Chapter 5

Hazel POV:

The cold smile on Jackson's face vanished, replaced by a mask of pure fury.

But before he could speak, Campbell snatched the divorce papers from my hand. Her performance began instantly.

"Oh, Hazel!" she wailed, her shoulders shaking with manufactured sobs. "This is all my fault. I knew I shouldn't have come into your lives."

She turned to Jackson, her eyes shimmering with tears. "I love you, Jackson! I love you and I love Colton like he's my own son!"

She then spun back to me, her face a tragic mask. "Please, don't leave him. I'll go. I'll disappear. I'll do anything, just don't break up this family!"

It was a masterful performance, worthy of an Oscar.

"Campbell, stop it," Jackson said, trying to pull her into his arms, but she theatrically shrugged him off.

Then, she did something so audacious, so shamelessly manipulative, that it almost took my breath away.

She dropped to her knees on the cold, damp asphalt of the driveway, right at my feet.

"Please, Hazel," she begged, her voice choked with fake emotion. "Hit me. Slap me. Do whatever you need to do to feel better. I deserve it. Just don't take Colton away from his father."

She reached out, grabbing the hem of my pants, her grip surprisingly strong.

"He needs his dad, Hazel. A boy needs his father."

I was frozen, trapped in her absurd, humiliating tableau. Her head was bowed, her shoulders shaking, but as she looked up at me, her face hidden from Jackson and Colton, her expression changed. The tears vanished. Her eyes were cold, hard, and filled with a triumphant hatred.

Her lips formed a silent word. Leave.

My patience snapped. The years of quiet endurance, of swallowed pride, of gritted teeth, all evaporated in a single, searing flash of rage.

"Get off me," I said, my voice a low growl. I tried to pull my leg away, to break free from her grasp.

She clung to me, and then, with a sharp cry, she let go, stumbling backward and landing hard on the ground. "Ow!"

I hadn't even touched her.

A sharp, stinging pain exploded across my cheek. Jackson had slapped me. Hard.

The force of it sent my head whipping to the side. Red and black spots danced in my vision. Through the ringing in my ears, I heard my son's voice.

"Dad!"

But it wasn't a cry of protest. It was a cry of alarm for Campbell.

When my vision cleared, the first thing I saw was Jackson and Colton, their faces contorted with identical expressions of hatred and disgust. Not for what Jackson had done to me, but for what they thought I had done to Campbell.

A laugh escaped my lips. A broken, hollow sound. It was all so pathetic. So predictable. Their loyalty, their love, it was all for her.

Colton was already at Campbell's side, kneeling beside her, his face a mask of frantic concern. "Campbell, are you okay? Did she hurt you?"

He gently took her arm, his fingers probing her wrist. "Does it hurt here? I know how to check for a sprain. Mom taught me."

The irony was a physical blow. The knowledge I had given him, the care I had taught him, was now being used to tend to my rival, the woman who had helped destroy my life.

"I'll protect you, Campbell," Colton vowed, his voice thick with emotion as he helped her to her feet. "I won't let her hurt you again."

I thought of the day Colton was born. Two months premature, a tiny, fragile thing weighing less than three pounds. The doctors had given him a 50/50 chance. Jackson's family, the McKees, with their cold, pragmatic view of the world, had told me to "be realistic."

But I refused. I sat by his incubator for weeks, reading to him, singing to him, willing him to live. I promised the universe, God, anyone who was listening, that if he survived, I would dedicate my life to him. I would give up anything.

And I had. I gave up my career as a brilliant analyst at a top firm. I gave up my friends, my hobbies, my very self. I endured Jackson's growing contempt, his affairs, his cruelty, all for the sake of the boy I had fought so hard to bring into this world.

And now, that boy was looking at me as if I were a monster.

"You're a vicious bitch, Hazel," he spat, his eyes burning with a hatred that seared my soul.

"You are not my mother," he declared, his voice ringing with the finality of a death sentence.

"And you are not his wife," he added, gesturing to his father.

I remembered a time, not so long ago, when he would run to me, his little arms wrapped around my neck, whispering, "You're the best mommy in the whole world." I remembered him standing up to a bully in kindergarten who had made fun of my worn-out sneakers, yelling, "Don't you talk about my mom like that!"

That boy was gone.

Chapter 6

Hazel POV:

For seventeen years, Colton had been the sun my entire universe revolved around. His happiness was my purpose. His well-being was my reason for breathing, for enduring the slow, painful death of my marriage.

But the sun had gone out. The universe was cold and empty. There was nothing left to orbit.

"You'll never see him again," Jackson sneered, his voice laced with triumph. He thought he had won. He thought he had found my breaking point.

He and Colton stood together, a united front of male solidarity, their expressions a mirror of smug satisfaction.

I met their gaze, my own eyes cool and empty. The pain was still there, a vast, black ocean inside me, but on the surface, there was only ice.

"Fine," I said. The word was quiet, but it landed with the force of a bomb.

"I don't want him."

Colton's face crumpled. The arrogant, hateful mask fell away, revealing the shocked, wounded face of a little boy who had just been told his mother didn't love him.

Jackson simply laughed, a harsh, ugly sound. "You're pathetic, Hazel. Truly."

He snatched the divorce papers from the ground where Campbell had dropped them, strode to the hood of my car, and scrawled his signature with a flourish.

"There," he said, shoving the papers at my chest. "You're free. Now get the hell off my property and don't ever come back. You'll be hearing from my lawyer."

I gathered the scattered pages, the flimsy paper a testament to the end of my life as I knew it. A strange sense of lightness filled me. I felt like a diver who had just released her weights, ascending from the crushing pressure of the deep.

"You'll regret this," Jackson called after me as I turned to walk away.

I paused, but I didn't turn back. "No," I said, my voice clear and steady in the night air. "I won't."

My posture straightened. The slump of the weary housewife fell away, replaced by a straight-backed elegance I hadn't felt in years. I was a Morgan. My family didn't build an empire by being weak. We didn't bow, and we certainly didn't break. I had just forgotten that. I had traded my birthright for a loveless marriage to a charismatic, arrogant, new-money tech CEO I' d met by chance at a coffee shop.

I started walking down the long driveway, not looking back.

I heard a small, choked sound behind me. It was Colton. A flicker of something, a remnant of maternal instinct, stirred within me.

"Colton," I said, my voice soft, almost a whisper. I didn't turn around. "Don't forget to take your allergy medication. The spring pollen is bad this year."

His allergies were severe, especially to nuts. I had spent his childhood reading every label, interrogating every waiter, living in a state of constant, low-grade panic. Once, after he'd accidentally eaten a cookie with nuts at a school party and collapsed, Jackson's family had blamed me. "How could you be so careless?" they'd asked, their voices sharp with accusation. I had sobbed for days, the guilt a physical weight on my chest.

"And stay away from mangoes," I added. "You know they give you hives."

He never listened. He loved mangoes.

"And whatever you do-"

"Just go!" Colton screamed, his voice breaking. "You're not my mom anymore, remember? You don't get to tell me what to do! You're just a crazy, jealous woman who tried to hurt Campbell!"

The words were a hammer blow, but I didn't flinch. I just closed my eyes for a moment.

It's better this way, I told myself. It's cleaner.

I started to walk again, my steps quickening. I would go to my car, drive away, and never look back. I had nothing to pack. Everything in that house was a monument to a life that wasn't mine.

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