Chapter 2

Aryana's POV:

The next morning, the heavy manila envelope in my tote bag felt like a block of ice. I walked into the lobby of Oneill Tech, using my status as Mrs. Oneill one last time. The air was cold and sterile, smelling of money and ambition.

Cameron's assistant, Chloe, looked up from her desk, her expression a familiar mix of stress and pity. "Mrs. Oneill. He's with Ms. Chavez."

"I know," I said, not breaking my stride. "This won't take long."

I could hear their voices through the frosted glass of his office door. They were laughing. The sound was easy, familiar. It was a sound he never made with me anymore.

I pushed the door open without knocking.

They weren't doing anything wrong, not really. They were leaning over a business plan on his massive desk, Kacie's hand resting on his arm. But it was the intimacy of it that stole my breath. The way they were a team. A unit.

They both looked up, startled. Cameron's face hardened instantly. Not with guilt, but with annoyance. I was an interruption.

"Aryana," he said, his voice clipped. "I'm in the middle of something."

Kacie straightened up, her face a perfect mask of sympathy. "Ari, sweetie. I'm so sorry about last night. This takeover is just an absolute nightmare. Cameron's been a lifesaver." She was subtly reminding me of her importance, of my irrelevance.

"I'm sure he has," I said, my voice flat. I looked directly at my husband. "I just need a signature. Then I'll be out of your way."

I walked to the desk and placed the envelope in front of him. The sound was a soft, definitive thud.

"What's this?" he asked, his eyes narrowed with suspicion.

"An IP release," I said. The lie came out smoothly, professionally. "The gallery needs a blanket release for the digital catalog. Since so much of the early Aether concept art is in the show."

He picked it up, weighing it in his hand. He was a human lie detector in the boardroom, and for a terrifying second, I thought he'd see right through me. He tapped the envelope with his pen, his sharp gaze fixed on my face.

I held his stare, refusing to look away. I channeled every ounce of my hurt into a cold, professional calm.

Before he could open it, Kacie masterfully intervened. "Cam, the board is waiting on that call," she said, her voice laced with urgency. "This can wait, right?"

She was right. In his world, this was trivial. My "hobby" paperwork versus a billion-dollar deal.

He looked from the envelope to Kacie, his decision already made. "Right," he grunted.

With a flash of impatience, he ripped the envelope open, pulled out the stack of papers, and flipped straight to the back. He didn't even glance at the twenty pages of the divorce settlement.

He saw the title at the top of the last page: Agreement and Signature.

He scribbled his name on the line. A sharp, angry slash of black ink.

My breath caught in my throat. I reached out and slid the signed paper back before he could give it a second look.

"Thank you for your time," I said.

As I turned to leave, Kacie gave me a small, condescending smile. The kind of smile a winner gives the loser.

I walked out of the office, out of the building, and didn't look back.

In the elevator, I looked down at the paper clutched in my hand. His signature. It was done.

He had just signed away his marriage, and he hadn't even noticed.

Chapter 3

Aryana's POV:

Walking out of that glass tower, I didn't know whether to throw up or to laugh. So I just kept walking, the signed divorce paper a secret fire in my bag.

I was free. I was also terrified.

Back at the penthouse, an email was waiting for me. It was a sign. A lifeline I had thrown to myself weeks ago, now being thrown back.

From: Cascade Foothills Artist Residency

Subject: Your Application

Dear Ms. Mason,

We are thrilled to offer you a place in our fall program. Your work was a unanimous favorite among the selection committee. We require your decision within 48 hours. The residency begins in two weeks.

Two weeks. A fourteen-day countdown to a new life.

I typed my reply before I could second-guess it.

I accept with pleasure.

I booked a one-way flight to Portland, Oregon. Then I started to erase myself from the life I was leaving behind.

I spent the next few days in a blur, packing the few things that were actually mine—my books, my clothes, my art supplies—and sending them to a storage unit. The rest was just a set. Designer dresses I never felt comfortable in, cold furniture I never chose. It was easy to leave.

But a strange exhaustion had settled deep in my bones. I told myself it was stress. A week later, when a wave of nausea hit me so hard in the middle of an art supply store that I had to grip a shelf to stay upright, I told myself it was the flu.

Then I did the math.

My period was late.

A cold dread, sharp and sickening, washed over me. No. It wasn't possible.

I bought a pregnancy test along with my charcoal pencils. My hands were shaking so badly I could barely pay the cashier.

I went to my studio, the one place in this city that was truly mine. The one place that felt safe. I took the test and set the small plastic stick on the edge of the sink.

Three minutes. I had dismantled my marriage in under twenty-four hours, but now I had to wait three minutes to find out if I was still chained to him.

My heart pounded a frantic, terrified rhythm against my ribs. Please, no. Please, no.

The timer on my phone went off.

I took a deep breath and looked.

Two pink lines. Unmistakable. Positive.

The world tilted. I stumbled back, my legs giving out, and sank onto a stool. Pregnant. The memory of that last time with Cameron, just a few weeks ago, came rushing back. It hadn't been an act of love. It had been cold, detached. A duty.

And now it was a life.

My simple plan to disappear, to start over as Aryana Mason, had just been obliterated.

I wasn't just running from him anymore. I was hiding his child.

Chapter 4

Aryana's POV:

For about an hour, I just sat on the floor of my studio, the positive pregnancy test lying on the counter like a tiny, plastic bomb.

My first instinct was to call him. To drive back to his office, throw the test on his desk, and watch his perfect, controlled world explode.

Part of me wanted to see it. To force him to finally, truly, see me.

I actually picked up my phone, my thumb hovering over his name. But then, I remembered the look on his face in his office. The cold annoyance. The impatience.

He wouldn't see a child. He'd see an asset. An heir. A complication to be managed.

He would try to control it. Control me. He would lock me back in the gilded cage I had just escaped, and this time, he'd throw away the key. For the good of the baby, of course.

My child would not be another one of his possessions.

The debate was over. I was not just saving myself anymore. I was saving my baby.

My first call was to my lawyer. "Sarah, it's me. File the papers, but can you put a two-week hold on the official notification being sent to his office?"

"Consider it done," she said. "Are you okay, Aryana?"

"I will be," I said, and I meant it.

My second call was to Brenton. I told him I was leaving for the residency immediately. I didn't tell him why, or that I wasn't coming back. He didn't ask. He just said, "Good. Go make something beautiful. And be safe, Aryana."

The last thing I did was pack a single duffel bag. My sketchbooks. A few changes of clothes. The signed divorce paper. And the positive pregnancy test.

I took a taxi back to the penthouse one last time. It was like visiting a museum of a life that was never really mine. I walked to the massive entryway table and laid my wedding ring on the cold marble.

Next to it, I placed a photo album I'd put together. It was full of pictures from the last four years. Me at his galas, his fundraisers, his award ceremonies. Always smiling. Always alone.

A visual record of my invisibility.

Then I walked out and didn't look back.

At the private airfield, a friendly woman named Ellis, the residency coordinator, greeted me. She was warm and normal, and for the first time in days, I felt like I could breathe.

As she led me toward our small chartered plane, I saw them.

Across the tarmac, Cameron and Kacie were boarding a sleek private jet. They were laughing, heads close together. They looked happy. Powerful. A perfect match.

Seeing them didn't hurt. It was clarifying. It was the final, absolute confirmation that I had done the right thing.

My own plane took off, banking north over the Pacific. I watched the San Francisco skyline, with the gleaming spire of Oneill Tech at its center, shrink until it was just a memory.

I placed a hand on my flat stomach.

For the first time in years, I felt a deep, profound sense of peace.

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