Chapter 6

Haven POV

I remained in the hospital bed for two hours after the procedure.

The cramps came in waves.

They felt like a dull knife scraping against the hollowed-out walls of my uterus, and strangely, I welcomed them.

Every spasm was a reminder of what was gone.

Every sharp pinch was a tether to reality, keeping me from floating away into the grey fog of shock.

Connor never came back.

He didn't call. He didn't send a nurse to check on me. The silence of my phone was louder than the hum of the hospital machinery.

My assistant, Maria, walked in.

She was the only person on the payroll who answered solely to me, not him.

She looked at my pale face and took in the bloodless line of my lips. She didn't ask how I was. She knew better.

Instead, she handed me a manila envelope.

I opened it.

Photos.

Connor and Gemma walking into a jewelry store. Connor and Gemma eating lunch at the bistro where he had proposed to me.

He was laughing. He looked light. He looked like a man who didn't have a wife bleeding out in a recovery room.

I looked at the timestamp.

Forty minutes ago.

While Dr. Evans was scraping his child out of me, Connor was buying diamond earrings for the woman who had set me up to die.

I put the photos down.

My hands didn't shake.

The rage that had been a roaring fire in my chest was gone. It had burned itself out, leaving nothing but cold, hard ash.

"Get the lawyer on the phone," I said.

Maria nodded. She dialed and put it on speaker.

"Mr. Henderson," I said.

"Mrs. Jones," he answered, his tone cautious. "I heard about the... incident. Is Connor with you?"

"No," I said. "And he never will be again. Initiate the divorce."

There was a pause.

"Haven, in our world... divorce is not simple. The Family will not like it."

"I don't care what the Family likes."

I sat up, ignoring the sharp pull in my abdomen.

"And the shares," I said. "My forty percent stake in the shipping lines. The construction fronts. The legitimate face of the Apex Crew."

"Yes?"

"Sell them."

"Sell them? To whom? It has to be internal. Connor won't have the liquidity to buy you out immediately."

"Not to Connor."

I looked out the window at the city skyline.

"Sell them to Elliott George."

The silence on the other end was heavy. Terrified.

"Haven, you are talking about starting a war. Elliott George is his mortal enemy. If you give him the controlling interest in the legitimate fronts, you cripple Connor. You leave him exposed."

"I know."

"Do it, Mr. Henderson. Or I will find a lawyer who will."

I hung up.

I got dressed. The jeans dug into my swollen stomach, a cruel constriction.

I walked out of the clinic and took a cab to the penthouse.

I walked into the foyer.

It smelled of vanilla.

My stomach turned.

They were in the living room.

Gemma was wearing my robe. The silk one Connor had bought me for our anniversary.

She was curled up on the sofa, watching TV as if she belonged there.

Connor was pouring wine. He looked up and saw me.

He froze.

The wine overflowed the glass, spilling onto the expensive rug like a dark stain spreading across our lives.

"Haven," he said. "You're home."

He put the bottle down and took a step toward me.

"I thought you were staying overnight for observation."

I looked at Gemma.

She pulled the robe tighter, smirking behind his back.

She was wearing the diamond earrings from the photos. They caught the light-sparkling little trophies of my destruction.

"Get out," I said to her.

Connor stepped between us.

"Don't start, Haven. She is just recovering. She had a nightmare."

I walked past him.

I went to the guest room and locked the door.

I didn't cry. I didn't scream.

I just listened to the murmur of their voices in the living room, plotting the end of my world while I planned the end of theirs.

Chapter 7

Haven POV

The next morning, the sun was blindingly bright.

It mocked the heavy darkness that clung to the inside of the apartment.

I walked into the kitchen for a glass of water, only to find Connor waiting for me.

He stood by the marble island, gripping his phone so tightly his knuckles had turned white.

He looked furious.

Not guilty.

Furious.

He shoved the screen into my face.

"Explain this," he snapped.

I focused on the screen. It was a text thread from a number saved as 'Haven.'

I will kill you, you little rat. Watch your back. I know where you sleep.

I looked up at him, bewildered.

"I didn't send that."

"Don't lie to me!" he shouted.

He slammed his hand onto the counter, the sound echoing like a gunshot in the quiet kitchen.

"Gemma showed me. She was shaking, Haven. She is terrified of you."

"She faked it, Connor," I said, my voice steady despite the adrenaline spiking in my blood. "Just like she faked the panic attack. Just like she faked the kidnapping."

"Stop it!"

He lunged forward and grabbed my upper arm.

His fingers dug painfully into my flesh.

In ten years, he had never touched me in anger. Not once.

And now, here he was, bruising me for a woman he met six months ago.

"You are jealous," he spat, his face inches from mine. "You are vindictive and cruel. I didn't think you were capable of this. Bullying a victim?"

A victim.

I laughed.

It was a dry, cracking sound devoid of humor.

"The only victim here is the child you let die yesterday so you could buy her earrings."

He recoiled as if slapped.

He released my arm, stumbling back a step.

"What are you talking about?"

I didn't answer.

I didn't owe him an explanation.

I certainly didn't owe him my grief.

"You need to apologize to her," he said, his voice dropping to a dangerous growl. "You will go in there, and you will apologize for threatening her. Or so help me God, Haven, I will kick you out of this house."

This house.

The house my money bought.

The house my strategies paid for.

I looked at him.

I really looked at him.

I saw the weak chin I used to think was gentle.

I saw the indecision in his eyes I used to mistake for thoughtfulness.

He wasn't a King.

He was a pawn who thought he was a player.

And I was done moving him across the board.

"I will not apologize," I said softly.

"Then get out of my sight."

He turned his back on me.

He walked toward Gemma's room without looking back.

He chose her again.

He would always choose her.

Because she made him feel big, and I made him realize just how small he really was.

I watched him go.

And in the silence that followed, I felt the last thread of the rope finally snap.

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