My best friend had just given birth, and I was cradling the tiny, swaddled bundle, lost in that soft, new-baby scent. It was a rare moment of peace—until Mark stepped toward us, his voice cutting through the quiet like a serrated blade. He didn't say he was the godfather. He said he was the father. The world tilted. I froze, my heart hammering against my ribs, certain I’d misheard him through the haze of hospital-grade disinfectant and exhaustion. But Mark just let out a sharp, cynical breath and repeated it. The boy was his. Then he twisted the knife. He told me that on the very night my father died—the night I was drowning in grief—he had been with Chloe. They’d spent the entire night locked in a hotel room, burning through an entire box of condoms while I sat alone by my father’s cooling body. I stood there, paralyzed. My throat felt like it was closing up, thick with something bitter and suffocating. It took everything I had to squeeze out a single sentence: "We just signed our marriage license yesterday." Mark didn't flinch. He reached out, pulling me into a mocking half-embrace, his voice dropping into that low, soothing register he used when he wanted to manipulate me. He told me Chloe was nothing more than a "fun distraction." If he’d wanted to marry her, he would have. Then, with a glint of cruel amusement, he added one last detail: Chloe had been keeping a secret from me, too. They had a history. He had been her first. ... 1 I don’t remember the drive home. Memory is a fractured thing when your life implodes. By the time Mark walked through the front door, the penthouse was a battlefield. I had smashed our wedding portraits, the floor a sea of jagged glass and silver frames. I’d ripped the "Just Married" banners from the walls and shredded the silk ribbons. I’d even taken a golf club to the designer bed frame we’d picked out together. Mark stood in the foyer, silhouetted against the city lights. He didn't yell. He just leaned against the wall and finished a cigarette in silence. When he finally moved, it was to check my hands. "Did you cut yourself?" I recoiled, hissing as I shoved him away. The rage I’d been clutching like a live wire finally snapped. "Why?" I screamed, my eyes burning. "Why her? Why any of this?" Mark arched an eyebrow, looking genuinely thoughtful for a second. Then, he smiled. It was the most terrifying thing I’d ever seen. "Because you’re stable, Norma," he said, his voice terrifyingly calm. "You’re detail-oriented. You’re peaceful. You were willing to walk away from your acting career, to step out of the spotlight and be a 'wife.' You’re the woman a man comes home to." He paused, a shadow of something like disdain crossing his face. "Chloe? She’s a disaster. A gorgeous, reckless trust-fund brat who can’t even boil an egg. She’s not wife material." The more honest he was, the more my heart felt like it was being fed through a paper shredder. Seeing the tears spill over, Mark stepped in again, wrapping his arms around me. "Look, I told you. There’s no future with her. From now on, it’s just... a co-parenting situation. That’s it." I tore myself out of his grip, a raw, guttural sob breaking from my chest. "Then why marry me? If you have a child with her, why would you put me through this? Why did you lie to me for years?" One was the man I had worshipped for three years. The other was my sister in every way that mattered. They had played me like a fool. I clutched my chest, the weight of the truth making it impossible to breathe. Mark didn't answer. He just looked at me with a cold, clinical pity, as if I were a patient having a psychotic break. "Stop the drama," he said, his voice turning brisk and impatient. "Chloe is waiting for me to bring her some homemade chicken soup. She’s recovering." I stood rooted to the spot, watching the man I loved walk into the kitchen. I watched him move with practiced ease—chopping vegetables, skimming the fat off the broth, adjusting the flame. In three years, he had never cooked for me. Not once. I had always assumed he didn't know how. But as I watched him, a memory of Chloe’s voice drifted back to me. Years ago, she’d laughed about an ex-boyfriend—some rich kid who’d never stepped foot in a kitchen until he met her. She said he’d spent weeks obsessively learning to cook just to fix her picky eating habits. She’d joked that he almost blew up his parents' kitchen trying to make her the perfect risotto. I had pictured that scene a thousand times, wondering what kind of man loved a woman that much. Now, the pieces were clicking into place with a sickening thud. All the moments I’d forced myself to ignore came flooding back. When we were out, Chloe always had his sunglasses ready before he even asked. At dinner, she’d instinctively tell the waiter, "No onions for him," before I could speak. When Chloe tripped, Mark’s hand was on her arm before I’d even realized she’d stumbled. When Chloe got a fever, Mark walked out of a board meeting, leaving fifty executives sitting in silence, just to drive her to the ER. My vision blurred. "Mark," I rasped. "I want a divorce." He looked up then, a small, annoyed crease appearing between his brows. Before he could respond, his phone buzzed. He glanced at the screen, and a genuine, soft smile—the kind he never gave me—lit up his face. "Hey, princess," he answered. "Yeah, the soup’s on the stove. Just play with the baby for a bit, okay?" He paused, casting a long, meaningful look in my direction. "She doesn't know. Don't worry." He hung up and looked at me. "Chloe doesn't know I told you. Keep it that way. She doesn't want to lose you as a friend." He began pouring