Chapter 5

The newspaper fluttered from my numb fingers, landing softly on the highly polished floor. Dax. Charley. Their faces, intertwined in a forced smile, stared back from the glossy page. The headline screamed: "Tech Mogul Dax Roth Weds Longtime Assistant Charley Hood in Secret Ceremony." Secret? My stomach churned. Secret from me, his wife? The date stated was two months ago. Two months ago he was still sharing my bed, whispering sweet nothings.

My mind raced, a frantic blur of images: Charley' s sweet birthday wishes, Dax' s whispered lies on the phone. The sheer audacity of their deception punched the air from my lungs. I ripped the paper, then another, then another, until the elegant living room was buried under a snowstorm of shredded lies.

I grabbed my car keys, my vision blurring with rage. I drove, the city streets a maze of flashing lights and angry horns. I didn't care. I needed to see them. I needed to understand.

I found them at their "new" home – a sprawling penthouse I didn't recognize, gleaming against the New York skyline. The front door was ajar. I pushed it open, my heart a hammer against my ribs.

They were there, in the living room, a picture of domestic bliss. Dax, laughing, his arm around Charley. Her head rested on his shoulder, her hand resting over a slight bump on her belly. My blood ran cold. The bump. It was small, but unmistakable.

"Dax!" My voice ripped through the air, raw and broken.

He spun around, his face draining of color. Charley shrieked, pulling back, her eyes wide with feigned innocence.

"Alysa?" Dax stammered, stepping in front of Charley, shielding her. Just like he always did.

"You bastard!" I screamed, the words tearing from my throat. "You married her? You have a child with her?" My gaze dropped to Charley's hand. On her finger, a sapphire ring. The very ring I had shown Dax years ago, saying it was the most beautiful stone I' d ever seen. He had told me it was "too flashy."

"What are you doing here?" Dax demanded, his voice suddenly cold, protective. "You shouldn't be here."

"I shouldn't be here?" I laughed, a harsh, desperate sound. "I' m your wife, Dax! Your wife!" My eyes focused on the faint love bite on Charley's neck, barely hidden by her collar. A fresh wound. One he had given her. It was a tangible mark of his betrayal, searing itself into my brain.

Something snapped. I lunged at Charley, my hands flying, fueled by a rage so potent it consumed me. "You snake! You lying, scheming bitch!"

Charley shrieked again, stumbling back. "She's crazy, Dax! Get her away from me!"

Dax, with a strength I hadn't known he possessed, roughly shoved me away. I fell, hitting the edge of a coffee table with a sickening thud. A sharp pain bloomed in my abdomen.

"Don't you dare touch her!" Dax roared, his face contorted with fury. He knelt beside Charley, cradling her. "Are you alright, darling? Is the baby okay?"

The baby. His baby. Our baby. My baby. The thought pierced through the haze of my anger. The kick. My first baby kick. Just this morning. The sudden, agonizing cramp in my belly intensified.

"Our baby, Dax," I gasped, clutching my stomach. "We were having a baby."

He looked at me then, his eyes wide with a fleeting horror. But it was fleeting. He quickly turned back to Charley, his concern for her overriding everything else.

The pain intensified, a searing fire. I looked down. Blood. My blood. Dark and viscous, spreading across my dress.

"No!" I screamed, a guttural sound of pure agony and despair. "My baby! Our baby!"

I woke up in a hospital bed, the sterile white walls mirroring the emptiness inside me. The doctor's words were a blur. Miscarriage. Too much stress. Too much trauma.

Dax walked in, his face carefully composed. He held a bouquet of white lilies, a gesture of hollow remorse. He sat beside my bed, taking my hand. It felt cold, detached.

"Alysa, I'm so sorry," he murmured, his voice gentle. "I didn't know. I swear..."

I yanked my hand away. "You killed him, Dax!" I screamed, my voice raw. "You and your whore! You killed our baby!" I thrashed, hitting him, scratching, tearing at his expensive suit. The nurses rushed in, sedating me.

When I woke again, Dax was gone. But Charley was there, sitting by my bedside, a smug smile playing on her lips. She held a single rose, its petals a vibrant, mocking red.

"Dax told me to look after you," she purred, her voice sweet as poison. "He's so worried. Especially after you lost the baby."

My blood ran cold. "You knew," I whispered, the realization dawning on me. "You knew I was pregnant."

