
After He Chose Another
Chapter 1
I stood at the edge of our penthouse ballroom, watching five hundred of New York's elite raise crystal flutes in celebration of Wintercross Enterprises' fifth anniversary. The chandelier light fractured through the glasses, casting diamond-like patterns across the marble floor. My husband's voice commanded the room from the center stage, where our massive glass sculpture—a twisting spire representing our intertwined destinies—caught and reflected every beam of light.
"None of this would exist without us," Ethan said, his charismatic smile sweeping across the crowd before landing on me. "Without the woman who saw potential where others saw risk, who stayed up nights building spreadsheets while I handled the handshakes." A ripple of appreciative laughter moved through the audience. "To Sophia, my wife, my partner, my everything."
I smiled back, the midnight-blue silk of my gown shifting like water as I raised my glass. The weight of the moment settled on me—five years of marriage, ten years together, and an empire built from nothing but late nights, cheap pizza, and unwavering belief in each other.
"You're glowing tonight," whispered Chloe Bennett, materializing beside me with her tablet tucked under her arm. My personal assistant's eyes sparkled with pride. "The board's quarterly projections came in. We've exceeded targets by eighteen percent."
"Save it for tomorrow," I murmured, watching Ethan work the room. "Tonight's for celebrating."
Chloe followed my gaze and smirked. "You two still look at each other like Stanford freshmen."
I laughed softly. "Some things don't change."
If only I'd known how quickly everything could.
Two days later, I settled into the buttery leather seat of our private jet, watching Manhattan shrink beneath us. Ethan loosened his tie and poured two glasses of champagne as we ascended toward Los Angeles.
"To the Westbrook partnership," he said, handing me a flute. "If we land this deal—"
"When we land this deal," I corrected, but didn't take the glass. Instead, I reached into my purse and pulled out a small white stick.
His eyes widened as he registered the two pink lines.
"Is that...?" His voice caught.
I nodded, tears blurring my vision. "I took three tests. All positive."
The champagne forgotten, Ethan pulled me into his arms, his heartbeat thundering against my ear. "A baby," he whispered into my hair. "Our baby."
"I know the timing with Westbrook—"
"Forget Westbrook," he said fiercely. "This is what we've wanted for years." His hand found my still-flat stomach, protective and reverent. "We'll celebrate tonight, and I promise to be appropriately skeptical about their financials tomorrow."
I laughed through my tears, nestling deeper into his embrace. In that moment, suspended above the clouds, our future seemed limitless.
The black SUV collected us at LAX, gliding through palm-lined streets toward Beverly Hills. I was scrolling through emails when the driver took a sudden turn down an unfamiliar street.
"This isn't the way to the Four Seasons," I said, looking up.
The partition glass slid up without response. Ethan leaned forward, knocking sharply on the divider. "Hey! What's going on?"
The SUV accelerated, then screeched to a halt as three black vans boxed us in. Men in tactical gear surrounded our vehicle.
"Ethan!" I screamed as the door was wrenched open. A gloved hand clamped over my mouth, dragging me out while another assailant pulled Ethan from the opposite side.
A hood came down over my head. Rough hands bound my wrists. I struggled wildly, my mind racing to the tiny life inside me.
"Please," I begged through the fabric. "I'm pregnant."
My captor said nothing, shoving me into what felt like another vehicle. I could hear Ethan nearby, his breathing ragged with fury.
Hours later—or perhaps minutes, time lost all meaning in the darkness—we were marched into what echoed like a warehouse. When they removed my hood, harsh fluorescent lights momentarily blinded me. As my vision cleared, I saw Ethan ten feet away, his face bloodied, eyes wild with fear.
Between us stood a tall man with ice-blue eyes and a jagged scar across his jaw. Dante Volkov, I would later learn.
"Mr. Cross," he said with a slight Eastern European accent. "You have a choice to make."
Two more guards entered, dragging a sobbing woman with them. Her mascara streaked down her face, her designer dress torn at the shoulder.
"Isabella Reed," Volkov announced. "Daughter of the man who saved your life fifteen years ago. Remember him?"
Ethan's face drained of color. "How do you—"
"Choose," Volkov interrupted, pulling out a gun. "Who leaves this warehouse first? Your wife..." he pointed the weapon at me, "or your savior's daughter?"
"This is insane!" Ethan shouted. "Take me instead!"
"That's not an option," Volkov said coldly. "Choose now, or I choose for you."
"Ethan!" I screamed, straining against my restraints. Our baby. Our future. "Ethan, please!"
His eyes met mine, filled with an agony I couldn't comprehend. Then they shifted to Isabella.
"Her," he whispered. "Let her go first."
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