Liv POV
I sat in the sterile waiting room of the lawyer's office, my hand resting protectively over my stomach.
It was a reflex I couldn't stop.
I felt sick. Not just the predictable morning sickness, but a marrow-deep nausea that made my skin clammy.
I had tracked Michael here.
My mother’s friend worked as a paralegal at this firm. She had whispered the tip-off: Michael had an appointment at 2:00 PM.
It was 2:15 PM.
I stood up on shaky legs and walked down the hallway. I knew I shouldn't be here. I knew I should wait for my own counsel.
But I needed to know his next move.
The door to the conference room was slightly ajar, leaking light and sound.
I heard Michael’s voice. It was calm. Business-like. Chillingly detached.
"I need to make sure my assets are protected," he said. "If she finds out about Serena, she’s going to come after the company."
"Infidelity clauses can be tricky, Michael," a deeper voice replied.
"I know," Michael said. "That's why I need leverage."
I held my breath, my heart hammering against my ribs. I leaned closer to the gap in the door.
"What kind of leverage?" the lawyer asked.
"If she wants a divorce, I'll threaten to drag it out for years," Michael said, his tone flat. "I'll drain her accounts. And if we... if there were a child involved, I would petition for full custody. Not because I want it, but because she wouldn't be able to bear losing it."
The hallway spun.
He didn't want a child. He wanted a pawn.
He was talking about a hypothetical child, but the cruelty was visceral and real.
"A child is a great bargaining chip," Michael continued, his voice devoid of any emotion. "It forces settlement. She’s sentimental. She’ll give up the money to keep the kid."
I felt a sharp cramp in my abdomen.
I leaned against the wall to keep from sliding down to the carpet.
He knew me. He knew exactly how to hurt me.
He was planning to use my love against me.
I thought about the baby growing inside me.
If he knew... if he knew I was pregnant, he wouldn't see a son or a daughter. He would see a negotiation tactic. He would see a way to keep his money.
I bit my lip until I tasted the copper tang of blood.
*Over my dead body.*
I turned around and walked back to the elevator. My steps were silent, ghost-like.
I didn't confront him. I didn't scream.
I went straight to my car and called the toughest divorce attorney in the city—a shark known for leaving no scraps.
"I want to file," I told her, my voice trembling but resolute. "And I want full custody. I want him to have nothing."
"On what grounds?" she asked.
"Adultery," I said. "And psychological abuse."
"We need proof."
"I'll get it," I said.
My phone buzzed against my palm.
It was Michael.
*Michael: Thinking of you. Hope you're feeling better. I'll be home late again. Closing a big deal.*
The timestamp was one minute after he finished talking to his lawyer about destroying me.
The irony was suffocating.
*Michael: I transferred $50,000 to your account. Buy something nice.*
He was trying to pay me off in advance. He was trying to pad the landing so I wouldn't look too closely at his life.
I looked at the text.
"Support," he called it.
"Hush money," I whispered.
I typed a reply, my fingers moving mechanically.
*Liv: Thanks. Don't hurry home.*
I hit send.
Then I opened his contact info.
I scrolled down to the bottom.
*Block Caller.*
I pressed it.
A weight lifted off my chest.
I sat there in the parking garage, the engine idling.
I felt a strange sensation wash over me. It wasn't fear anymore.
It was clarity. Cold, hard clarity.
I wasn't just a wife. I wasn't just a victim.
I was a mother.
And a mother does whatever it takes to protect her young from predators. Even if the predator is the father.
I drove to the bank.
I withdrew half of our joint savings. It was my legal right.
Then I went to a storage unit rental place.
I wasn't going to wait for him to kick me out. I was going to disappear by degrees.
My phone buzzed again. It was a notification from the bank app.
Michael had seen the withdrawal.
Good.
Let him panic.
Let him wonder.
Let him feel a fraction of the uncertainty I had lived with for months.
I drove home. The house was dark.
I walked into the nursery. The empty room.
"You won't know him," I whispered to the darkness.
"You won't use him."
I put my hand on my stomach.
"It's just us," I said.
And for the first time in days, I didn't cry.
Liv POV
The gallery was awash in gallery white—unforgiving, sterile, and bright.
My black-and-white landscapes hung against the starkness, commanding the room.
They were images of isolation. Stark. Lonely. Hauntingly beautiful.
This was my first solo exhibition. By all metrics, it should have been the highlight of my career.
I wore a silk dress that draped over my body, carefully hiding the tiny bump that no one else could see yet.
