Chapter 2

The business card in my hand felt impossibly heavy. Diana Reeves, Attorney at Law. Her office was housed in a sleek downtown building that seemed to touch the clouds, much like Nathan's corporate headquarters. The difference was that this tower didn't make me feel small. It made me feel protected.

I smoothed down my dress—a vibrant emerald green I'd bought yesterday, nothing like the muted pastels that had filled my closet for seven years—and stepped into the elevator.

"You must be Mrs. Sterling," said a tall woman with sharp eyes and a sharper suit when I entered the office. She didn't extend her hand. "I'm Diana Reeves."

"Isabella," I corrected her. "Just Isabella Martinez."

Something in her expression softened almost imperceptibly. "Isabella, then. Come in."

Diana's office was minimalist but warm, with a wall of windows overlooking the city. She gestured for me to sit across from her at a polished desk.

"So," she said, opening a leather portfolio. "I understand you're seeking a divorce from Nathan Sterling."

"Yes." The word was small but felt enormous leaving my lips.

"I've done some preliminary research." She tapped a pen against her notes. "Your husband's net worth is considerable. The prenuptial agreement you signed has some vulnerabilities we can exploit. With his recent... indiscretions being so public, I believe we can secure you a very favorable settlement."

I watched the sunlight glint off her pen as she outlined figures that seemed astronomical—properties, investments, cash settlements. The numbers blurred together, meaningless.

"Mrs. Reeves," I interrupted. "I don't want his money."

She stopped mid-sentence, her pen hovering over the paper. "Excuse me?"

"I don't want a settlement. I don't want alimony. I don't want anything from him."

Diana leaned back in her chair, studying me with new interest. "That's... unusual. May I ask why?"

I touched the faded scar on my wrist absently. "I spent seven years trying to be someone else for him. I just want myself back."

Her expression shifted from confusion to something like respect, maybe even a hint of admiration. "That's the first time I've heard that in twenty years of practice." She closed her portfolio. "But you should know that walking away with nothing is not in your best interest."

"It's the only way I'll truly be free of him."

Diana nodded slowly. "Alright. We'll proceed your way. But I want you to take some time to think about it. This decision will affect your future significantly."

I left her office feeling lighter than I had in years, despite the weight of what lay ahead.

Three days later, I sat on the edge of the bathtub in my hotel room, staring at the pregnancy test in my trembling hands. Two pink lines. Unmistakable. Undeniable.

I pressed a hand to my stomach, feeling a confusing mixture of hope and dread. A child. Nathan's child. Our child.

For a moment, I allowed myself to imagine a different life—one where Nathan loved me, where we raised this baby together in a home filled with warmth instead of echoing silence.

The fantasy crumbled as quickly as it formed. This wasn't a sign to stay. If anything, it was more reason to leave, to create a life where my child wouldn't grow up watching their mother erase herself for a man who couldn't love her.

I needed to tell Nathan. Not because I expected him to change, but because despite everything, this child was his too.

The next morning, I went to his office. His secretary's eyes widened when she saw me—no doubt she'd seen the TMZ photos too.

"I need to see my husband," I said, my voice steady.

She hesitated, then buzzed me in without announcing me.

Nathan was standing at the floor-to-ceiling window, his back to the door, phone pressed to his ear. He turned when I entered, surprise briefly crossing his face before his features settled back into their usual mask of indifference.

"I'll call you back," he said into the phone, his eyes never leaving mine.

I didn't sit down. "I'm pregnant."

The words hung in the air between us. For a split second, something flashed in his eyes—shock, maybe even a flicker of joy. Then his gaze hardened.

"Is it mine?" he asked coldly.

The question hit me like a physical blow. After seven years of complete devotion, of reshaping myself into someone else for him, he could still believe I would betray him?

"I want a paternity test," he continued, his voice businesslike. "My lawyers will arrange it."

Something inside me that had been holding on—some last, fragile hope that there was something worth salvaging—finally broke free and drifted away.

"You know what, Nathan?" My voice was calm, almost gentle. "You don't deserve to know."

I turned and walked out of his office, out of the building, and into the bright morning sunlight. My hand rested protectively over my stomach as I hailed a taxi.

The child within me was the future. Nathan Sterling was the past. And for the first time in seven years, I was looking forward, not back.

Chapter 3

I stood in the center of my new apartment, surrounded by cardboard boxes containing the meager remnants of my life. The space was modest—a far cry from the sprawling mansion I'd shared with Nathan—but it was mine. Truly mine.

Sunlight streamed through the bare windows, illuminating dust motes that danced in the air. The hardwood floors creaked beneath my feet as I moved to open the first box labeled simply 'Clothes.'

