The pregnancy confirmation from NewYork-Presbyterian felt heavy in Izora Shaw's hand, the paper crinkling under the pressure of her damp palm. She stood before the heavy oak doors of Aloysius's study, her heart a frantic drum against her ribs. This could change everything. It had to.
She took a breath that did little to calm her and pushed the door open.
The room smelled of old leather and money. Aloysius Lawson sat behind a desk the size of a small car, his focus entirely on a document before him. The lamplight carved sharp angles on his face, making him look more like a marble statue than her husband. He didn't look up.
"What is it?" he asked, his voice flat, the tone he used for a subordinate who had interrupted him.
Izora's carefully rehearsed words vanished. She walked forward, the thick rug swallowing the sound of her footsteps, and placed the report on the polished mahogany between them.
"Aloysius," her voice trembled, a traitor to her resolve. "I'm pregnant."
His eyes, the color of a winter storm, finally lifted from his papers. They scanned the medical letterhead, the clinical black and white text, but no flicker of joy, no hint of surprise, registered in them. Only a cold, analytical assessment. He slid the report to the side as if it were a quarterly earnings statement he found wanting. Then, he pulled another folder from a neat stack.
"Eloisa's leukemia has relapsed," he said, his tone unchanged. "She needs a bone marrow transplant. You're the most suitable donor."
The air rushed out of Izora's lungs. It felt like being plunged into ice water. "A bone marrow aspiration... while I'm pregnant? The risk-"
"Agree to the donation," he cut her off, sliding the second folder across the desk. It landed next to her pregnancy report. The cover read: Shaw Consortium-Financial Viability Assessment.
A chill, so profound it felt like it was freezing her from the inside out, spread through her body. He didn't care about the baby. He had never cared. This was just another transaction.
"This is your child, Aloysius," she said, her voice cracking. "Our child."
A corner of his mouth lifted in a sneer that was more brutal than any blow. "Mine? Izora, you know exactly what this marriage is. I've never touched you."
The memory, hazy and shameful, flooded back. A chaotic night at a fundraiser months ago, a drink that tasted wrong, a disorientation she couldn't fight. Waking up in his bed, the only time. He had looked at her with nothing but disgust.
He stood, his tall frame casting a long, oppressive shadow over her. "I don't know whose bastard you're carrying, but it will not be an heir to the Lawson name."
Each word was a precise, surgical cut. Her entire body went cold.
He delivered the final terms of his deal. "Get rid of it. Then go to the hospital and donate to Eloisa. It's the only way Shaw Consortium survives."
She bit her lip so hard she tasted blood. A raw, desperate defiance surged through her. "I won't."
He looked at her, his expression utterly devoid of emotion. It was the look one gave a malfunctioning piece of equipment. "You will. For your mother. For the hundreds of employees at Shaw."
He picked up his jacket from the back of his chair, shrugging it on and smoothing the lapels. He adjusted his cuffs, a small, meticulous gesture that screamed of his detachment. He was already moving on to his next meeting, his next deal.
"Don't you believe me at all?" The cry was ripped from her throat, raw and desperate.
He paused at the door, his back still to her. "Trust? The moment you schemed your way into my bed, that word ceased to exist between us."
The door clicked shut, sealing her in with the silence and the cold. Izora's legs gave out, and she sank to the floor, her hand instinctively going to her flat stomach. It was the only warmth left in her world.
On the massive desk, her pregnancy report lay beside her family's death warrant. A cruel, cosmic joke. She pulled out her phone, her fingers trembling as she opened a news app. The headline was stark: "Shaw Consortium on Brink of Collapse, Mass Layoffs Imminent."
A wave of utter hopelessness washed over her. He wasn't just disowning their child. He was ordering her to kill it to save another woman.
The tears finally came, hot and silent, tracking paths down her frozen cheeks. But as she sat there, broken on the floor of his monument to power, a tiny, hard ember of resolve began to glow in the desolate landscape of her heart. She had to find a way. For the child. She had to.
