Iris Marsh POV:
"Ah! My head! Bennett, it hurts!" Jayda shrieked, clutching her temples with exaggerated drama. She swayed slightly, almost collapsing into Bennett' s arms. Her delicate act was so overt, it was almost comical, if I wasn't so utterly disgusted.
Bennett, of course, reacted as if she were a fragile porcelain doll. He immediately pushed me away with a sharp shove, his arm circling Jayda' s waist, pulling her protectively behind him. The force of his push sent me stumbling back, my own head throbbing in protest. I almost lost my footing.
"Iris! What the hell is wrong with you?" he snarled, his eyes blazing with fury. "Can't you see she's pregnant? You're out of control!"
My own pain, the raw betrayal, the crushing fear for my health, all flared into a white-hot anger. "Pregnant? She's pregnant? And what about me, Bennett? You think I'm just making this up? My head is splitting open!"
He paused, a flicker of something unreadable – was it concern? – crossing his face. His eyes, for a split second, dropped to the medical folder I clutched. But then Jayda, ever the opportunist, let out another soft whimper, leaning heavily against him.
"Oh, Iris, honey," she cooed, her voice dripping with false sympathy, "we all get a little headache sometimes, don't we? Stress, you know. It's not like you're actually sick." Her eyes, though, held a malicious sparkle.
At her words, Bennett' s momentary concern vanished, replaced by a visible wave of relief. He actually relaxed his shoulders. "See? Jayda's right. You're just stressed. Maybe you should take some aspirin and calm down." He even managed a patronizing smile.
"Aspirin?" I scoffed, a bitter laugh escaping me. "I'm in a hospital, Bennett! Do you think I came here for aspirin? Do you think the doctors here are prescribing aspirin for 'stress'?"
"She's carrying my child, Iris," Bennett said, his voice hardening, his eyes completely focused on Jayda. "That's a real concern. Your... headaches are just an inconvenience."
An inconvenience. That' s what I was. My pain, my health, my very existence, reduced to an inconvenience. How easily he dismissed me, how readily he sacrificed me for this new, shiny future he was building with her.
"Oh, so her convenience trumps my health? Trumps our five years? Trumps everything?" My voice was sharp, laced with sarcasm. "What a stand-up guy you are, Bennett."
His jaw tightened, the last trace of anything resembling remorse or worry disappearing from his face. He looked utterly impatient, as if I were a particularly annoying fly. Jayda, sensing her victory, nestled deeper into his side, a soft, purring sound escaping her lips. Bennett' s hand went instinctively to her stomach, a tender, possessive gesture.
In that moment, a profound stillness settled over me. The fight, the anger, the desperate hope that he might still care – it all evaporated. He was gone. His love, his tenderness, his future, were now hers. There was nothing left for me here. Absolutely nothing.
The last thread of hope, the brittle, fragile thing I had been clinging to, snapped. I took a deep, shuddering breath, and a calm, cold resolve settled over me.
"Fine," I said, my voice surprisingly steady. "You win."
Bennett looked at me, a flicker of something, perhaps confusion, in his eyes.
"Send me the divorce papers, Bennett. Have your lawyer draft them. I'll sign them."
He stared, mouth slightly open. Jayda's smirk widened.
"And take your pregnant girlfriend and get out of my sight," I added, my voice still calm, but with an underlying steel he'd never heard before. "I'm done."
He blinked, then seemed to recover, nodding curtly. "Fine. You want a divorce, you'll get one." He turned, Jayda already pulling him towards the exit. They walked away, leaving me standing alone in the sterile hospital corridor.
I stood there for a long time, the silence of the hospital amplifying the emptiness inside me. My hand instinctively crumpled the medical folder I held. It felt like a lifetime had passed in the last few minutes.
I walked over to a nearby trash can and, without a second thought, dropped the folder inside. The crinkle of paper was loud in the silence. My marriage was over. And a part of me, a deep, wounded part, felt a strange kind of relief. There was no more illusion, no more false hope. Just the stark, brutal truth.
My old life was gone. It was time to start a new one, even if I had no idea what that would look like. I turned and walked toward the exit, my steps slow but determined. I needed to go home. Or rather, to my home. The one that used to be ours. I needed to pack.
As I approached the apartment building, a faint, sickly sweet smell hit me, even before I reached the front door. It was unlocked. A chilling sense of dread washed over me. The door creaked open. The smell intensified – stale alcohol, something sickly floral, and an undertone of decay. My eyes adjusted to the dim light inside. Bennett was sprawled across the sofa, an empty bottle of whiskey on the floor beside him. He was out cold.