When I got back to the apartment, the front door was slightly ajar. A knot of dread tightened in my stomach. I pushed it open slowly.
The sound of soft moans drifted from the living room.
I walked in to find a scene that ripped the remaining shreds of my heart apart. Sophia Harper was straddling Liam on the custom-made sofa I had picked out. His hands were under her shirt, her head thrown back in ecstasy.
It wasn't just intimate; it was explicit. They were so lost in each other they didn't even hear me enter.
"Ahem."
Liam froze. He pushed Sophia off him, scrambling to button his shirt, his face flushing with anger rather than shame. "Elena."
Sophia adjusted her dress slowly, a smirk playing on her lips. She didn't look scared; she looked triumphant.
"Elena, can you give us a minute?" Liam said, keeping his voice low, as if I were the intruder. "Sophia isn't feeling well emotionally. She needed comfort. I'll come to the guest room later."
"The guest room? Comfort?" I laughed bitterly. "Liam, you were practically undressing her in our living room. This is my apartment. My name is on the lease. If anyone should leave, it's her."
"Please, just for tonight," he said defensively. "You know how she is. We grew up together. She needs me right now."
"Sort what out?" Sophia chimed in, wrapping her arm around his waist. "He loves me, Elena. You were just a placeholder."
"Sophia, stop," Liam warned, but he didn't push her away.
"It's true," she sneered. "He told me he never wanted kids with you. He said the thought of it made his skin crawl. That's why he was so relieved when he sent you to the clinic."
My blood ran cold.
"You think you can win?" she continued. "I'm Sophia Harper. My uncle is a powerful producer. Who are you? A no-name architect he picked up out of pity."
My hands balled into fists. "Get out," I whispered.
"Make me," Sophia challenged. She suddenly threw herself backward into the coffee table. "Ahh! My stomach! The baby!"
Liam spun around, seeing her on the floor. He didn't ask questions. He lunged at me, shoving me hard.
"You monster!" he roared.
I stumbled back, my hip slamming into the granite kitchen island. A sickening crack echoed—my ribs. I slid to the floor, gasping, clutching my side. Blood began to seep through my blouse.
"Liam... I'm hurt," I wheezed.
He didn't look at me. He was cradling Sophia. "Are you okay, my love? Did she hurt our baby?"
He looked at me with pure hatred. "She saved my life, and you try to kill her child? Get out of my sight, Elena. If anything happens to Sophia, I will destroy you."
He carried her out, stepping over my broken body.
I lay on the floor, tears mixing with the blood. As the pain throbbed in my side, a memory washed over me, unbidden and cruel.
I was twenty-one. We were in the university library, sharing a single cup of cheap coffee because Liam couldn't afford his own. He had traced the lines of my palm, his eyes full of dreams.
"One day, El," he had whispered, kissing my knuckles. "I'm going to build an empire. And you'll never have to work again. I'll treat you like a queen. You're the only one who believes in me."
I had smiled, so in love it hurt. "I don't need to be a queen, Liam. I just need you."
Then the memory shifted. My father's study, the night I left. The mahogany desk between us like a canyon.
"He is a parasite, Elena!" Marcus Foley had roared, his face purple with rage. "He sees your money, not you! If you walk out that door with him, you leave this family behind. No trust fund. No protection. Nothing."
"I don't care about the money!" I had screamed back, my voice shaking with conviction. "I'd rather eat instant noodles with him than caviar in this prison! He loves me for me!"
"You are making the biggest mistake of your life," my father had whispered, turning his back on me.
I choked on a sob, lying on the cold kitchen floor. My father was right. I had traded a kingdom for a man who just left me bleeding to comfort a liar.
Liam didn't come back for two days. I spent the time in a daze, moving through the silent apartment like a zombie.
Then, a text message from him lit up my phone.
Can you do me a favor? There's a blue velvet box in my top drawer. A courier is coming to pick it up in an hour. Have it ready for him.
I went to his drawer. Inside was a small, elegant box. I opened it. A diamond necklace.
"For the woman who saved me," the note attached read.
I laughed until I sobbed.
