
Betrayal and the Road to Justice
Chapter 1
The fluorescent lights in Dr. Martinez's office buzzed overhead as I stared at the small black and white image in my trembling hands. Eight weeks. The tiny blob on the ultrasound photo looked more like a bean than a baby, but my heart swelled with a fierce, protective love I'd never experienced before.
"Congratulations, Amy," Dr. Martinez said, her warm smile reaching her eyes. "Everything looks perfectly healthy. You'll want to start taking prenatal vitamins and schedule your next appointment in four weeks."
I nodded, barely hearing her words as joy bubbled up inside me like champagne. Mitchell and I were going to be parents. After five years together, after all the challenges we'd faced with his leg injury and the financial struggles, we were finally going to have our family. I pressed the ultrasound photo against my chest, imagining Mitchell's face when I told him.
"Thank you," I whispered, my voice thick with emotion.
The drive home felt like floating on air. I kept glancing at the passenger seat where I'd carefully placed the ultrasound photo in a small gift box I'd bought on impulse from the hospital gift shop. Mitchell would be home from his physical therapy appointment by now, probably resting on the couch with his leg elevated as usual. I'd make his favorite dinner, light some candles, and then surprise him with the news that would change our lives forever.
Our apartment building came into view, and I practically bounced up the stairs to the third floor, my keys jingling with excitement. I paused outside our door, taking a deep breath to calm my racing heart. I wanted to savor this moment, the last few seconds before our world expanded to include this precious new life.
I turned the key quietly, planning to surprise him. "Mitchell?" I called softly, stepping inside. "I'm home early!"
Silence greeted me, but I could hear movement upstairs in our bedroom. He must be resting. Perfect. I set my purse down carefully, the gift box still clutched in my other hand, and started toward the staircase.
That's when I saw him.
Mitchell was walking down the stairs, his gait smooth and confident, both legs carrying his weight equally. No limp. No hesitation. No sign of the disability that had shaped our entire relationship for five years.
The gift box slipped from my numb fingers, hitting the hardwood floor with a soft thud.
He froze mid-step when he saw me, his face cycling through surprise, panic, and something that looked almost like relief. For a heartbeat, we stared at each other across the space that suddenly felt like a chasm.
"Amy," he said, his voice carefully controlled. "You're home early."
I couldn't speak. Couldn't breathe. Five years of careful attention to his needs, of massaging his leg when it ached, of taking on extra shifts to pay for his treatments, of planning our lives around his limitations—all of it crumbling in the space of a single moment.
"Your leg," I finally managed, my voice barely a whisper.
He descended the remaining steps normally, each footfall driving another nail into the coffin of everything I'd believed about us. When he reached the bottom, he stood there, no longer bothering to favor his supposedly injured leg.
"Amy, I can explain—"
"Five years." The words tore from my throat like broken glass. "Five years, Mitchell. I've been taking care of you, worrying about you, organizing our entire life around your disability for five years."
His jaw tightened. "It's complicated."
"Complicated?" I laughed, but it sounded more like a sob. "What's complicated about lying to someone who loves you? What's complicated about making me believe you needed me when—" My voice cracked, and I pressed my hand to my mouth.
The ultrasound photo lay forgotten on the floor between us, our future reduced to a crumpled piece of paper. The baby I'd been so excited to tell him about suddenly felt like a secret I needed to protect, even from its own father.
"You don't understand," Mitchell said, taking a step toward me. His movement was fluid, graceful—everything it had never been in all our years together. "There are things you don't know, things I had to—"
"Had to what?" I backed away from him, my heart hammering against my ribs. "Had to lie to me every single day? Had to let me believe I was caring for someone who needed me when you were perfectly fine?"
The man I thought I knew, the man I'd loved and protected and sacrificed for, was a stranger. And if he could lie about something this fundamental, this all-encompassing, what else had been a lie?
Mitchell's eyes darted to the gift box on the floor, and something flickered across his face—curiosity, maybe even concern. But I couldn't trust any expression he made now. How could I trust anything about him ever again?
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