The Metropolitan Museum of Art glittered like a jewel box, the annual spring gala in full swing. I stood near a Monet, one hand protectively cradling my belly—now seven months along—while watching Ryan across the room. He was playing his part perfectly, his hand resting on the small of Victoria's back as they laughed with investors. The diamond on her finger caught the light, throwing fractured rainbows against the wall.
"Sarah, you look absolutely radiant," Martin Chen, one of Ryan's board members, approached with genuine warmth. "How are you feeling?"
I summoned a smile. "As well as can be expected."
His eyes flickered with understanding. Everyone in Ryan's circle knew our divorce was supposedly temporary—a business arrangement. But the sympathetic glances were becoming harder to bear.
"The fresh air on the terrace is wonderful," Martin said. "You should step out for a moment. In your condition..."
I nodded gratefully and made my way toward the east terrace. As I passed Ryan, our eyes met briefly. Something flashed across his face—regret? Longing? Before I could interpret it, Victoria tightened her grip on his arm, drawing his attention back to her.
The terrace was quieter, with fairy lights strung overhead and Manhattan spread out below like a carpet of stars. I inhaled deeply, trying to calm the flutter of anxiety that had become my constant companion.
"Needed a break too?"
I turned to find Victoria standing behind me, her white silk gown ethereal in the moonlight. My body tensed involuntarily.
"The waiter mentioned they're serving those little lemon tarts you've been craving," she said, her voice honeyed with false concern. "I thought you might want to know."
Before I could respond, a server approached with a tray. "Ladies, would you care to try our signature champagne? Or perhaps sparkling water?"
Something felt off. The server's eyes didn't meet ours, and his uniform seemed slightly too large.
"No, thank—" I began, but Victoria interrupted.
"We'd love to," she smiled, reaching for a flute.
That's when everything happened at once. The server dropped his tray with a crash. Two more men appeared from the shadows. Something rough covered my mouth and nose—a cloth soaked in chemicals. I tried to scream, to fight, but darkness crowded my vision as I heard Victoria's muffled protests beside me.
* * *
I awoke to cold concrete beneath me and the taste of fear in my mouth. My hands were bound behind my back, my ankles tied together. Through the disorientation, I became aware of labored breathing beside me.
"She's awake," a male voice announced.
I blinked against harsh fluorescent lighting, my vision clearing to reveal a warehouse space. Victoria sat tied to a chair a few feet away, her perfect updo now disheveled, mascara streaking her cheeks. Her breathing was rapid and shallow.
"I need my insulin," she gasped. "Please, my purse—"
"Shut up," snapped one of three masked men. He pointed to a laptop set up on a crate. "Your boyfriend gets to decide which one of you needs medical attention first."
My blood ran cold as I understood. "Ryan," I whispered.
The tallest kidnapper turned the laptop toward us. On screen was Ryan's ashen face, flanked by FBI agents in a conference room. His eyes widened when he saw us.
"Sarah! Victoria!" His voice cracked. "Are you hurt? Who are these people?"
"Twenty million, Blackwood," the kidnapper stated flatly. "But we're feeling sporting. You don't have to pay for both of them."
Ryan's expression hardened. "What are you saying?"
"Choose," the man said, pulling out a gun. "Your pregnant ex-wife or your diabetic fiancée. One leaves with us now. One stays until payment clears. Simple."
"This is insane," Ryan shouted. "I'll pay whatever you want—"
"Clock's ticking," the kidnapper interrupted, pointing his gun at Victoria, whose breathing had become more labored. "Your fiancée's having a reaction. No insulin for hours now. And your ex looks ready to pop that baby any day."
I stared at the screen, my heart pounding so hard I thought it might break my ribs. This couldn't be happening. Not after everything we'd been through. Despite the divorce papers, despite Victoria, Ryan would choose me. He had to. I carried his child.
"Ryan," I pleaded, tears streaming down my face. "Please."
I watched as someone off-screen whispered in Ryan's ear. His face contorted with anguish as he glanced between us.
"I choose..." he began, his voice breaking.
Time seemed to slow as I watched his lips form the next word.
"Victoria."
The world collapsed around me. I couldn't breathe, couldn't think. The kidnappers moved immediately, unlocking Victoria's restraints and half-carrying her toward a side door.
"No!" I screamed, thrashing against my bonds. "Ryan! How could you?"
The last thing I saw on the screen was Ryan's face—torn, guilty, but resolute—before one of the men slammed the laptop shut.
"Looks like you're staying with us, mama," the tallest kidnapper said, his voice cold with amusement. "Your husband made his choice."
Fury surged through me, giving me strength I didn't know I had. "He's not my husband anymore," I spat.
The first blow came without warning—a backhand across my face that sent me sprawling. Then another. And another. Through the pain, one thought burned like acid: Ryan had chosen her. Over me. Over our baby.