She chuckled softly. "Of course. Did you really think Dax would share everything with you and not me? I heard you talking to your doctor. Such a shame, isn't it? Losing a baby like that. Especially when Dax and I are so excited for ours."

She leaned closer, her eyes gleaming with malice. "You know, Dax has been giving you placebos for months. He didn't want a child with you. He wanted my child. He just needed to make sure you didn't get pregnant while he was… tying up loose ends."

My mind reeled. Placebos. The prenatal vitamins he had insisted I take, so lovingly, every morning. It was all a lie. He had controlled my body, my future, for months. The monster. He wasn't just a cheat. He was a manipulative, calculating demon.

"You're lying!" I shrieked, tears streaming down my face.

She just smiled, a chilling, triumphant smile. "Am I? Ask him. He'll tell you. He said you were getting too emotional, too clingy. He needed to get rid of you, but he wanted to do it cleanly. He was trying to protect you from yourself." She paused, her voice dripping with venom. "And now, you can't even have children, can you? After that little tantrum, your womb is ruined. Dax's words, not mine."

My world shattered. My parents gone. My baby gone. My husband, a monster. My best friend, his accomplice. My heart, a hollow cavity filled with nothing but ice and hate.

And then the public shaming began. Dax, the master manipulator, leaked stories to the press. Alysa Bailey, the unstable heiress, suffering a breakdown, attacking his "innocent" assistant, trying to ruin his life. My father's company, already struggling, was ruthlessly taken over by Dax, his name stripped from the legacy. All my assets, the stock he had so lovingly "given" me, were transferred to Charley. I was left with nothing but my fury and my broken body.

I was held captive in our Hamptons estate, not by chains, but by Dax's men, by his lies, by the surveillance cameras he had installed. He would visit, playing the concerned husband, pretending to care, while Charley, my former best friend, would strut through the house, flaunting her growing belly, mocking my misery.

One day, she stood over me, her belly prominently displayed. "See, Alysa?" she cooed. "This is what a real woman's body does. You're just a barren husk. Dax doesn't want you anymore. He never did."

I screamed. I clawed. I did everything I could to hurt her, to hurt him. But they were always stronger. Dax would just watch, detached, a cruel smile playing on his lips. "See, Alysa?" he'd say, "You're just proving my point. You're unstable. Unfit."

Then came the final blow. He released a video. A video of me, in my most vulnerable, desperate moments, screaming, crying, trashing the house. He had edited it, twisted it, made me look like a madwoman. It went viral. I became a national joke, a cautionary tale. The mad heiress, driven insane by her husband's success.

My father's friends, my own friends, turned away. The world believed Dax's narrative. I was alone. Utterly, completely alone.

Until that last night. The pain in my abdomen had eased. The rage, however, still thrummed beneath my skin. I had taken to wandering the grounds, a ghost in my own home. I stumbled upon an old, forgotten shed. Inside, dusty and neglected, was a crate of explosives, leftover from a renovation project years ago. My father' s project.

A terrifying idea, born of desperation and revenge, began to form. I would burn it all down. Like the first lie, like the first betrayal, it would all end in fire.

But then, a faint flutter. Again. Not the phantom pain of my lost child. This was different. A tiny, insistent tremor. A whisper of life. My hand flew to my belly. Could it be? After all Charley had said? After the placebos?

I found an old pregnancy test kit in a forgotten bathroom drawer. My hands trembled as I took it. Two pink lines. Faint, but undeniably there.

A miracle. A tiny flicker of hope in the abyss of my despair. I wasn't barren. I wasn't alone. I had a second chance. And I would protect this life with every fiber of my being.

The plan changed. Burn it down, yes. But not with me in it. I would fake my death. Dax would think I was gone, another tragic victim of my own madness. He would never look for me. He would never look for our child.

That night, as the flames engulfed the Hamptons estate, I drove away, a new life kicking faintly within me, a silent promise of a future he would never touch. I watched the inferno in my rearview mirror, the inferno that consumed my past, and carried me into my unknown future.

The sound of Emma' s laughter, echoing from the dining room, pulled me sharply back to the present. Brenda was still watching me, her eyes filled with concern. "Alice?"

I forced a smile, my heart still pounding with the echoes of that terrible past. "I'm fine, Brenda. Just... a lot on my mind." I got up, my body aching with the phantom pains of old wounds. "I need to go check on Emma."