When the courier arrived, I handed him the package. "I'm going with you."
The car ride was silent. As we drove toward the St. Regis, the rain began to streak the windows, triggering another memory I couldn't suppress.
It was raining the night I left the estate. I had packed one small bag. I walked down the long driveway, soaking wet, shivering.
Liam was waiting at the bus stop outside the gates. He didn't have a car then. He held a broken umbrella over my head, his jacket soaked.
"You really did it," he had said, looking at me with awe. "You gave it all up for me?"
"Everything," I had promised, shivering against his chest. "It's just us now, Liam. You and me against the world."
He had held me tight. "I won't let you down, Elena. I swear."
I wiped a tear from my cheek in the back of the courier car. He had let me down. He had taken my sacrifice and built his foundation on my back, only to hand the keys to someone else.
The St. Regis was hosting a massive press conference for Sophia's new movie. I walked into the ballroom. The noise died down instantly. Every head turned.
I was wearing a simple dress and no makeup. My hair was pulled back in a messy bun.
Liam saw me, and his face tightened into a knot of anger. "Elena? What the hell are you doing here?" he hissed as I approached the stage.
I didn't answer. I just held out the blue velvet box.
"You forgot this," I said, my voice surprisingly steady.
Sophia snatched the box. "Oh, Liam! It's beautiful!"
She made him put it on her. Then, she faked a stumble. "Oh! My baby!"
"Elena!" Liam roared, lunging to steady her. "Security! She's trying to hurt Sophia!"
I held out the divorce agreement I had been clutching. "Sign them, Liam."
"Just sign it so she'll leave!" Sophia moaned.
Without even reading it, he snatched a pen, scribbled his name, and shoved the document back at me.
Then he swept Sophia into his arms. "Let us through! It's an emergency!"
I turned to leave. As I walked away, someone deliberately stuck out a foot.
I went down, hard. My head hit the marble floor with a sickening crack.
Through a haze of pain, I saw Liam stop. He looked back at me, lying on the floor with blood starting to pool around my head. For a second, I saw a flicker of the boy from the library, the boy who held the broken umbrella.
But then Sophia whispered something in his ear.
The boy vanished. The CEO turned his back on me and walked away.
I lay there, the polished floor cold against my cheek. I realized my wedding ring was gone. It must have flown off when I fell.
I didn't even look for it.
Ignoring the stares, I stumbled to the exit. I flagged down a taxi.
"Hospital?" the driver asked, alarmed by the blood.
I wiped a smear of blood from my cheek.
"Yeah," I said, a grim smile touching my lips. "But I'm not gonna die."
The ER doctor was a colleague. "Dr. Foley? What happened?" she gasped.
Before I could answer, the news on the TV blared. "Disgraced Surgeon Elena Ball Stages Fall to Win Back Tech CEO."
Then, the curtain ripped open. Victoria Turner, Liam's mother.
"You embarrass my son?" she screamed, slapping me.
Her bodyguards dragged me out of the hospital bed. "She's coming with us."
They took me to a warehouse. Victoria forced me to knees.
"Liam is launching his IPO. He doesn't need a crazy ex-wife," she spat.
She called Liam. "I have her. I'm teaching her a lesson."
"Liam!" I screamed at the phone. "I'm pregnant! Help me!"
"Mom," Liam's voice came through, weary. "Just... make sure she doesn't cause trouble. I trust you."
He hung up.
They left me there. Hours later, the pain in my stomach became a knife. I felt the warmth of blood.
My baby.
I screamed for help, but no one came. I miscarries on the cold concrete floor, alone, apologizing to the tiny soul I couldn't save.
The next morning, they dumped me at a clinic.
I woke up empty.
A text from Liam: Mom went too far, but you pushed her. Let's move on.
I stared at the phone. Then I dialed the number I had memorized.
"Julian," I whispered.
"Elena?" His voice was sharp, commanding. "Where are you?"
"I lost the baby, Julian. I lost everything. I want to come home."
"I'm coming," he said, his voice shaking with a rage I had never heard. "And God help them when I get there."