Through swollen eyes, I watched the warehouse door open to the night. Strong hands grabbed me, dragging me outside. I felt rocks and dirt beneath me as they pulled me toward a steep embankment.
"Nothing personal," one of them muttered. "Just business."
Then I was falling, tumbling down jagged rocks, my body curling instinctively around my belly as I tried to protect the life inside me. Pain exploded everywhere as I hit the ground below, and darkness claimed me once more.
I drifted in and out of consciousness, fragments of reality piercing through the darkness. Pain radiated through my body in waves, but nothing compared to the agony in my heart. Ryan had chosen Victoria. The thought kept repeating, a broken record of betrayal playing in my mind as I finally opened my swollen eyes to harsh fluorescent lights.
"She's awake," a female voice announced. "Mrs. Blackwood, can you hear me?"
I tried to speak, but my throat felt raw. A woman in scrubs leaned over me, her expression professionally concerned.
"I'm Dr. Hayes," she said, checking my vitals. "You're at Hudson Valley Regional. You were found at the bottom of a ravine."
Memory flooded back—the kidnappers, the fall, the rocks tearing into my skin as I tumbled down the embankment. My hands flew to my belly, panic seizing me.
"My baby," I croaked. "Please—"
"Your baby's heartbeat is stable," Dr. Hayes assured me, though something in her eyes made my chest tighten. "You've suffered significant trauma, but we're monitoring both of you closely."
I sank back against the pillows, relief washing over me. At least one thing remained intact in my shattered world.
"Ryan," I whispered. "I need to see Ryan."
Dr. Hayes's expression shifted slightly. "Mr. Blackwood has been notified. He's here, but given your condition—"
"Please," I begged, tears stinging my battered face. "I need to see him."
She hesitated before nodding. "Briefly. You need rest."
Minutes later, I saw him through the glass partition of my ICU room. Ryan stood there, his usually impeccable appearance disheveled, dark circles under his eyes. Our gazes locked, and for a moment, I saw a flicker of the man I'd loved for eight years—the one who'd once been arrested for staging a flash mob proposal, who'd placed his entire empire in my name, who'd promised never to let me spend a night alone.
I reached out a bruised hand toward him, silently pleading.
He took one step forward, then stopped as his phone rang. Glancing at the screen, he answered immediately.
"How is she?" he asked, and I knew he wasn't talking about me. "Yes, I'll be right there. Tell Victoria I'm coming."
He looked at me with conflicted eyes before mouthing, "I'm sorry," and turning away. I watched him disappear down the corridor, leaving me alone with the beeping monitors and the bitter taste of abandonment.
* * *
Three days later, I was discharged against medical advice. I couldn't bear another moment in that hospital, where Ryan visited only briefly between his extended stays at Victoria's bedside. Each time he appeared, he stood farther from my bed, as if my pain might be contagious.
The penthouse doorman's eyes widened when I arrived, my face still bruised, my movements slow and careful.
"Mrs. Blackwood—I mean, Ms. Mitchell," he stammered. "We weren't expecting you today."
"It's still my home," I replied quietly, moving past him to the private elevator.
The moment I stepped into the penthouse, I knew something was wrong. The air smelled different—floral, but not the sunflower fragrance I always used. Designer luggage stood in the entryway, bearing Victoria's monogrammed initials.
I moved through the space like a ghost, noting changes everywhere. New throw pillows on the sofa. Different artwork on the walls. In the master bedroom, Victoria's clothes hung in what had been my closet, her perfumes arranged on my vanity.
My heart pounded as I made my way to the rooftop terrace—my sanctuary, where I'd cultivated a garden of sunflowers that bloomed year-round in carefully regulated conditions. Ryan had built it for me after our first anniversary, knowing how much I loved them.
I pushed open the glass doors and froze. My sunflowers were gone. In their place stood rows of pristine white orchids, their clinical beauty stark against the Manhattan skyline.
"Sarah."
I turned to find Ryan standing in the doorway, his expression guarded.
"You're supposed to be in the hospital," he said, not moving closer.
"Where are my sunflowers?" I asked, my voice barely audible.
He looked away. "Victoria has severe allergies. The sunflowers triggered her asthma."
"So you destroyed them." It wasn't a question.
"They're just flowers, Sarah," he said coldly. "Victoria needs to be comfortable here until—"
"Until what?" I interrupted, anger finally breaking through my shock. "Until you decide I'm worth choosing again?"
His jaw tightened. "You know this isn't what I wanted. The situation with the kidnappers—I had no choice."
"You had every choice," I whispered, one hand resting on my belly where our child still miraculously grew. "And you made it."
As I stood among Victoria's orchids, watching the last traces of my life being systematically erased, I realized the crack in my trust had become a chasm too wide to ever bridge again.