At Elsa's launch party, Gideon snatched the shot glass and shoved the alcohol down my throat, mocking my pain as "drama."
As a fresh pool of crimson soaked my dress, he didn't call 911.
He turned to comfort Elsa, who was "shaken" by the scene.
I survived only because of Alva, the reclusive billionaire next door, who shielded my dignity with his jacket while my husband stepped over me.
Recovering in Alva' s care, I discovered the "award-winning" designs Gideon had gifted Elsa were actually mine-stolen from my college archives years ago.
They thought I was the fragile, obedient wife who would die quietly in the background.
They were wrong.
I wiped the blood from my legs, accepted Alva's offer, and prepared to burn their stolen empire to the ground.
Chapter 1
Dahlia POV
My fifth wedding anniversary was supposed to be a night of quiet celebration, not a silent plea for help echoing in an empty house while my husband ignored my calls, choosing his 'best friend' over my life.
I had spent hours on the meal. Braised short ribs, a bottle of the Cabernet Gideon loved, and a chocolate lava cake from that fancy patisserie downtown. The dining table sparkled with candlelight, reflecting off the crystal glasses I' d polished myself. I even wore the silk slip dress Gideon bought me for our first anniversary, the one he said made me look like an old Hollywood star. I wanted tonight to be perfect. I wanted him to remember us.
The clock on the mantel ticked louder with each passing minute. Seven o'clock came and went. Then eight. I sent a text, "Dinner's ready, love. Missing you." No reply. I tried calling. It went straight to voicemail. Again. And again.
My fingers trembled as I picked up my phone for the tenth time. A message finally popped up, not from Gideon, but from our mutual friend, Elsa Rodgers. It was a selfie of her and Gideon, both beaming, champagne flutes in hand. The caption read: "So proud of my amazing mentor and friend, Gideon Knight, for supporting me at the 'Designer of the Year' launch party! What a night!"
My stomach dropped, a cold, hard knot forming where my hopes had been. Designer of the Year? Launch party? He had told me he had a "client emergency" that couldn't wait. He'd said it with such a serious voice, such convincing urgency. I had bought it, like I always did.
I stared at the picture, at Gideon's arm slung casually around Elsa, his smile wider than I' d seen it in months. There was no 'client emergency.' There was just Elsa. Always Elsa.
A wave of nausea washed over me, but it wasn't from the betrayal this time. It was a sharp, searing pain in my lower abdomen. I clutched my stomach, trying to breathe through it. It had been coming and going for a few days, a dull ache I'd brushed off as stress. Now, it was a knife twisting deep inside me.
I walked to the dining table, the flickering candles suddenly mocking my efforts. The short ribs were cold. The wine untouched. I blew out the candles one by one, the smoke curling upwards like my shattered dreams. The silk dress felt heavy, suffocating. I peeled it off and threw it onto the bed, the expensive fabric landing with a whisper.
Just yesterday, I had found out. A tiny, faint line on the home pregnancy test. A miracle I hadn' t dared to hope for after so many months of trying, so many disappointments. I' d wanted to tell Gideon tonight, make it a surprise, watch his face light up. I' d imagined him holding me, finally truly looking at me, excited about our future.
But looking at that photo of him and Elsa, his hand on her back, their heads close, I knew I couldn' t. Not tonight. Not ever, if this was how he saw our life together. My secret, our secret, would stay mine alone. It felt safer that way.
The pain intensified, a relentless cramp that made me double over. I tried to remember what the instructions on the pregnancy test said about severe pain. It didn't say anything. I just remembered the joy, the tiny, fragile hope blooming in my chest. I couldn't lose this baby. Not now. Not when everything else felt like it was crumbling.
I forced myself to eat a few bites of toast, even as the pain made my jaw clench. I drank some water. I needed to be strong. For my baby. For myself.
But the pain was getting worse. It felt like fire, then ice, spreading through my belly, seizing my muscles. I stumbled to the bathroom, my vision blurring. A cold sweat broke out on my forehead. I splashed water on my face, but it didn't help.
Then I saw it. A dark, crimson stain on my underwear. My heart hammered against my ribs. No. Not this. Not now. Not after everything.
Tears sprang to my eyes, hot and fast, not just for the pain, but for the fear. The fear of losing this tiny life I had just found, this little piece of hope in my desolate marriage. I sank to the cold tile floor, clutching my stomach, gasping for air.
"Gideon," I whispered, my voice a raw croak. I fumbled for my phone, my fingers slick with sweat. I called him again. And again. No answer. His "client emergency" was more important. Elsa's launch party was more important.
