Isabella Diaz, the housemaid, practically spat the words through gritted teeth. "Mrs. Hayes-Carlisle. It's done. She delivered."
Jasmine Hayes didn't move from her seat by the window. The late-afternoon light caught the dust motes floating around her like a constellation of tiny, dying stars. "Boy or girl?"
"A boy." Isabella's mouth twisted into something bitter. "Mrs. Beatrice Carlisle-Beaumont and Mrs. Meredith Carlisle-Beaumont are beside themselves. Won't stop gushing about how perfect the baby is. Even Mr. Lachlan, he was so thrilled he-"
She stopped cold, a hand flying to her lips as if she could catch the words and stuff them back in. A look of pure pity flickered across her face before she shook her head, sighed heavily, and retreated toward the kitchen.
Jasmine let the silence return. Her heart sank anyway, a slow and deliberate descent, like a stone dropped into deep water. The Carlisle-Beaumont household had practically emptied itself over the past week. Everyone had flocked to the hospital, orbiting Seraphina Stone like she was the center of the universe. Including Jasmine's own husband. Lachlan had barely left the woman's bedside. He hadn't called. Hadn't texted. The indifference was so complete it felt almost artistic.
The front door clicked open.
Lachlan swept into the room, and the energy shifted. He was buoyant in a way Jasmine hadn't seen in years-maybe ever. The cold, polished mask he wore at home had vanished, replaced by a boyish excitement that made him look younger, softer. It was a version of him she'd never been allowed to know.
"Sera had the baby. Seven pounds, six ounces. Perfect little cheeks. Absolutely gorgeous." He was already talking before his coat hit the chair, words tumbling out in a rush. "The kid came out stubborn as hell-gave Sera a rough time. We nearly called for a C-section, but she refused. Insisted on seeing it through naturally. You know how determined she gets."
Jasmine said nothing.
"Seeing her in that much pain-God, Grandmother and Mother were crying. It was intense." He shook his head, a tender smile lingering at the corners of his mouth. A smile that had never once been aimed in Jasmine's direction during three years of marriage.
He meant Seraphina Stone. Heiress to the Stone Group. The woman who'd married into the Carlisle-Beaumont family on the exact same day Jasmine had, three years ago. A double wedding that had captivated New York's elite-champagne fountains, senators in attendance, a string quartet flown in from Vienna. Jasmine had married the second son, Lachlan Carlisle-Beaumont IV. Seraphina had married the firstborn, Alastair.
It hadn't lasted. Alastair, a man addicted to speed, had wrapped his McLaren around a semi-truck during an illegal street race. The car folded like paper. He didn't survive.
Jasmine still remembered the wedding vows. Alastair had added a personal line, right there at the altar, promising to give up his dangerous hobbies for Seraphina. For her, he'd sworn, he'd walk away from all of it. What sent him onto that road that night was a question no one seemed willing to ask. The family closed ranks, and the official story became gospel: a tragic accident, a young widow left to mourn, a family shattered by grief.
The Stones' precious daughter became a widow. The Carlisle-Beaumonts, drowning in guilt, urged her to remarry. Seraphina refused. She would stay. She would honor Alastair's memory. She would remain a Carlisle-Beaumont.
The family rewarded that devotion. And how. They'd found a way to give Seraphina the child she claimed she needed to survive her grief. Alastair was dead, so the source of that child was his twin brother.
Jasmine stared at her own hands, delicate and still. "Congratulations."
Lachlan's smile dimmed. "What's that supposed to mean?"
"It means exactly what I said. Congratulations."
He closed the distance between them, standing over her chair. The warmth in his expression curdled into something harder. "Jasmine. It's a happy day. Can you drop the passive-aggressive act for once?"
She lifted her chin and met his eyes. "She gave birth to a child you helped conceive. I'm offering my congratulations. Isn't that what you wanted?"
The air thickened. Lachlan's jaw tightened. "Sera went through hell to bring that baby into the world because she loved Alastair. Because she wanted something of him to hold onto. A reason to keep living. What exactly is wrong with that?"
Jasmine exhaled, so softly it was almost inaudible. "Did you ever think to ask me?"
She hadn't known. When Seraphina's pregnancy was first announced, Jasmine had assumed it was Alastair's posthumous child. She'd endured Seraphina's mood swings with patient courtesy, swallowing her pride every time the woman demanded special treatment. Only when the timeline became suspicious-impossibly suspicious-did Lachlan finally confess.
Seraphina was carrying a child conceived through artificial insemination. His frozen sperm, stored years ago at St. Jude's Fertility Clinic. The entire family had discussed it. They'd all agreed. He hoped Jasmine could understand.
The Carlisle-Beaumont machine had conspired to keep her in the dark. They'd cooked the meal, served it, and then invited her to the table to offer grace.
Lachlan dropped onto the sofa across from her. He plucked a cigarette from a silver case, fitted it between his lips, and flicked his lighter open with a sharp, practiced snap. The flame flared, illuminating the hard planes of his face for just a moment.
