Chapter 2

I couldn't sleep that night. Ethan's words echoed in my mind like a cruel mantra: "You were a family obligation... a business arrangement." The fake marriage certificate lay on my nightstand, a constant reminder of the seven years I'd spent loving a man who had been living a lie.

Morning light filtered through the curtains as I dragged myself from bed. My body felt heavy, my mind foggy. The nausea that had plagued me for weeks returned with a vengeance, sending me rushing to the bathroom.

This wasn't just emotional distress. Something was wrong.

I called Dr. Rebecca Chen, our family physician since I was a child. Her office was a sanctuary of sorts—the one place where I felt safe from the lies that had become my life.

"Summer," Dr. Chen greeted me with warm concern as I settled onto the examination table. "You look pale."

"I've been feeling off for weeks," I admitted. "Fatigue, nausea..."

She nodded, her experienced hands checking my vitals. "Any chance you could be pregnant?"

The question hung in the air between us. Pregnant. The one thing Ethan and I had wanted for years but never achieved.

"I don't think so," I said softly. "We've tried for years without success."

Dr. Chen's expression remained neutral as she conducted the examination, but I caught the slight widening of her eyes when she checked the test results.

"Summer," she said gently, "you're approximately two months pregnant. And... there are two heartbeats."

The world seemed to stop. "Two?"

"You're carrying twins," she confirmed, her voice softening. "Congratulations."

Twin babies. Our babies. The news should have filled me with joy, but instead, a cold dread settled in my stomach.

Dr. Chen must have noticed my reaction because her expression grew serious. "Summer, there's something else we need to discuss. Your blood work shows significant anemia—worse than usual."

"From the transfusions," I said automatically.

She nodded, her eyes concerned. "Giving blood regularly for years has taken a toll on your health. And now with the pregnancy..."

"The transfusions for Ethan," I clarified, still processing her words. "To save his life."

"Yes," Dr. Chen said, looking confused. "Didn't you know? You've been his donor since childhood. Your rare blood type has kept him alive all these years."

My head spun with this new revelation. I had known about the transfusions—had willingly given my blood whenever Ethan needed it—but I'd never realized it was me specifically who had saved his life.

"I need to tell him about the babies," I said suddenly, rising from the examination table.

I found Ethan in his home office, reviewing documents with a distracted expression.

"Ethan," I said from the doorway. "I have something important to tell you."

He barely glanced up. "Can it wait? I'm preparing for tomorrow's announcement."

"Announcement?"

"About Lauren and me," he said dismissively. "We're finally going public with our marriage."

My heart pounded against my ribs. "Ethan, I'm pregnant."

That got his attention. His head snapped up, eyes narrowing. "That's not possible."

"Dr. Chen confirmed it today. Twins. Two months along."

Something flickered across his face—shock, perhaps even a moment of softness—before his expression hardened again.

"Lauren is pregnant too," he said coldly. "Three months along. My son."

The room seemed to tilt beneath me. "Your son?"

"Yes," he said, rising from his desk. "My real family. Lauren and I have been planning this for months."

"What about us?" I whispered.

"There is no us," Ethan said, his voice devoid of emotion. "There never really was. Summer, you need to accept reality. If you're pregnant—and I'm not convinced you are—you should consider your options."

"You mean terminate?"

"I mean be practical," he said, turning away. "I already have a family to think about."

I left his office numb with shock, my hand instinctively moving to my still-flat stomach.

Three days later, I sat in a coffee shop, staring blankly at my untouched latte. The bell above the door chimed, and Lauren swept in like she owned the place.

"Summer," she said with false warmth, sliding into the seat across from me. "I thought we should talk."

She placed her phone on the table between us, screen up. Photos appeared—Ethan in a tuxedo, Lauren in white. Their wedding day.

"We've been married for four years," she said, her voice dripping with satisfaction. "Not seven like your fake ceremony."

"You knew," I whispered.

"Of course I knew." She leaned forward, her perfectly manicured nails tapping against her phone. "Did you really think Ethan would choose you over me? I saved his life."

"No," I said quietly. "I did."

Her smile faltered for just a moment before returning, sharper than before. "Ethan has been giving you fertility medication for months," she said venomously. "Those vitamins he insisted you take? They were designed to prevent pregnancy."

The cup trembled in my hand. "What?"

"To make sure you could never give him children," Lauren continued, her eyes gleaming with malice. "And now that you're carrying his bastards—"

"They're his children," I said firmly.

Lauren's laugh was cold. "Ethan will never acknowledge them. They'll be nothing but a reminder of his obligation to you."