As I walked away, I felt Dax's eyes on me again, from the shadows near the entrance to the dining room where his family was eating. He stood there, statue-still, his gaze glued to Emma, who was now chattering happily with Cristopher. A chilling premonition settled over me. Our paths had crossed again. And this time, I knew he wouldn't let go so easily.

Chapter 6

The air crackled with unspoken tension. I knew Dax was watching me, his gaze a physical weight on my back. My instincts screamed at me to run, to hide Emma, but five years had taught me to stand my ground. I had fought too hard for this peace.

I took a deep breath, trying to calm the frantic beat of my heart. Emma, oblivious, skipped ahead, her colorful backpack bouncing. Cristopher, ever watchful, placed a reassuring hand on my lower back. "Everything okay, Alice?" he murmured, his voice a low rumble.

"As okay as it can be," I replied, forcing a smile.

Dax stepped out of the shadows, blocking our path to the inn's private family quarters. "Alysa," he said, his voice a low plea. "We need to talk."

"I told you, my name is Alice," I said, my voice flat. I pulled Emma closer, shielding her from his intense gaze. "And we have nothing to talk about, Mr. Roth."

His eyes were fixed on Emma, a desperate, confused hunger in them. "Who is she, Alysa? Tell me."

"She's my daughter. And she has a father who loves her very much," I retorted, letting my gaze drift pointedly to Cristopher. "Now, if you'll excuse us, my family is waiting."

Dax took another step, reaching out a hand, as if to touch Emma. Cristopher moved instantly, placing his body between Dax and my daughter. His hand, firm and unyielding, pressed against Dax's chest.

"I think you've caused enough disturbance for one evening, Mr. Roth," Cristopher said, his voice calm but laced with steel. "Perhaps it's best you return to your own family. They're probably wondering where you've gone."

Dax's eyes, blazing with a mix of anger and desperate confusion, locked with Cristopher's. "Stay out of this," he snarled.

"This is my business," Cristopher replied, his jaw tight. "Alice and Emma are my family."

The words hit Dax like a physical blow. He stumbled back, his face paling. He looked at me, then at Cristopher, then at Emma, his gaze filled with a dawning, terrible realization.

"Mommy, Cristopher, let's go! I'm hungry!" Emma whined, tugging at my hand. "Grandpa Cristopher promised me pancakes!"

Dax gasped, his eyes widening in horror. "Grandpa Cristopher?" he whispered, the words choked.

I didn't dignify him with a response. I turned, pulling Emma and Cristopher firmly into the inn's private wing. I could feel Dax's gaze burning into my back until the door swung shut, mercifully cutting him off.

Inside, the warm scent of Cristopher's famous blueberry pancakes filled the air. Emma, quickly distracted, chattered happily about her day. Cristopher settled us at the small kitchen table, his presence a soothing balm.

"He won't bother you anymore tonight," Cristopher said, his voice grim. "I made sure of it."

I nodded, grateful. "Thank you, Cristopher."

He just squeezed my hand. Later, after Emma was tucked into bed, dreaming of pancakes and playgrounds, Cristopher and I sat on the porch swing, the Vermont night wrapping around us. The silence was comfortable, familiar.

"He recognized you, didn't he?" Cristopher said softly, breaking the quiet.

I sighed. "I think so. For a moment. Then he saw Emma."

Cristopher wrapped his arm around me, pulling me closer. "He's dangerous, Alice. You know that, right?"

"I know," I whispered, resting my head on his shoulder. "I lived it."

The next morning, I was serving breakfast in the inn's dining room when I saw him again. Dax. He was sitting alone at a table by the window, staring out at the early morning mist. His usual entourage, Charley and their son, were nowhere in sight.

He looked haggard, his eyes shadowed with sleeplessness. He saw me, and his eyes, bruised with a raw emotion, pleaded with me. He stood up, as if compelled, and started toward me.

Before he could reach me, Cristopher stepped in, placing a hand on my arm. "Alice, can you check on the coffee?" he asked, his voice deliberately loud. He then turned to Dax, his expression unyielding. "Mr. Roth, perhaps you should return to your table. Your family will be joining you shortly, I presume."

Dax ignored him. His eyes, fixed on mine, were desperate. "Please, Alysa. Just five minutes. Anywhere quiet."