the soup into a thermal flask, his movements hurried. He was already halfway out the door. "I said I want a divorce," I repeated, my voice shaking. Mark turned back, looking genuinely confused. "We literally just got the license, Norma. What is wrong with you? Do you want us to be the laughingstock of the city? Grow up. Be dignified." I grabbed the crystal vase off the entry table and hurled it at his feet. It shattered, water and lilies spraying across his expensive shoes. "Dignified?" I roared. "Did you think about my dignity when you were screwing her while I was burying my father? Did you think about it when you got her pregnant? Why do I have to be the one who’s dignified?" The tears were thick now, hot and humiliating. Mark just narrowed his eyes and muttered a single word: "Psychopath." Then he slammed the door. I collapsed onto the floor, the silence of the apartment pressing in on me. A second later, my phone began chirping. It was Chloe. [Norma, why’d you leave before I woke up? :( ] [Did you see your godson? Isn't he perfect?] [When are you and Mark leaving for the honeymoon? I’m so jealous!] [Ugh, Mark is such a jerk for dragging you to the courthouse the day I went into labor. I need you here for the recovery! Waaaah!] Then, another text: [Actually, don't worry about me. The baby's dad is here taking care of us.] She followed it with a photo. A man’s elegant, long fingers were holding a baby bottle. On his ring finger sat a gold band—the exact match to the one I was wearing. I started to shake so hard the phone nearly slipped from my grip. They weren't even hiding it anymore. They hadn't even bothered to take off the rings. At that same moment, Chloe posted to her Instagram story. Just one line of text over a black screen: If I asked you to stay this time, would you? A notification popped up from Mark: [Go on the honeymoon by yourself. I’ll catch up when I can.] The air left my lungs. My chest felt like it was being crushed by a physical weight. Shaking, I went to Chloe’s post and typed a comment for everyone to see. No need for the cryptic bullshit. You can have him. I dragged my broken body upstairs and began to pack. I couldn't spend another second in this "dream home" I had spent months decorating. But as I reached into the back of the closet for my suitcase, my hand brushed against something cold. An old phone. Without thinking, I entered Chloe’s birthday as the passcode. Unlocked. The wallpaper was a photo of them kissing. The notes app was a shrine to her. Chloe’s cycle. Chloe’s allergies. Chloe’s prenatal appointments. The gallery was worse. Thousands of photos of her. Chloe sleeping. Chloe laughing. Chloe pouting. Chloe flushed in the heat of a moment I wasn't meant to see. Chloe with tears in her eyes as she was wheeled into the delivery room. A digital timeline of a life lived in parallel to mine, dating back to when they were twelve years old. In some of the photos, I was there—captured in the background, a blurry, oblivious ghost in my own life. My fingers were numb. Mark and I had been together for three years. Aside from our staged wedding photos, I could barely find a picture of us together. Whenever I’d asked for a selfie, he’d pull away. “You’re a public figure, Norma. We don’t need the tabloids tracking our every move.” He had never visited me on a film set, yet he’d never missed one of Chloe’s gallery openings or charity galas. He’d complained that my dream honeymoon to the Amalfi Coast was "too far," yet they had traveled the world together. They’d been to Disney twenty-seven times. Twenty-seven times. Every time I’d suggested a theme park for our anniversary, he’d called it "childish" and "boring." I scrolled until my eyes burned and the tears ran dry. I put the phone back exactly where I found it. I texted my agent: [That Hollywood project—the thriller. I’m in. Send Paul to pick me up. Now.] My agent replied instantly: [Norma! Thank God. I knew you weren't done. I’ll have him there in twenty minutes.] I dragged my suitcase to the curb, but as I moved to get into the car, a hand clamped onto my shoulder like a vice, spinning me around. Mark’s eyes were bloodshot, his face a mask of primal fury. "Norma, Chloe tried to kill herself." "Because of what you posted." I froze. "What?" "You knew she was fragile!" he screamed, shaking me. "You knew she just gave birth! Why would you trigger her like that?" Before I could speak, he shoved me into his car. "You and her are both O-negative," he hissed, his voice cracking. "You’re the only one who can save her." He tore through red lights, his hands white-knuckled on the wheel, dragging me into the hospital. "Doctor! She’s O-negative! She can donate!" He was trembling. I had never seen him so undone, so utterly terrified. I stood there like a hollowed-out shell, letting him drag me into the donor room. He stayed there, his grip bruising as he forced my sleeve up. I was staring at the wall, my mind a static hum of nothingness, until the doctor’s voice broke through. "I’m sorry, sir. We can't take her blood. This woman is pregnant." The world went silent. I instinctively moved my hand to my stomach. Then Mark’s voice shattered the silence. "I said draw the blood! I don't care about the baby! I want Chloe alive!" The blood in my veins turned to ice. My tears started falling before I even realized I was crying. "Mark... this is your child." But he was already screaming at the nurses, demanding they stick the needle into my arm. "Mark—no!" I tried to rip the needle out. I tried to run. But I only made it one step before his hands were on me again, pinning me down. He looked at me, his