I couldn't sit at home any longer, waiting for Ethan to return with whatever lies he'd prepared. The pregnancy test felt like a lead weight in my pocket as I grabbed my coat and keys. If I was going to confront him with life-changing news, I needed to know exactly what I was up against.
I called Caroline, my voice barely steady. "Can you track Ethan's phone for me?"
"You don't need to ask twice," she replied, her tone hardening. "Give me fifteen minutes."
The text came through quickly: *Downtown, corner of Maple and 5th. Looks like he's at Tiffany & Co.*
My stomach twisted. Valentine's Day gifts? After everything?
I drove downtown with my hands gripping the steering wheel so tightly my knuckles turned white. The upscale jewelry store stood like a temple to wealth, all gleaming windows and polished chrome. I parked across the street, my heart hammering against my ribs.
Through the window, I could see Ethan moving between display cases, his expression more animated than I'd seen in months. A saleswoman followed him, nodding as he pointed at various items.
I slipped out of my car and crossed the street, staying close to the buildings. The pregnancy test seemed to burn against my thigh with every step. Just hours ago, I'd imagined this baby might save us. Now I wasn't sure what "us" even meant anymore.
I positioned myself near the side window, partially hidden by a decorative plant. Ethan stood at the counter now, examining something small in his hand.
"Can I see the engraving options?" His voice carried through the glass, clear and eager.
The saleswoman nodded, producing a tablet. "We have several elegant scripts to choose from."
I watched as Ethan carefully selected something, his finger tracing letters on the screen. The saleswoman nodded, disappearing into the back.
Minutes later, she returned with two delicate silver bracelets. Even from outside, I could see the intricate designs, the careful craftsmanship.
"Perfect," Ethan said, taking one in his hand. He examined it closely, his thumb running over what I now realized were names engraved in flowing script.
Ethan & Madison.
My vision blurred. Not just gifts—matching bracelets with their names. A permanent symbol of their relationship.
Ethan pulled out his wallet, extracting our joint credit card. The same card we'd used for our wedding planning, for our future home down payment.
"I'll take them both," he said, handing over the card with a smile.
I stumbled backward, nearly colliding with a passerby. The stranger steadied me with a concerned look, but I barely noticed.
"Ethan & Madison."
The words echoed in my head like a death knell for our relationship. This wasn't just an affair. This was commitment. This was future planning.
Somehow, I made it home before Ethan. I paced our living room, the pregnancy test clutched in my trembling hand. The positive result seemed to mock me now—a child conceived in what I'd thought was love, but was actually just another lie.
The sound of his key in the lock made me freeze. I turned to face the door as it swung open.
"Olivia?" Ethan looked surprised to see me waiting. "I thought you'd be at your book club tonight."
I held up the pregnancy test, my hand shaking so badly I nearly dropped it. "I have something to tell you."
His eyes narrowed on the plastic stick in my hand. "Is that—"
"I'm pregnant," I said, the words catching in my throat. "We're going to have a baby."
Instead of joy or even surprise, Ethan's face hardened. "Are you sure it's mine?"
The question hit me like a physical blow. "Of course it's yours! Who else would it be?"
He set down his briefcase, his movements deliberate. "You've been acting strange for weeks. Following me around, checking my phone. Did you hire someone to follow me today?"
"No, I—" I began, but he cut me off.
"Because if you did, that's crossing a line, Olivia." His voice rose, defensive and angry. "Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean you can invade my privacy."
"Paranoid?" I stepped toward him, disbelief washing over me. "Madison sent me photos of you two together! I know about the hotel!"
Something flickered across his face—not guilt, but irritation at being caught. "Madison means nothing to me."
"Nothing?" I echoed, my voice breaking. "Then why did I just watch you buy matching bracelets with both your names engraved on them?"
His eyes widened slightly, then narrowed again. "You were following me?"
"I wanted to know the truth," I whispered.
"Well, now you know," he said coldly. "But it doesn't change anything between us."
I stared at him, this stranger wearing my fiancé's face. "How can you say that? We're having a baby!"
Ethan's gaze dropped to the test in my hand, then back to my face. What I saw there made my blood run cold.
"A baby doesn't mean I have to give up everything else," he said.
The phone's shrill ring cut through the silence of my apartment. I stared at the screen, Madison's name flashing like a warning I should have heeded months ago.
"Olivia!" Her voice cracked with what sounded like panic. "Thank God you picked up!"