"I wasn't going to let you ruin this," he said quietly. "Sera needed it. The family needed it. My contribution was clinical. Minimal. I don't see why you're making it into something ugly."
Lachlan was, objectively, a beautiful man. Sharp, sculpted features. Gold-rimmed glasses that gave him the look of a sophisticated older graduate student-the kind of man who could discuss Proust and pour a perfect Scotch in the same breath. That collegiate charm was exactly what had drawn Jasmine in, three years ago, when she'd mistaken his cool reserve for depth and his indifference for mystery.
Now, watching him from across the hospital suite she hadn't yet entered, she realized exactly how naive she'd been. Her brain must have short-circuited. That was the only explanation.
Lachlan took a long drag from his cigarette, then stubbed it out in a crystal ashtray. His brow furrowed slightly, as if he were working through a complex equation.
"Sera came to me," he said, as if that explained everything. "She begged, Jasmine. And the family was unanimous. Grandmother, Mother-everyone agreed it was the right thing to do. I couldn't say no. I didn't tell you beforehand because I knew you'd overreact. You'd make it complicated, and Sera couldn't handle any more stress. She was already showing signs of severe depression. Suicidal ideation. She needed this. All she wanted was a baby-something to live for. And what I gave her? It was nothing. A minor inconvenience. A clinical procedure."
Jasmine stared at him. "A minor inconvenience."
"That's not-" He caught himself, jaw tightening. "You're twisting my words."
"Am I?" Jasmine's voice stayed quiet. Dangerously quiet. "You donated your genetic material to your dead brother's wife without telling your own wife. You let the entire family participate in a conspiracy of silence. And you're calling it a minor inconvenience."
Lachlan's fingers drummed against the armrest. "It's not like I slept with her."
"No. You just fathered her child."
"For God's sake-" He stood abruptly, pacing toward the window. "Alastair's death destroyed Sera. She was a shell. This baby gave her back a reason to exist. Why can't you see that as a good thing?"
Jasmine said nothing. The silence stretched, thick and suffocating.
She wasn't speechless. She had plenty to say. She could list every betrayal, every lie, every moment she'd been made to feel like an outsider in her own marriage. But if she started now, she wasn't sure she'd be able to stop. And she needed to stay calm. Calculated. Cold.
Lachlan watched her from across the room. She was beautiful in the dim light-delicate features, eyes that held depths he'd never bothered to explore. The quiet devastation in her expression stirred something in his chest. Guilt, maybe. Or irritation. He couldn't tell the difference anymore.
His phone buzzed again. Seraphina.
He answered immediately, his voice softening into something unrecognizable. "Hey. Yeah, I'm still at the house. Be there soon. You need anything?" A pause. "Okay. Get some rest. I'll see you in an hour."
When he hung up, he spoke without looking at Jasmine. "The baby's name is Damien. Grandmother chose it. She wanted to honor Alastair, but using his name directly felt like tempting fate, so she adapted it. Damien Carlisle-Beaumont. It has a nice ring, don't you think?"
Jasmine stood. "You should hurry back. Your brother's widow and your son are waiting for you."
The words hit like a slap. Lachlan's expression darkened. "Stop calling him that."
"Calling him what?"
"My son."
"Isn't he?"
Lachlan's voice rose. "He's Alastair's son. Biologically, yes, I contributed, but that's a technicality. This is about family. About legacy. About doing what's right for people who are suffering. Can you honestly not see the difference?"
Jasmine's smile was thin and bloodless. "I'm just trying to understand the technicalities. For instance-how exactly did you make the donation? Did you go to the clinic? Did a doctor handle the transfer? I'm genuinely curious about the process."
Lachlan's composure slipped. A flicker of something-fear? guilt?-crossed his face before he locked it down. "I told you. I had samples frozen at St. Jude's. Years ago. This is a matter of medical record."
"Of course." Jasmine's voice was smooth as glass. "I wasn't implying anything else."
"You absolutely were."
"Was I?" She tilted her head, eyes wide with mock innocence. "I just asked a question. You're the one who started sweating."
Lachlan raked a hand through his hair. "There is nothing inappropriate between Sera and me. This wasn't an affair. It was a medical procedure to help a grieving widow. If you can't understand that, that's your problem."
"My problem," Jasmine echoed. "Right."
"Three years, Jasmine." His voice dropped, taking on an edge of accusation. "Three years of marriage, and you've never once tried to understand this family. To fit in. To give me a reason to-"
He stopped. The unspoken words were deafening.
To give me a reason to love you.
Jasmine had heard it before. In the silences. In the way Meredith looked at her. In the cold, transactional nature of their marriage. Three years, and her womb had remained empty. Meredith called her a barren hen behind her back. The family whispered about her failure to produce an heir. Jasmine had even gone to a fertility specialist, endured invasive tests, just to prove that her body wasn't the problem.
Jasmine wasn't infertile. That was the cruel irony.
The fertility specialist had been clear. Her hormone levels were normal. Her reproductive anatomy was perfectly healthy. There was no medical reason she couldn't conceive. The problem had never been her body. It had been the fact that Lachlan barely touched her, and when he did, it was perfunctory-a mechanical exercise in marital obligation that left her feeling more alone than if he'd simply stayed on his side of the bed.