As she gathered her things to leave, she leaned close, her voice a whisper against my ear.

"If you're smart, you'll get rid of them now. Because no matter what happens, those babies will never be part of our family."

She left me sitting there, her words burning in my ears as tears blurred my vision.

Chapter 3

I couldn't sleep. The weight of Ethan's betrayal and Lauren's venomous words pressed against my chest like a stone. Two months pregnant with twins—twins Ethan didn't want and Lauren had threatened. I stared at the ceiling of our bedroom, the same bedroom where I'd dreamed of our future together.

"You were a family obligation," Ethan's words echoed in my mind.

I slipped out of bed at dawn, careful not to wake him. Not that he'd notice—he'd been sleeping in the guest room since our confrontation.

"I need to protect what's mine," I whispered to my reflection as I dressed. "What's ours."

The first call was to James Morrison.

"I need to liquidate everything," I told him, my voice steadier than I felt. "The stocks, properties, investments—all of it."

"Summer, are you certain?" His concern filtered through the phone. "These are your family's assets."

"My family is gone," I said simply. "And I need to secure my future."

Over the next week, I met with financial advisors, brokers, and wealth managers. Each meeting was in a different location—coffee shops, hotel lobbies, once even in a park bench overlooking the lake. I was paranoid, but I had reason to be.

"Ms. Hayes, these transfers will be completed within 48 hours," my newest advisor confirmed, sliding documents across the table. "All funds will be converted to untraceable accounts as requested."

I signed where indicated, my signature looking foreign to my own eyes. "And the offshore accounts?"

"Already established. Your grandparents' properties in Switzerland and the Cayman Islands are being prepared for immediate occupancy."

A noise from the adjacent booth caught my attention. A familiar voice—Lauren.

"I don't care what it costs," she hissed into her phone. "The problem needs to be eliminated permanently."

I froze, pen hovering over the signature line.

"Accidents happen to pregnant women all the time," she continued, her voice cold and calculating. "Make it look natural. No one will question it."

My blood ran cold as I signed the final document with trembling fingers.

---

"Summer? It's been ages."

Xavier Jacobs looked exactly as I remembered from high school—kind eyes, gentle smile, the same quiet strength that had always made him stand out from the crowd.

"Thanks for meeting me," I said, wrapping my hands around the warm coffee mug. "I didn't know who else to call."

We sat in a small café three towns over from Seattle. I'd chosen it specifically because no one from our social circle would ever frequent such an ordinary place.

"How have you been?" he asked, his therapist's training evident in his careful tone.

I laughed bitterly. "I'm carrying twins I wasn't supposed to have, from a husband who was never really mine, while his real wife plots to kill me."

Xavier's expression remained steady, though his eyes darkened with concern. "Summer, are you in danger?"

"Probably," I admitted. "But I don't have proof."

He reached across the table, his fingers lightly touching mine. "You know you can stay with me if you need to escape. My guest room is yours whenever you need it."

Something in his eyes made me pause. There was more there than just friendship.

"Xavier?"

"I've loved you since we were seventeen," he said quietly. "I never said anything because of your arrangement with Ethan. But I want you to know that you're not alone in this."

His confession hung between us, a lifeline thrown when I was drowning.

---

The bridal boutique's window display glowed with soft lights, showcasing a stunning ivory gown. I'd tried it on once, seven years ago, when Ethan and I had come here to plan our future.

I hadn't meant to walk past it. But something had drawn me to this street, this shop, today.

Through the window, I saw them.

Ethan stood behind Lauren, his hands adjusting her veil with a tenderness I recognized all too well. The same tenderness he'd shown me when we'd stood in this very spot, planning what I thought was our real wedding.

"That one's perfect," Ethan was saying, his voice carrying through the partially open door. "Just like you."

Lauren turned in the mirror, her reflection catching mine through the glass. For a moment, our eyes met—hers triumphant, mine devastated.

"Remember when we came here with Summer?" Lauren asked loudly enough for me to hear. "Poor thing actually believed you'd marry her someday."

Ethan laughed—a sound that once made my heart flutter but now pierced it like a knife. "She served her purpose. Just a business arrangement, like you said."

I backed away from the window, my hand instinctively covering my stomach where our twins grew.

Every memory I had of love, of happiness, of future promises—all of it had been a lie. Even this place, this sacred space where dreams were supposed to come true, had been tainted by their deception.

As I walked away from the boutique, tears blurred my vision. But beneath the heartbreak, something else stirred—a resolve hardening like steel in my veins.

They would never touch my children. Never.

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