I tried to stand, to get help, to do something. But a fresh wave of agony slammed into me, knocking the air from my lungs. My legs gave out. I hit the floor with a thud, a sharp pain shooting through my hip.
I remembered the doctor's words from months ago, after my last miscarriage scare. "Any severe pain, any bleeding, call us immediately." I had been so careful. So hopeful.
Now, as I lay there, helpless, the hallway light seemed to dim. The world tilted. My calls to Gideon went unanswered, swallowed by the silence of our empty home. Was this it? Was this how it ended?
A faint knocking. I barely registered it. Then louder, insistent. My neighbor? Alva Booker? He was reclusive, a man of few words, hardly ever seen outside his perfectly manicured estate next door. What would he want?
Another wave of pain, sharper than anything before, ripped through me. I squeezed my eyes shut, a whimper escaping my lips. The knocking stopped. A moment of silence. Then, the sound of a key turning in the lock.
Our house key. The spare I' d given Alva for emergencies, months ago, when Gideon was away on a 'business trip' and I'd locked myself out. I' d forgotten about it.
The front door creaked open. A tall, dark silhouette filled the doorway. Alva. His usually stoic face was etched with concern as he saw me crumpled on the floor, a growing crimson pool beneath me.
"Dahlia!" His voice was deep, laced with an urgency I' d never heard from him. He was beside me in an instant, his hands gentle as he tried to lift me. "What happened? Are you okay?"
"No," I choked out, tears streaming down my face. "The baby... I think... I'm bleeding."
His eyes widened, then hardened with a fierce determination. He scooped me up, surprisingly strong, and carried me out of the house, my head lolling against his shoulder. The world spun. He laid me gently in the back seat of his sleek black sedan, then rushed around to the driver's side.
The drive to the ER was a blur of flashing lights and Alva's frantic questions. I could only manage gasps and whimpers. Everything hurt. My baby. My only hope.
At the ER, chaos. Nurses, doctors, bright lights. A cold, sterile room. Alva was there, a steady presence, holding my hand until they prepped me for surgery.
"Ectopic pregnancy, ruptured," I heard a doctor say, their voice distant, muffled. "We need to operate immediately. She's losing a lot of blood."
Ruptured. That word echoed in my mind, a death knell. It wasn't just the baby; it was me too.
I woke up hours later, groggy and disoriented, to the dull ache of a fresh incision. The room was quiet, sterile. No Gideon. Only Alva, sitting in a chair in the corner, his eyes closed, looking exhausted.
A nurse bustled in, her smile strained. "Ms. Rogers, you had a successful surgery. You're very lucky. Your neighbor got you here just in time."
"My baby?" I whispered, my voice rough.
Her smile faltered. "I'm so sorry, dear. We had to remove the ruptured fallopian tube. The pregnancy was not viable."
The words hit me like a physical blow, stealing what little breath I had. Gone. My baby was gone. The fragile hope, extinguished.
"We tried calling your husband," the nurse continued, oblivious to my internal scream. "Multiple times. He didn't answer."
I looked at Alva, who had opened his eyes and was now staring at me with profound sadness. He averted his gaze, respecting my pain.
"He was... busy," I managed, the bitterness a metallic taste in my mouth.
The nurse nodded sympathetically. "Well, you'll need a lot of rest. And someone to help you through this. It was a very close call. You almost didn't make it."
"He wouldn't care," I said, my voice flat. My eyes drifted to the small bedside table. A faint glow from my phone. I reached for it, my fingers fumbling with the screen. It was Gideon's Instagram. A fresh post.
Another photo of him and Elsa, but this time, he was on stage, accepting an award. His arm was still around her. He was beaming. His "best friend" had won "Designer of the Year." He had been there for her. Always for her.
I let the phone drop, the sound barely audible. The words of the nurse, "You almost didn't make it," replayed in my head. He had ignored my calls. He had chosen her over me, over us. Over my very life.
The door creaked open, and a doctor walked in, a serious expression on his face. He checked my vitals, then turned to Alva. "We need to ensure Ms. Rogers has proper care during her recovery. Emotional support is crucial for this kind of loss." He looked at me. "Is your husband on his way?"
I met the doctor's gaze, a cold, empty calm settling over me. "My husband," I said, my voice devoid of emotion, "is already here." I glanced pointedly at the phone on the table, its screen still displaying Gideon and Elsa's triumphant smiles. "Just not in the way you mean."