I hesitated. Part of me wanted to refuse, wanted to build an impenetrable wall between us. But another, darker part, the part that still harbored a burning need for answers, for justice, knew I couldn't. Not now. Not when he was looking at Emma like that.

I glanced at Cristopher, who gave me a subtle nod. He trusted me. He knew I could handle myself.

"Fine," I said, my voice cold. "Ten minutes. The old shed behind the vineyard. Alone."

I walked away without looking back, the tension in the dining room a palpable hum. I could feel Dax's eyes on me, then Cristopher' s, then the confused glances of the other guests. I pushed through it all, my resolve hardening with every step.

The shed was cold, dusty, smelling of old wood and forgotten things. I pulled a pack of cigarettes from my pocket, a habit I' d picked up in the darkest days after my escape. A small act of rebellion, of self-destruction. I lit one, the cherry glowing in the dim light, and inhaled deeply. The harsh smoke filled my lungs, grounding me.

Dax walked in, his face pale, his eyes wide with disbelief. "You smoke now?" he asked, his voice choked. "You always hated the smell."

I took another long drag, letting the smoke curl from my lips. "A lot of things have changed, Dax," I said, my voice devoid of emotion. "You wanted to talk. Talk."

He swallowed hard, his gaze lingering on the lit cigarette. "Are you... are you pregnant again?" he asked, his voice barely a whisper, his eyes flicking to my stomach, then to my left hand, where my wedding ring from Cristopher gleamed. "Is that... is that why you're here? With him?"

I laughed, a short, bitter sound. "You think I'd be pregnant with your child, after what you did?" I shook my head slowly, the irony a heavy cloak around me. "And no, Dax. I'm not pregnant. And my daughter is not yours."

He flinched. "Alysa, please. What happened? After the fire... everyone thought you died. I mourned you. I swear, I... I was devastated."

"Devastated?" I scoffed, taking another puff. "You married Charley two months later. You moved into a penthouse and had a baby. Don't insult my intelligence, Dax. You were thrilled. Free of the 'mad heiress' who had become a liability."

He took a step closer, his eyes pleading. "It wasn't like that. I was lost. Charley... she was there. She helped me pick up the pieces."

I stared at him, my gaze unwavering. "Help you pick up the pieces? You mean help you finalize the takeover of my father's company? Help you consolidate all my assets? Help you spin the story to make me look like a deranged villain?" I snorted. "Spare me your crocodile tears, Dax. I know exactly what kind of 'help' Charley gave you."

My mind flashed back to those brutal months after I had faked my death. The desperation of being on the run, pregnant, alone, with no money, no identity. The constant fear of being discovered. The morning sickness, severe and relentless, while I slept in my car, or in cheap motels, or, at times, on park benches.

I remembered the excruciating leg cramps, the dizzy spells, the constant threat of losing this precious life inside me. I was starving, sick, terrified. The world, fueled by Dax's carefully crafted narrative, hunted me like a criminal. Every news report painted me as the deranged, violent wife who had tried to destroy the philanthropic tech mogul.

People whispered, pointed, sometimes even shouted insults. "Crazy bitch!" "Husband batterer!" I was spat on, cursed at. I had to change my appearance, dye my hair, wear oversized clothes to hide my pregnancy and my identity. I had lost everything. My name, my family, my fortune, my reputation.

And then, when I finally found refuge in this quiet Vermont town, exhausted and broken, Cristopher had found me. He had taken me in, asked no questions, simply offered kindness. He helped me set up the inn, gave me a job, a home. He shielded me from the world's cruelty. He was the one who held my hand through labor, the one who cut Emma's umbilical cord. He was the one who had helped me name her, Emma, meaning "universal, whole." A name filled with hope.

"You have no idea, Dax," I said, my voice low and trembling with suppressed rage, "the hell I went through. The price I paid for your lies." I took another drag from my cigarette, the fire in my chest a familiar companion. "But I made it. And I built something beautiful from the ashes you left behind."

A tear traced a path down Dax's cheek. He reached for my hand again. "Alysa, please. I know I made mistakes. Terrible mistakes. But I regret them. Every single one."

"Regret?" I scoffed, pulling my hand away violently. "Your regret is too little, too late. You lost your chance, Dax. You had everything, and you threw it away for a pathetic lie and a conniving woman. Now, leave me the hell alone. And stay away from my daughter."

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