Chapter 3

The silence in the guest wing was heavy, a suffocating blanket that did nothing to muffle the throbbing in my hip or the hollow ache in my womb. I lay on top of the duvet, staring at the ceiling fan slicing through the stagnant air. The painkillers were gone—replaced by sugar pills—so I rode the waves of agony with nothing but grit and a growing, cold fury.

The door creaked.

I didn't turn my head. I expected Cameron, coming to scold me for the coffee stain, or perhaps Brittany, coming to inspect her handiwork. Instead, small footsteps padded across the hardwood floor.

"Mrs. Harris?"

Tyler.

I shifted, wincing as the movement pulled at my stitches. He stood by the bedside table, looking for all the world like a Gap ad—crisp polo, neat hair. But his eyes were wrong. They were flat, devoid of the sparkle usually found in a five-year-old.

He held something in his hand. "I found this."

He opened his palm. It was a ring—cheap costume jewelry, likely left by a previous guest, but the band was snapped, leaving a jagged, rusty edge of metal exposed.

"It's broken," I whispered, my throat dry. "Like everything else in this house."

Tyler smiled. It wasn't a child's smile. It was a mimicry of one, stretching the skin too tight across his cheeks. "Daddy says you're broken, too. He says you couldn't keep the baby safe."

The cruelty of it took my breath away more effectively than a punch to the gut. I pushed myself up on my elbows, staring at this boy I had thrown myself in front of a car to save. "Tyler, that isn't nice."

"I want to play doctor," he said, his voice dropping to a whisper. He moved closer, faster than I expected.

Before I could pull away, he lunged. He grabbed my left hand—the one still bearing Cameron’s diamond—and raked the jagged edge of the broken ring across the back of my skin.

The metal bit deep. A line of crimson welled up instantly, stark against my pale flesh.

"Tyler!" I gasped, jerking my hand back. The sting was sharp, hot.

Immediately, Tyler dropped the ring. His face contorted, shifting instantly from malice to terror. He threw his head back and screamed. "Don't hit me! Daddy! She hit me!"

The door flew open before the echo of his scream died. Cameron filled the frame, his face thunderous.

"What the hell is going on?"

"She hit me!" Tyler sobbed, rushing to Cameron and burying his face in his father's expensive slacks. "She was mad about the baby! She hit me!"

Cameron looked at me, then at the boy clinging to his leg. He didn't look at the blood dripping from my hand onto the white sheets. He only saw his heir in distress.

"Are you insane?" Cameron’s voice was low, dangerous. "You're taking your grief out on a child?"

"He cut me, Cameron! Look!" I held up my bleeding hand.

"Stop it," he snapped, scooping Tyler up. "Stop lying. You're unhinged, Eliza. Get cleaned up. Brittany made dinner, and you are going to come out there and act like a civilized human being, or so help me God, I'll have you committed."

***

The dining room was a theater of the grotesque. Brittany sat at the foot of the table, perfectly poised, while Tyler sat next to Cameron, looking small and fragile. I was the ghost at the feast, my hand bandaged, my stomach churning.

"Dessert," Brittany announced, her voice dripping with artificial sweetness. She placed a tray of cupcakes in the center of the table. They were crudely decorated with neon frosting.

"Tyler made these specially for you, Eliza," Brittany said, sliding a specific cupcake toward me. It was piled high with gray-blue icing. "To say sorry for the... misunderstanding earlier."

Tyler watched me, his chin resting on his hands. "Eat it, Mrs. Harris. It's my special recipe."

Cameron looked up from his phone, his jaw tight. "Eat the damn cupcake, Eliza. He's trying to make amends."

My stomach rolled. The smell of vanilla was cloying, masking something sharper. But Cameron’s eyes were hard flint. I reached out, my trembling fingers peeling back the paper liner. I took a bite.

Salt.

An overwhelming, burning mouthful of salt, mixed with cream that tasted sour, curdled.

My gag reflex triggered instantly. I clapped a hand over my mouth, the nausea violent and immediate. I shoved the chair back, the legs screeching against the floor, and bolted for the powder room.

I barely made it to the sink before I retched, spitting the vile mixture into the porcelain basin. I rinsed my mouth, shaking, tears of humiliation pricking my eyes.

Through the open door, I heard Brittany’s laugh—a light, tinkling sound.

"Poor thing," she said, loud enough for me to hear. "Such a weak stomach. No wonder she couldn't hold onto a pregnancy."

I gripped the edges of the sink, staring at my reflection. Pale. Hollow. Broken.

I couldn't go back out there. I walked past the dining room, ignoring Cameron’s barked command to sit back down, and headed for the study, needing a moment of sanctuary.

The door was ajar. I stopped, intending to close it, but voices drifted out. Cameron and Brittany had followed me into the hallway, pausing near the study entrance.

"This place feels cramped with her here," Brittany murmured. I could hear the rustle of paper—brochures.

"I know," Cameron replied, his voice softer than it had been with me in years. "I'm looking at the listings in Tribeca. We need a bigger place. Five bedrooms."

"Five?" Brittany cooed.

"Tyler needs space," Cameron said, and then, with a casual cruelty that stopped my heart, added, "And he needs a sibling. Since Eliza obviously can't provide one... maybe we should try again. Soon."

The air left my lungs. He wasn't just grieving differently. He was replacing me. He was replacing *us*. The baby I lost wasn't a tragedy to him; it was an inconvenience, easily rectified with a new model.

I stood in the shadows, the taste of salt and bile still in my mouth, and felt something inside me snap. It wasn't my mind. It was the tether that had bound me to Cameron Harris.

