ready by morning. The cab arrives. I give the driver the address Lena sent. I lean my head against the window and press my hand to my stomach again. I do not know what comes next. I do not know how I will build a life from nothing. I do not know how I will raise a child alone. But I know I will not raise them in that house. I will not let them grow up watching their father choose someone else. I will not let Celeste smile at them the way she smiled at me tonight. I will be a surgeon again. I will be the woman I was before I lost myself. I will be a mother. And Nathaniel Preston will never know what he lost. The cab pulls onto the highway. The city lights fade behind me. I let my eyes close. For the first time in three years, I breathe. I am leaving. I am not coming back.Nathaniel Hamilton had cried three times in his adult life before Michael was born.The first time was at his father’s funeral, not because he missed the man—he didn’t—but because of the weight of everything unsaid, everything that would never be resolved. The second time was when he married Victoria, watching her walk down the aisle in Margaret’s garden, unable to believe that someone like her could love someone like him. The third time was when Victoria almost died from the poison, holding her limp hand in the ambulance, bargaining with a God he wasn’t sure existed.Since Michael’s birth, he had cried almost every day.Not in front of anyone—he was careful about that. He waited until the house was quiet, until Victoria was asleep, until Liam was in bed and Patricia had gone home. Then he sat in the nursery, Michael in his arms, and let the tears come.He cried because he was tired. He cried because he was scared. He cried because every time he looked at his son, he saw everything he
The first time Victoria held Michael without wires and tubes between them, she forgot how to breathe.He was so small. Even after weeks in the NICU, even after gaining weight and growing stronger, he was still tiny enough to fit in the crook of her arm with room to spare. His skin was soft, almost translucent, the blue veins visible beneath the surface. His eyes were closed, his lips parted, his chest rising and falling in the steady rhythm of sleep.“He's beautiful,” Nathaniel whispered. He was sitting beside her on the couch, his arm around her shoulders, his eyes fixed on their son.“He's perfect,” Victoria replied. “Absolutely perfect.”She had imagined this moment a hundred times during the long weeks of bed rest. She had dreamed of holding her son, of feeling his weight in her arms, of pressing her lips to his forehead and breathing in his newborn scent. But the reality was so much more than the dream. The reality was overwhelming, almost unbearable in its sweetness.Michael sti
The bleeding started without warning.Victoria had been sitting up in bed, propped against pillows, Michael asleep in the bassinet beside her. She was feeling stronger that morning—the fog of the past weeks finally lifting, the exhaustion beginning to fade. She had even talked to Nathaniel about maybe, possibly, taking a short walk around the garden later that day.Then she felt it. A rush of warmth. A spreading stain on the sheets.She looked down at the blood and felt the world tilt sideways.“Nathaniel,” she called, her voice remarkably calm. “Nathaniel, come here.”He was in the bathroom, brushing his teeth. He appeared in the doorway, toothbrush still in hand, and froze.“Don't panic,” Victoria said. “But I'm bleeding. A lot.”He didn't panic. He moved. In the space of a breath, he was at her side, pressing the call button, shouting for help, holding her hand with a grip that would leave bruises. Victoria was grateful for the bruises. They meant she was still there to feel them.
The first night home was the hardest.Michael woke every two hours, hungry and crying, his tiny fists flailing. Victoria was exhausted—still recovering from the C-section, still weak from the blood loss, still haunted by the memory of almost losing him. She sat up in bed, fumbling with the nursing pillow, her hands trembling. The incision across her abdomen pulled with every movement, a constant reminder of how close they had come to disaster.“I've got him,” Nathaniel said, appearing beside her before she could even swing her legs over the side of the bed. He lifted Michael from the bassinet with practiced ease, cradling him against his chest. “You rest.”“I can feed him.”“You can feed him in an hour. Right now, you need to sleep.” His voice was gentle but firm. This was not a negotiation.Victoria wanted to argue—every instinct screamed at her to take her son, to prove that she was capable, to push through the pain the way she always had. But her body wouldn't cooperate. The exhaus






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