As I pulled out a sweater—one I'd chosen because Charlotte had owned something similar—a wave of emotion crashed over me. Seven years of my life spent molding myself into someone else's shadow. Seven years of desperate attempts to earn love from a man who had never truly seen me.

I clutched the sweater to my chest and sank to the floor, my body shaking with sobs that seemed to come from somewhere deep and primal within me. The tears felt different from the ones I'd shed in Nathan's house—those had been quiet, controlled, hidden. These were raw and unrestrained, echoing off the empty walls of my new beginning.

"Who am I?" I whispered to the empty room. "Who am I without him?"

The question hung in the air, unanswered but somehow liberating. For the first time in years, I had the freedom to discover the answer for myself.

---

The neighborhood coffee shop became my sanctuary in the days that followed. Away from the prying eyes of the social circles that had been dissecting my public humiliation, I could sit for hours with a book I actually wanted to read, wearing clothes in colors I actually liked.

I was midway through my chamomile tea—coffee wasn't good for the baby, according to the pamphlets Dr. Winters had given me—when a shadow fell across my table.

"Isabella Martinez?"

I looked up to find a man I didn't recognize standing over me. He was young, perhaps in his late twenties, with intense eyes that seemed to hold equal measures of anger and determination.

"Yes?" I replied cautiously, one hand instinctively moving to my still-flat stomach.

"Ryan Mitchell." He sat down across from me without waiting for an invitation. "I've been looking for you."

Something in his tone made me tense. "Do I know you?"

"No." His mouth twisted into a bitter smile. "But we have something in common. Nathan Sterling ruined both our lives."

I started to gather my things, suddenly uncomfortable. "I should go—"

"My father was Thomas Mitchell," he continued, his voice low and intense. "He was the foreman who died when that support beam collapsed at the Westlake construction site."

I paused, vaguely recalling Nathan mentioning an accident at one of his sites. He'd been annoyed about the insurance premiums and potential PR issues, not the loss of life.

"Your husband's company ruled it worker negligence," Ryan said, his knuckles white around his coffee cup. "Used their legal team to bury any investigation. My father had been reporting safety violations for weeks."

"I'm sorry," I said, meaning it. "But I don't see what this has to do with me. I'm divorcing Nathan."

"I know." His eyes locked with mine. "That's why I'm here. I have a plan to make him pay—really pay—for what he's done. And you're the key."

A chill ran through me. "What kind of plan?"

Ryan leaned forward, his voice dropping to barely above a whisper as he outlined a scheme so calculated, so ruthless, it made my blood run cold. It involved manipulation, deception, and a level of cruelty that, while perhaps deserved, frightened me.

"No," I said firmly when he finished. "I won't be part of this."

"He deserves to suffer," Ryan insisted, his eyes flashing. "You of all people should understand that."

"Maybe he does," I conceded, standing up. "But I won't become like him to make it happen."

As I walked away, I could feel Ryan's eyes boring into my back. Part of me—a dark, wounded part I barely recognized—had been tempted by his offer. The thought terrified me almost as much as Ryan himself.

---

The waiting room of Dr. Winters' office was quiet except for the soft classical music playing overhead and the occasional rustle of magazine pages. I was early for my appointment, nervously reviewing the questions I'd prepared about prenatal care.

The door opened, and a burst of laughter shattered the calm atmosphere. I looked up, then quickly ducked my head behind a parenting magazine as Scarlett Rose waltzed in with another young woman.

"I'm telling you, Chloe, it's working perfectly," Scarlett was saying, her voice carrying easily across the small space. "Nathan is completely wrapped around my finger."

I froze, straining to hear without being obvious.

"But faking a pregnancy?" her friend—Chloe—replied, sounding impressed and horrified in equal measure. "That's next level, even for you."

Scarlett laughed again, the sound like glass breaking. "It's not like I'll have to fake it forever. Just long enough to get him to leave his wife and put a ring on my finger. Then, oh no, tragic miscarriage."

"And he has no idea?"

"Please. Men see what they want to see. Especially men like Nathan Sterling."

White-hot anger surged through me, so intense it made my vision blur. This woman—this calculating, manipulative actress—was playing Nathan like a fiddle. And while part of me thought he deserved it, another part felt an unexpected flash of protective fury.

I stood up abruptly, the magazine falling from my hands. Scarlett's eyes met mine, widening in recognition. For a moment, we stared at each other—the wife and the mistress—connected by the man who had wronged us both in different ways.

Without a word, I walked past her and out of the waiting room, my appointment forgotten. The rage coursing through me felt foreign but strangely empowering. For the first time since discovering Nathan's betrayal, I felt something other than grief and self-doubt.

I felt strong. And I wasn't sure what I was going to do with that strength yet, but I knew one thing: Scarlett Rose had just made a serious mistake.

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