expression suddenly, eerily calm—a calm that made my skin crawl. "Norma. Give the blood to Chloe. Now." Four security guards held me down in that sterile room. I watched, tube after tube, as the life was drained out of me and rushed down the hall to save the woman who had stolen my life. The room began to spin. My face went gray. Before the last vial was full, the world went black. ... I woke up three days later. The doctor told me, with a heavy, sympathetic look, that the blood loss had been too severe. I had slipped into a coma. My body couldn't sustain the pregnancy. The baby was gone. I felt nothing. Just a vast, echoing numbness. I turned my head to see Chloe sitting by my bed, her eyes red and puffy. "Norma... you know everything now, don't you?" "I’m so sorry. I felt so guilty, I just couldn't handle it. I didn't think Mark would... I didn't know he'd do that to you." She collapsed against my bed, sobbing. It was a loud, performative sound. I noticed the bandages on her wrists were just Band-Aids. She didn't look like someone who had been on the brink of death. She looked up, her face twisted with a sudden, desperate resolve. "Norma, listen to me. My baby... he’ll be your baby too. We’ll raise him together. I’ll share him with you." A surge of pure, acidic loathing rose in my throat. "Get. Out." Chloe blinked, looking wounded. She grabbed my hand and tried to use it to slap her own face. "I know sorry isn't enough! But I don't want to lose you! Hit me! Do whatever you want, just don't hate me!" As she tried to force my hand against her cheek again, Mark appeared in the doorway. He rushed over, tearing Chloe away from me. In the chaos, I was shoved, tumbling out of the high hospital bed and crashing onto the floor. I felt a sharp, warm gush between my legs. I groaned, gasping for a nurse. Mark froze, his hand hovering toward me, but Chloe’s wail cut him off. "Mark! It’s all your fault! Norma hates me now! I’m going to lose my best friend!" Mark immediately turned to her, shushing her. "It’s okay, it’s okay. I’m sorry. Don't get upset, you’re still healing. Let’s get you home. The baby needs you." I watched their retreating backs from the floor. "Mark," I spat, my voice a jagged edge. "I will never forgive you. Not in this life. Not in the next." He hesitated for a fraction of a second, but he didn't turn around. Ten minutes later, my phone buzzed with a text from him. [I’m sending Chloe and the baby away. I’m ending it with her for good.] [When you’re recovered, we’ll go on that honeymoon. We’ll start over.] I turned off the screen. I didn't reply. I thought of the child I’d never meet. My father was gone. I had no one left. I had pinned all my hopes on a family of my own, and Mark had murdered that hope with his own hands. I stayed awake until dawn. When the nurse came in, I told her I was checking out. Mark walked in as I was signing the papers. He didn't say a word. He walked up to me and backhanded me across the face so hard my ears rang. The copper taste of blood filled my mouth. Before I could even process the pain, he grabbed me by the hair and slammed my face toward his phone screen. The headlines were exploding. Pop Star Chloe’s Secret Baby: The Dark Truth Revealed. Below the fold were photos from years ago—grainy, horrifying images of Chloe from a kidnapping incident she’d survived in her teens. His voice was a low, terrifying hiss. "I made a concession, Norma. I was going to choose you. Why did you do this?" "Do you have any idea what this will do to her? It took me ten years to pull her out of that depression! You destroyed everything!" I stared at the screen, dazed. "I didn't do it," I whispered. But he wasn't listening. He dragged me out of the room and into a secluded wing of the hospital. The room was flooded with blinding fluorescent light. A row of men—men who looked like they’d been pulled from the darkest corners of the city—stood there, naked. Cameras were mounted in every corner. My heart plummeted. I gripped Mark’s arm. "What are you doing?" A sick, twisted smile spread across his face. "You’re an actress, Norma. You know how the industry works." "The fastest way to bury a scandal is with a bigger one." His eyes were manic. "You’re an Oscar winner. If photos of your assault hit the internet, no one will care about Chloe anymore." I stopped breathing. I looked at the man I had married. I had just lost his child because of him. And now, he was handing me over to be destroyed to protect his mistress’s reputation. Mark shoved me away and walked toward the door. "Make it quick," he told the men. He stepped out and locked the door behind him. I threw myself against the wood, screaming, pounding until my knuckles bled. "Mark! Let me out! I didn't do it! Mark, please!" Outside, there was only the roar of his car engine as he drove away. I sank to the floor. As the men began to close in, reaching for my clothes, I closed my eyes and let the darkness take me. ... I don't know how much time passed. The lights were dimmed now. I lay in the center of the room like a piece of discarded meat. There wasn't an inch of skin that wasn't bruised. The blood from the miscarriage was still seeping out, staining the linoleum floor. I crawled, inch by agonizing inch, toward a ceramic vase in the corner. With the last of my strength, I knocked it over. I picked up a jagged shard. Without a moment’s hesitation, I drew it across my wrist. The world was fading when the door was finally kicked in. A massive shadow rushed toward me, a voice roaring in agony. "Who did this? I’ll kill them! I’ll kill them all!"

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