Izora sat on the cold floor of the study until her legs went numb, the silence of the grand house pressing in on her. The tears had dried, leaving her eyes gritty and her face stiff. Crying was a luxury she couldn't afford. She forced her aching limbs to move, pushing herself up from the floor. Her mind raced, sifting through impossible options, finding nothing.
Her phone buzzed on the rug where she'd dropped it. The screen lit up with a picture of her mother, Eleanor Shaw, smiling on a sailboat. Izora's stomach clenched.
She answered, trying to keep her voice steady. "Mom?"
"Izora, thank God." Eleanor's voice was frayed with anxiety. "Did you speak with him? Did you talk to Aloysius about the company? The board is about to mutiny. They're saying we have less than a week."
Her mother started to cry, a sound that always undid Izora. "This was your grandfather's life's work, Izzy. We can't let it just... disappear."
Izora wanted to scream the truth. He'll save it, but he wants my child's life in return. But the words caught in her throat. She couldn't break her mother's heart like that. Not yet.
"I'm working on it, Mom," she managed, the lie tasting like ash. "I'll do everything I can."
Eleanor, mistaking the evasion for hope, showered her with grateful blessings before hanging up. The call was the final weight that crushed Izora's spirit, leaving her feeling utterly alone. She walked like a ghost back to her bedroom, a part of the house designed to look like her own space but which had always felt like a gilded cage. She collapsed onto the bed, the exhaustion so profound it was a physical pain.
Sleep offered no escape, only a disjointed nightmare of her wedding day-a cold, sterile affair in a judge's chambers with more lawyers than guests. It had been a transaction from the very beginning.
She woke with a start to a dark room. A soft knock came at the door.
Mr. Peterson, the family's butler, stood in the doorway, his face as impassive as ever. He held a slim leather folder.
"Madam," he said, his voice respectful but devoid of warmth. "Mr. Lawson asked me to give you this."
Izora took the folder. Her fingers felt clumsy as she opened it. Inside, printed on the heavy, watermarked stationery of the Lawson family's legal counsel, was a document titled "Medical Procedure Consent Form."
It detailed, in cold, legal language, the entire process for a pregnancy termination. An appointment was already scheduled. Two days from now. Nine in the morning. Cedar Creek Private Medical Center. They had even attached the resume of the presiding physician, a Dr. Sterling, as if to underscore the efficiency and finality of Aloysius's decision.
Her hands began to shake violently. He hadn't wasted a second. He was already executing the plan.
With a strangled cry of rage, she hurled the folder at the wall. The papers scattered across the floor.
She glared at Mr. Peterson, her voice a low snarl. "Tell him I will die before I sign that."
The butler gave a slight, almost imperceptible bow. "My only task was to deliver the documents, Madam. The master's decisions are not for me to alter."
His words confirmed her reality. This house wasn't a home; it was a prison, and he was one of the wardens. Her fate had been decided.
A wave of nausea hit her, and she stumbled into the en-suite bathroom, gagging over the toilet. She gripped the cold marble sink, staring at her pale, haunted reflection in the mirror. Anger wouldn't save her. Tears wouldn't save her child.
She had to save herself.
And then, a name surfaced from the depths of her despair. Julian Carlisle.
He was her childhood friend, the boy who knew her before she was Izora Shaw, the Lawson appendage. He was also, she knew, one of the few men in New York whose power and influence could rival Aloysius's. He was her only hope.
Her mind, suddenly sharp and clear, went to work. She grabbed her phone, her fingers flying across the calendar. A tech industry charity gala. Tonight. At the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Julian, a top-tier venture capitalist, would be there. He never missed an opportunity to network.
She took a deep, shuddering breath and walked into her closet. It was a cavernous room filled with designer gowns she rarely wore. Tonight, she needed more than a dress. She needed armor. She couldn't look like a victim. She needed to look like a fighter.
Her eyes, once filled with despair, now held a glint of steely resolve. She was going to war.