The "barren hen" narrative was just another weapon in Meredith's arsenal. The real issue was the Hayes family's spectacular financial collapse. Two leveraged bets on high-risk ventures had detonated simultaneously, vaporizing the family's liquidity and leaving them teetering on the edge of insolvency. The old-money prestige that had made Jasmine an acceptable match had evaporated. Now she was just an inconvenient reminder of a bad investment.
Jasmine had always known she was an outsider in the Carlisle-Beaumont world. But the extent of the family's contempt had only become clear after Alastair's death. That was when Seraphina's true position in the household had been revealed. She wasn't just the grieving widow. She was the golden child, the beloved daughter-in-law, the woman who could do no wrong. And Jasmine was the spare. The placeholder. The one who'd been chosen only because the woman Lachlan really wanted had married his brother first.
She'd found the photograph a month ago. Anonymous sender. No note. Just the image: Lachlan and Seraphina outside a luxury hotel, his hand resting possessively on the curve of her spine, her body angled into his with the easy intimacy of long familiarity. They looked like a couple. They looked like they belonged together.
That was the real donation process. Not a sterile clinic procedure. Not a medical transfer of frozen samples. A hotel room. A betrayal that predated Alastair's death, or that had begun so quickly afterward it made no difference.
Jasmine had stared at that photograph for hours. She'd expected to feel rage. Heartbreak. The visceral agony of a woman watching her marriage dissolve. Instead, she'd felt something unexpected: clarity.
She'd been a fool. She'd loved a man who'd never loved her back. She'd sacrificed her career, her ambitions, her sense of self, all for a marriage that had been hollow from the start. And now she knew the truth. Now she could act.
She drove to NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital's maternity wing, her mind cold and clear. The family had spared no expense for Seraphina's delivery. Beatrice, the matriarch, had flown in a private obstetrician from London. The VIP suite was larger than most Manhattan apartments, filled with fresh flowers and the soft hum of premium medical equipment.
Seraphina lay propped against a mountain of silk pillows, her complexion dewy and radiant. She looked nothing like a woman who'd supposedly just endured hours of agonizing labor. She looked like she'd stepped out of a spa advertisement. Lachlan sat at her bedside, cradling a porcelain bowl of soup. He lifted each spoonful to his lips first-testing the temperature, blowing gently-before guiding it to Seraphina's mouth with a tenderness that bordered on reverence.
Jasmine stood in the doorway, watching.
In three years of marriage, Lachlan had never once shown her that kind of care. Their interactions were transactional. Polished. Distant. Even in their most intimate moments, he'd been clinical, almost detached. She'd convinced herself that was simply his nature-a man raised in such rarefied air that he'd forgotten how to bend. But watching him with Seraphina, she understood the truth. He remembered perfectly well how to bend. He just chose not to do it for her.
"Jasmine!" Seraphina's face brightened with theatrical delight. "You came!"
The word sister-in-law scraped against Jasmine's nerves like sandpaper.
Lachlan dabbed at Seraphina's mouth with a linen napkin before acknowledging his wife. "You're here."
"I said I would be."
"Good. Stay with Sera for a while. I'm going down to get her some grapes. She's been craving them." He stood, already moving toward the door. "I know what kind she likes. Might pick up a few other things. The market's just downstairs. Won't be long."
Seraphina's voice went syrupy. "Oh, you don't have to go yourself. Send one of the staff."
"No." Lachlan's eyes softened. "I want to."
As he passed Jasmine, his gaze dropped to the bouquet in her hands. His expression flickered with something close to irritation. "Put those on the balcony. Sera doesn't like sunflowers."
Jasmine's fingers tightened around the stems. She imagined, very briefly, the satisfying crunch of the arrangement meeting his perfect jawline. Instead, she smiled thinly. "Of course."
Seraphina patted the bed beside her. "Come. Sit with me."
Jasmine ignored the outstretched hand and pulled up a chair instead.
"You're still angry with me, aren't you?" Seraphina's eyes immediately glistened with unshed tears. It was an impressive performance. Truly. The trembling lip. The catch in her voice. The wounded vulnerability radiating from every pore. "I know using Lachlan's... genetic material... was difficult for you. But I-"
The tears spilled over, right on cue.
"Alastair and I had plans. After the wedding, we were going to enjoy being newlyweds for a year, and then we wanted children so badly. I wanted to give him a family. And then-" Her voice cracked dramatically. "Then everything was taken from me. I loved him so much. I love this family. All I wanted was to give Alastair a legacy. A piece of himself that would live on after him. Is that so wrong?"
She reached for Jasmine's hand. This time, Jasmine didn't pull away quickly enough.
"Lachlan and Alastair were twins. That's the only reason I asked him. There was nothing else. Nothing. You have to believe me. Please don't hate me. Please."
Jasmine's throat tightened around the words she wanted to say. The photograph. The hotel. The truth rotting beneath this pretty performance. She opened her mouth to respond, and a sharp voice cut through the room like a blade.