I smiled at the guests. I shook hands. I tilted my head and laughed at the right moments, playing the part of the successful artist to perfection.
But my eyes kept darting to the door.
Michael walked in at 8:00 PM.
He was wearing his "apology suit." Navy blue. Crisp white shirt. The one he wore when he knew he’d screwed up.
He was holding a bouquet of white roses.
I hated white roses. They reminded me of funerals.
He walked straight to me, ignoring the art, ignoring the people who had come to see it.
"For the star of the evening," he said, his voice booming with forced cheer.
He handed me the flowers. The crowd applauded politely.
He leaned in to kiss my cheek. "You look beautiful, Liv."
That’s when I smelled her on him. Vanilla and musk. Cloying and sweet.
I took the flowers because I didn't want to make a scene. Not here. Not tonight.
"Thank you," I said. My voice was brittle.
"Daddy!"
The word cut through the polite chatter like a knife through silk.
The room went dead silent.
I turned toward the entrance.
A woman was standing there. She was beautiful in a sharp, predatory way.
It was Serena. The woman from the photos.
And holding her hand was the little boy. Jason.
He broke free from her grip and ran toward Michael.
"Daddy!" he yelled again, his voice innocent and damning. "Why are you holding that lady's flowers?"
Michael froze.
His face drained of color. He looked from me to the boy to the crowd, trapped in a nightmare of his own making.
He dropped his hand from my waist like I was on fire.
Jason grabbed Michael’s leg. "Up! Up!"
Michael instinctively reached down. He hesitated, looking at me with panic in his eyes, but the boy was already climbing him.
He picked him up.
The image was perfect. Framed like a twisted family portrait. The doting father. The beautiful son.
And the wife standing there holding funeral flowers.
Whispers started to ripple through the room like static.
"Is that his son?"
"I thought they didn't have kids."
"Who is that woman?"
Serena walked over. Her heels clicked loudly on the polished concrete floor, each step a deliberate strike.
She stopped in front of me. She looked me up and down with a sneer.
"Hello, Liv," she said.
She reached out and touched Michael’s arm. He didn't pull away.
"Please," Serena said, her voice pitched perfectly loud enough for everyone to hear. "Don't be mad at Michael. He's just trying to do the right thing by his family."
She put a possessive hand on Jason’s back.
"His *real* family."
The humiliation washed over me. It was hot and suffocating.
I felt naked. Everyone was looking at me. Pity. Curiosity. Amusement.
"Get out," I whispered.
"Now, Liv," Serena said, her voice dripping with fake sweetness. "Don't be difficult. We just wanted to support your little... hobby."
She looked at my ring finger.
"Although," she said, "that ring really doesn't suit you anymore."
She reached out.
Before I could react, she grabbed my left hand.
She yanked.
It hurt. My knuckle scraped against the metal as she twisted it violently.
She pulled the diamond ring off my finger.
"Oops," she said.
She tossed the ring.
It clattered onto the floor. It spun dizzily and landed at my feet.
My marriage. My promises. My dignity. All lying on the dirty floor.
Something snapped inside me.
I lunged. Not for the ring, but for her.
"You bitch!" I screamed.
I stepped forward.
Serena’s eyes flashed. She stepped back and shoved me. Hard.
It wasn't a gentle push. It was a full-force shove to my chest.
I lost my balance. My heels slipped on the slick floor.
I fell backward.
I tried to catch myself, but I was too slow.
My lower back hit the corner of a display pedestal with a sickening crunch.
Pain exploded in my spine. It radiated down to my stomach like shattered glass.
A sharp, tearing cramp ripped through my abdomen.
"Liv!" someone screamed.
I lay on the floor. The gallery lights were blinding.
I curled into a ball, clutching my stomach.
"My baby," I gasped. "My baby."
No one heard me over the commotion.
I saw Michael. He looked at me. He took a step toward me.
But Serena grabbed his arm. She whispered something in his ear and pulled Jason close.
Michael looked at them. Then he looked at me.
And then, he made his choice.
He turned his back.
He let Serena pull him toward the exit. He was shielding them from the cameras.
He was leaving me on the floor.
I felt a wetness between my legs.
I looked down.
The white silk of my dress was turning dark red.
Panic, cold and absolute, seized my heart.
"Help," I whispered.
The room started to spin. The faces of the guests blurred into a kaleidoscope of judgment.
The last thing I saw before the darkness took me was my wedding ring, glittering on the floor, inches from the growing pool of blood.
Liv POV
The sharp sting of antiseptic pulled me from the darkness.
