Seraphina POV:
The lawyer's office was cold and impersonal, the polished mahogany table a stage for the final act of my humiliation. Dante was there. And of course, so was she. Selena sat beside him, a new diamond on her finger, playing the part of the supportive fiancée to perfection.
"I just want it on record," I said, my voice steady as I signed the legal separation agreement, "that Moretti Holdings would not exist without my family's seed money and my mother's connections."
Selena scoffed. "Dante is a genius. He would have made it with or without you."
I ignored her, pushed the papers across the table, and stood to leave. My part in this farce was over. But she rose with me, blocking my path.
"You're pathetic," she hissed, her voice low. "Playing the victim."
Then she slapped me. Hard.
The sound cracked like a whip in the silent office. My head snapped to the side, my cheek exploding with heat. I looked past her, past the lawyer's stunned face, to Dante.
He just sat there. He did nothing.
In his silence, in his cowardly consent, whatever was left of my love for him shattered.
Before the ringing in my ears faded, Selena shrieked. She lunged, not at me, but at the baby carrier in the corner, knocking it over with a theatrical shove. The infant, startled, began to wail.
"She tried to hurt my baby!" she screamed, spinning to face Dante, her eyes wide with manufactured terror.
Dante was on his feet in an instant, his face a mask of pure rage, his eyes locked on me. "What did you do?" he growled.
"I didn't touch him!" I cried, but my words were lost as a violent, twisting cramp doubled me over, stealing the air from my lungs. "Dante, please," I gasped, a primal fear for my baby gripping me. "Something's wrong."
He shot me a look of pure disgust. "Stop the performance." He turned his back on me completely, going to comfort Selena.
The plush carpet rushed up to meet me as my knees gave out. The last thing I saw before darkness swallowed me was Dante's back as he walked away with his new family. I woke in a sterile white hospital room, my mother holding my hand.
"You and the baby are both okay," she said, her voice a balm.
Moments later, the door swung open. It was Dante and Selena. He looked uncomfortable. She looked triumphant.
He stepped to her side, his jaw tight. He looked at me not with concern, but with cold, hard judgment.
"You owe Selena an apology," he demanded.