I gripped the phone tighter, my knuckles whitening. "What do you want, Madison?"
"It's Ethan," she sobbed, her words tumbling out in a rush. "There's been an accident. His car went off the road near Millerton Ridge."
My heart lurched painfully in my chest. Despite everything—the betrayal, the lies, the matching bracelets—something primal surged through me. Six years of love doesn't disappear overnight.
"Is he—" I couldn't finish the question.
"He's alive, but he's hurt bad." Madison's voice broke. "He's asking for you. Only you, Olivia."
I closed my eyes, trying to think clearly through the fog of emotion. "Why are you calling me? After what you've done—"
"Please!" she begged, her voice raw with desperation that sounded almost real. "He needs you. I wouldn't ask if it wasn't life or death."
I looked out my window at the darkening sky. Rain lashed against the glass, the first drops of what weather reports had warned would be a severe storm.
"Where exactly is he?" I asked, already reaching for my keys.
"Millerton Ridge, off Highway 29. There's an old hunting cabin where they've taken him." She paused. "You need to hurry. The storm's getting worse."
I hesitated only briefly before grabbing my coat. "I'm on my way."
"Drive safe," Madison said, her voice oddly calm now. "Ethan needs you."
The moment I hung up, doubt crept in. Why would Ethan be asking for me after what happened? Why would Madison call me at all?
But what if he really was hurt? What if he was dying?
I couldn't take that chance.
The drive began in light rain that quickly intensified into a downpour. Wind whipped through the trees lining the highway, sending branches dancing across the road. Fog rolled in from the hills, thickening until I could barely see twenty feet ahead.
"Come on," I muttered, leaning forward over the steering wheel. "Just a little further."
My wipers fought a losing battle against the deluge. The road turned from asphalt to gravel as I followed Madison's directions onto a narrow country road. My headlights barely penetrated the wall of white before me.
I should have been more suspicious. The hunting cabin Madison mentioned was at least thirty minutes from the nearest town. Why would Ethan be out here in this weather?
But then I remembered the baby. Our baby. Maybe this was a sign—a chance to start over, to put the betrayal behind us.
"Please let him be okay," I whispered, one hand moving protectively to my stomach. "For you."
The rain hammered against my roof like a thousand tiny fists. Water pooled on the road, making my car hydroplane slightly as I navigated through the flood. The fog was so thick now that I had to crawl along at barely fifteen miles per hour.
I was so focused on the road ahead that I didn't notice the pair of headlights until they were nearly on top of me—high, bright beams that belonged to something much larger than a car.
A truck.
Time seemed to slow as I jerked my wheel to the right, trying to avoid collision. The truck swerved too, but not fast enough.
Metal screamed against metal as the massive vehicle struck my driver's side door. The impact threw me sideways, my seatbelt cutting into my shoulder and abdomen. Glass exploded around me as we spun, my car lifted by the truck's momentum.
I remember flying. My car leaving the road, airborne for one terrifying moment before crashing down the embankment. The world tumbled around me—trees, sky, rain, all blending together in a violent kaleidoscope.
Then pain. Sharp, blinding pain as my head struck something hard.
And darkness.
I woke to the steady beep of machines and the antiseptic smell of hospital sheets. My body felt leaden, every breath sending shards of pain through my ribs.
"Ms. Bennett?" A gentle voice penetrated the fog in my mind. "Can you hear me?"
I forced my eyes open to see a woman in a white coat standing beside my bed. Her dark hair was pulled back in a neat bun, her eyes kind but serious.
"I'm Dr. Martinez," she said. "You've been in an accident."
Memory flooded back—the storm, the truck, the sickening sensation of falling.
"My baby," I whispered, my hand instinctively moving to my stomach. "Is my baby okay?"
Dr. Martinez's face softened with unmistakable sympathy. She took my hand in hers, her touch warm against my cold fingers.
"Ms. Bennett, I'm so sorry." Her voice was gentle but firm. "The trauma from the accident was severe. We did everything we could, but..."
The world seemed to stop as her words registered.
"No," I breathed, the single word carrying all my hope, all my dreams for the future I'd imagined. "No, please."
"The baby didn't survive," she said softly.
Something inside me shattered—deeper than bone, more profound than flesh. The tiny spark of hope that had sustained me through Ethan's betrayal extinguished completely.
I turned my face to the wall as tears burned hot trails down my cheeks. The child who was supposed to bring us back together was gone. And with it, the last thread connecting me to the life I thought I had.