I blinked, my vision adjusting to the harsh fluorescent glare. The ceiling was white. The sheets were scratchy against my skin.
Hospital.
I tried to sit up, but a wave of dizziness slammed me back against the pillows.
"Liv!"
My mother was by my side instantly. Her eyes were red and swollen, the lines of her face etched with exhaustion. She grabbed my hand as if I might disappear.
"Mom," I croaked, my throat dry as sandpaper. "The baby?"
She squeezed my hand, her grip trembling. "The doctor said it was a close call. But the heartbeat is still there. You need absolute bed rest, Liv. You can't stress yourself."
I let out a breath I didn't know I was holding, tears pricking the corners of my eyes.
Then, like a physical blow, the memory of the gallery crashed into me.
The white roses. The little boy calling him Daddy. The shove. The blood soaking through my dress.
And Michael walking away.
"He left me," I said. It wasn't a question. It was a verdict.
My mother’s face hardened into stone. "He tried to come in an hour ago. I had security remove him."
"Good," I said.
I looked at the IV tube snaking into my arm.
I felt different. The fear was gone. The sadness was evaporating like mist.
All that was left was a cold, hard rage, settling in my chest like a block of ice.
"I want to see my lawyer," I said.
"Now?"
"Right now."
*
Two days later, I was discharged.
I didn't go home. Home was a battlefield I was done fighting on. I went to a hotel.
I had my lawyer draft the papers immediately.
I sent them to Michael’s office via courier.
That afternoon, my phone rang. It was him.
I didn't answer. I let it ring until it went to voicemail.
I sent a text.
*Liv: Meet me at the cafe on 4th Street. 3 PM. Bring a pen.*
I arrived early. I sat in the back corner, my back to the wall.
Michael walked in at 3:05. He looked tired, his usually pristine appearance fraying at the edges. His tie was crooked.
He saw me and rushed over, feigning relief.
"Liv," he said, reaching for my hand. "Thank God. I've been so worried. Are you okay? Why were you in the hospital?"
I pulled my hand away as if he were contagious.
"Sit down," I said.
He sat. He looked nervous, his eyes darting around the room.
"Liv, about the gallery... Serena is crazy. I didn't know she was coming. I was trying to get her out of there to protect you."
"Stop," I said. My voice was low, steady.
I slid a manila envelope across the table.
"Sign them."
He opened the envelope. He saw the title: Petition for Dissolution of Marriage.
His face turned red, a vein pulsing in his temple.
"I'm not signing this," he said. He threw the papers down, scattering them slightly. "You're being irrational. We can work this out. I love you."
"You love your image," I said. "And you love your money."
"I'm not signing," he repeated. He leaned forward, his voice turning nasty, the mask finally slipping. "You think you can leave me? You have nothing without me. I made you."
I reached into my bag.
I pulled out a second envelope.
This one was thinner.
I slid it across the table.
Michael opened it.
It was a copy of his company’s internal financial report. Specifically, the forensic accounting of the funds he had embezzled to set up a trust for Serena and Jason.
His face went white. All the blood drained from his arrogant features.
"Where did you get this?" he whispered.
"It doesn't matter," I said. "I was paying attention, Michael. Even when you thought I was just decoration. If you don't sign the divorce papers today, and give me full ownership of the house, I send this to the IRS and your board of directors."
He looked at me. Really looked at me.
He realized for the first time that the submissive, quiet wife he knew was dead. She had died on the gallery floor.
He picked up the pen.
He signed the divorce papers with a shaking hand.
Then he stood up.
He leaned over the table, his face inches from mine, his breath hot with venom.
"You'll regret this," he hissed. "You'll be alone. No one will want used goods like you."
He looked at my stomach. He didn't know. He still didn't know.
"And if you ever manage to have a kid," he spat, "I hope it knows its mother is a cold-hearted bitch who destroyed its father."
He threw the pen on the table and stormed out, the cafe door jingling cheerfully behind him.
I watched him go.
I put a hand on my stomach, protective and fierce.
"He's wrong," I whispered to the baby. "We aren't destroyed."
I picked up the signed papers.
The sun was shining outside, bright and blinding.
I walked out of the cafe.
I was alone. I was pregnant. I was divorced.
But for the first time in years, I was free.
I hailed a cab.
"Where to?" the driver asked.
"The airport," I said.
I knew the doctors said bed rest. I knew it was a risk. But I wasn't going back to the house. I wasn't staying in this city.
I had a plan. And Michael wasn't part of it anymore.