The fear evaporated, replaced by a cold, crystalline clarity. I looked at the ring on my finger—the one Tyler hadn't managed to cut off.

I didn't need to save this marriage. I needed to survive it.

Chapter 4

The penthouse was silent, save for the rhythmic hum of the refrigerator and the distant city noise bleeding through the triple-paned glass. It was 3:00 AM. The witching hour for the guilty, or in my case, the awakened.

I moved through the guest room like a wraith, my movements sharp and efficient. The pain in my hip was a dull throb now, easily ignored compared to the icy clarity in my chest. I didn't pack much. Just clothes that fit loosely over my bruised abdomen, my teaching credentials, and the photo of my mother I kept in the nightstand. I left the jewelry Cameron had bought me—the guilt gifts, the apology diamonds. They felt heavy, like shackles.

I zipped the duffel bag, the sound loud in the stillness. I reached for my wallet, pulling out the platinum card Cameron insisted I use for “household expenses.” I needed a cab. Maybe a hotel until I could think.

I opened the banking app on my phone, just to check the balance.

*Account Frozen. Contact Administrator.*

I tried the joint checking. *Access Denied.*

My breath hitched. He knew. Somehow, he knew I was flighty, or perhaps this was just standard procedure for him—control the money, control the woman. He had cut me off before I even made it to the door.

Panic flared, hot and suffocating. I had sixty dollars in cash and a MetroCard. That wouldn't get me far. I scrolled through my contacts, my thumb hovering over Sarah’s name. No. She had a new baby; I couldn't bring this toxicity into her home.

My finger drifted down to 'Dad.'

Abram Morgan. We hadn't spoken since Christmas, a polite, ten-minute exchange about the weather and his stocks. He was a stranger with my eyes. But he was the only power Cameron feared.

I pressed call. One ring. Two.

"Eliza?"

His voice was rough with sleep but instantly alert.

"Dad," I whispered, my voice cracking. "I need help. I need to leave."

There was a pause, heavy with the years of distance between us. Then, the steel I remembered from my childhood snapped into place. "Where are you?"

"The penthouse. Cameron frozen my accounts. He... he has a mistress moving in. A child."

"Stay there," he commanded. "Don't engage. Security will be there in twenty minutes."

***

The wait was agony. I sat by the door, shoes on, bag in my lap. When the elevator dinged, it wasn't security. It was Cameron.

He stood in the hallway in his silk pajamas, rubbing his eyes. He looked at the bag, then at me. His expression shifted from confusion to a terrifying calm.

"Going somewhere?" he asked, leaning against the doorframe, blocking my exit.

"Move, Cameron."

"It's three in the morning, Eliza. You're hysterical again. Go back to bed."

"I'm leaving. Forever."

He laughed, a low, dismissive sound. "With what money? I saw the alerts. You can't even buy a coffee without my permission."

"I don't need your money."

"You need everything from me," he sneered, stepping closer. "You're a kindergarten teacher, Eliza. You can't survive in this city without me. Now put the bag down before you wake up my son."

*My son.* The words were a physical blow.

Before I could respond, the elevator chimed again. The doors slid open to reveal two men—massive, wearing dark suits that screamed private security. Behind them stood my father.

Abram Morgan looked older than I remembered, his hair silver, but his presence filled the hallway. He held a cane he didn't seem to need.

"Daddy?" I breathed.

Cameron spun around. His arrogance faltered, replaced by the nervous twitch of a man realizing he was out of his depth. "Abram. This is a private residence. You can't just barge in here."

"I can buy this building and evict you before breakfast, Cameron," my father said, his voice quiet and deadly. He looked at me, his eyes scanning the bruises on my face, the bandage on my hand. His jaw tightened. "Get her bag."

The security guards moved forward. Cameron stepped aside, shrinking against the wall.

***

The estate in the Hamptons was a fortress of silence and sea air. I sat in my father’s study, a room smelling of leather and old paper. A team of lawyers sat opposite us, their pens scratching against legal pads.

"Adultery is clear," the lead attorney said. "But the abuse... we need documentation."

I placed my phone on the desk. "I have photos of the bruises. The text messages where he admits Brittany is staying there. The hospital records from the miscarriage."

My father flinched at the word. He reached across the mahogany desk, covering my hand with his. His skin was dry, papery. "I should have stopped him years ago, Eliza. I never liked him. He was a climber. But I thought... I thought you wanted distance from me. I thought I was respecting your independence."

"I did want distance," I admitted, tears pricking my eyes. "But I didn't want this."

"I have failed you," Abram said, his voice thick. "But I will not fail you now. I will spend every dime I have to bury him."

My phone buzzed on the desk. A notification. Then another. Then a flood.

I picked it up. My stomach dropped.

Instagram. Facebook. Twitter. Brittany had been busy.

A photo of me from the hospital, hair matted, eyes wild, screaming at a nurse. The caption read: *So heartbreaking when grief turns into madness. We tried to help her, but she threatened my son. Please pray for our family's safety from this unstable woman. #MentalHealthAwareness #ProtectOurChildren*

"She posted it," I whispered, showing the screen to the lawyer. "She's saying I'm dangerous."

Another notification. An email from the school district.

*Dear Mrs. Harris, due to recent concerning allegations circulating publicly regarding your conduct, the Board has decided to place you on administrative leave pending an investigation...*

My career. My kids. The one thing that was truly mine.

I looked at my father. The tears didn't fall. They burned up in the heat of a new, unfamiliar emotion. It wasn't sadness. It was war.

"They took my job," I said, my voice steady. "They took my baby. Now they want my reputation."

Abram stood up, leaning heavily on his cane. "Then we take everything else."

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