She picked up her phone again, dialing the house line for the garage. Her voice was calm, steady, and cold.
"Frank, have the car ready. I'm going to the Met."
The city lights of Manhattan blurred into streaks of gold and white as the car sped downtown. Izora stared out the window, the glittering spectacle a world away from the icy landscape of her heart. She opened her clutch and took out a compact, dabbing concealer under her eyes to hide the dark circles. She could not afford to look weak. She was Mrs. Lawson, and tonight, that title was her only weapon.
The car pulled up to the grand entrance of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. As she stepped out, a barrage of camera flashes momentarily blinded her. She held her head high, a polite, practiced smile fixed on her face, and moved through the gauntlet of press with a grace she did not feel.
Inside, the Great Hall was a sea of champagne, diamonds, and calculated smiles. The air hummed with the low thrum of powerful people making powerful conversation. Izora scanned the crowd, her eyes searching for Julian's familiar, sardonic grin.
Instead, they landed on the one person she wanted to avoid.
Aloysius. He stood near the base of the grand staircase, looking effortlessly commanding in his tuxedo. And on his arm, clinging to him with a proprietary air, was Aida Jefferson, a rising actress whose star was fueled more by her social media savvy than her talent. They looked like a power couple on a magazine cover. Whispers followed them like a trail of perfume.
A sharp pang went through Izora's chest, but she forced herself to look away, to refocus on her mission. Find Julian.
But it was too late. Aida had spotted her. A triumphant smirk flickered across the actress's perfectly made-up face. She whispered something in Aloysius's ear, and then, like a predator sensing an opportunity, she began to steer him in Izora's direction.
"Mrs. Lawson," Aida purred, her voice dripping with false sweetness. "What a surprise to see you here." The unspoken "alone" hung in the air between them.
Aloysius's face was a cold, indifferent mask. He looked at Izora as if she were a piece of furniture he had to navigate around.
Aida reached into her tiny, jewel-encrusted clutch and produced a folded check. A personal check from Aloysius's account. She pushed it towards Izora. "Aloysius asked me to give this to you. Sign the divorce papers, and you can write any number you want on it."
The guests nearby fell silent, their eyes wide with hungry curiosity. They smelled blood in the water.
Izora didn't even glance at the check. Her gaze was fixed on Aida. "Miss Jefferson," she said, her voice quiet but carrying in the sudden hush. "In what capacity are you speaking to me?"
Aida's smile tightened. She lifted her chin. "I'm the woman Aloysius loves."
Izora let out a small, soft laugh. "Is that so? But my name is the one on the marriage certificate. And as long as I am Mrs. Lawson, the child I am carrying is the first-in-line heir to the Lawson fortune."
She deliberately emphasized the words "first-in-line heir," her eyes flicking pointedly to Aida's flat stomach.
Color flooded Aida's face. She was speechless, sputtering with rage.
Izora turned her cool gaze to her husband. "Control your... companion, Mr. Lawson. Not just anyone is qualified to negotiate terms with me."
The words were a perfect shot, striking Aida right where it hurt most-her unofficial, unrecognized status. A collective, muffled gasp went through the onlookers. No one had expected the quiet, docile Izora Shaw to have such a sharp tongue.
Aida looked like she was about to lunge, but a single, warning glance from Aloysius stopped her cold.
Izora, having made her point, turned and walked away, leaving the actress fuming and her husband looking on with an unreadable expression. She picked up a flute of champagne from a passing tray, her fingers trembling slightly. It was a small, temporary victory, but a necessary one. She would not be dismissed. She would not be erased.
She moved through the glittering crowd, her eyes once again scanning for Julian. Finally, she saw him. He was on a secluded terrace overlooking the park, leaning against the stone balustrade, a glass of whiskey in his hand. He looked bored and detached from the scene inside.
A spark of hope ignited in Izora's chest. She pushed through the French doors and hurried towards him.
"Julian..." she said, his name a desperate plea on her lips.