He Presented His Heir, I Disappeared With His Twins
On the night Valen Varesi's dying first love went into labor, his parents stationed armed men outside my suite to make sure I stayed far away from the private maternity floor and the birth of the Varesi family's heir.
I never gave them the scene they were expecting.
Not when Sabina Orsini was taken into surgery, not when the baby's first cry carried through the corridor, and not when the whole family finally relaxed.
His mother sat beside Sabina's bed, clutching her hand with relief. "As long as we're here," she said, "that barren wife of his won't get anywhere near you or the baby."
Valen stood at Sabina's side, wiping the sweat from her forehead with a tenderness I had once believed was mine. "Don't worry," he said. "My father has men covering every exit. If Nerina tries anything, she'll be gone before the night is over."
Only then did he finally let himself breathe.
As far as Valen was concerned, he had done nothing unforgivable. He had granted a dying woman one final wish and secured the bloodline his family had demanded for years. I was the one refusing to be reasonable.
He had even decided that if I came later, apologized to Sabina, and stopped fighting him, he might be generous enough to let me raise the boy in name and keep my place as Mrs. Varesi.
What never crossed his mind was that I had already made my decision.
By the time Valen finally opens the "gift" I left for his heir ceremony, I will already be gone.
And the only thing waiting for him inside is a divorce notice, a twin pregnancy report—
and the truth that the children carrying his real bloodline will never call him father.