
Betrayed Wife's Comeback
Chapter 2
The pain started as a dull ache in my abdomen, spreading like poison through my veins as I stared at Brooks' celebration post. My mother's death certificate lay crumpled beside me on the dusty hardwood floor of my grandmother's brownstone, the official seal blurred by my tears.
"Mrs. Campbell?" The hospital administrator's voice echoed from my dropped phone. "Are you still there?"
I couldn't answer. The cramping intensified, doubling me over as I clutched my stomach. Something was wrong—terribly, devastatingly wrong. The stress, the betrayal, the crushing weight of losing everything in three days had pushed my body beyond its limits.
Blood. There was blood seeping through my dress, pooling on the floor beneath me. My unborn child—the secret I'd discovered just weeks ago, the tiny hope I'd carried even as my world crumbled—was slipping away like everything else Brooks had stolen from me.
"No, no, no," I whispered, crawling toward the stairs, desperate to reach the bathroom, to call for help. But my vision blurred, darkness creeping in from the edges. Through the haze, I could almost hear Brooks' laughter from that restaurant, celebrating his new life while mine ended in this empty house.
The last thing I saw was my grandmother's antique locket, fallen from my neck, glinting in a shaft of afternoon sunlight.
Then—nothing.
***
I gasped awake, my heart hammering against my ribs. Silk shirts hung around me like ghosts, their expensive fabric brushing my shoulders as I struggled to orient myself. The familiar scent of Brooks' cologne—bergamot and cedar—filled the air.
I was in his walk-in closet.
Panic seized me as I scrambled to my feet, my hands instinctively flying to my abdomen. No blood. No pain. Just the soft curve of early pregnancy beneath my silk nightgown. I pressed my palm against my stomach, feeling the subtle firmness that confirmed what seemed impossible.
My phone showed the date: March 15th. Three months before Brooks would bring Anastasia home. Three months before my mother would die. Three months before I would lose everything.
But I remembered it all—every cruel word, every devastating betrayal, every moment of that nightmare future. The memories sat in my mind like acid, burning with crystal clarity. Brooks' indifferent expression as he handed me divorce papers. My mother's final, labored breath over the phone. The searing agony of miscarriage on my grandmother's floor.
Footsteps approached the closet. Brooks appeared in the doorway, already dressed in his charcoal suit, checking his Bulgari watch.
"There you are," he said without looking up. "I need you to confirm the caterer for tonight's dinner with the Hartwell investors. And call my mother—she's been pestering me about Easter plans."
I stared at him, this man I'd once loved so completely I'd erased myself to fit his vision of the perfect wife. His dark hair was perfectly styled, his jaw clean-shaven, his posture radiating the confidence of someone who'd never questioned his right to take whatever he wanted.
"Emilia?" He finally glanced at me, irritation flickering across his features. "Are you listening?"
"I heard you," I said quietly, my voice steadier than I felt.
He nodded and turned away, already dismissing me. But I saw something I'd missed before—or perhaps chosen not to see. The way his eyes never quite met mine. The subtle impatience in his movements when he had to repeat himself. The casual assumption that I would handle every detail of his life without question or gratitude.
I had been so grateful for his attention, so desperate to prove worthy of his love, that I'd mistaken control for care.
Not this time.
As soon as Brooks left for the office, I moved with purpose I'd never felt before. My grandmother's jewelry box sat in our bedroom safe—Brooks had insisted on storing my "sentimental trinkets" there for security. Inside, beneath the pearl necklaces and vintage brooches, lay what I'd forgotten: my grandmother's final gift to me.
A Swiss bank account number, written in her careful script on aged stationary. "For when you need to fly, little bird," the accompanying note read. "Some cages are made of gold, but they're still cages."
I'd never understood what she meant. Now I did.
My fingers trembled as I dialed the number for the Clinique Alpine in Geneva—the same facility I'd researched desperately in my previous life, too late to save my mother. This time, I had three months.
"Good morning, this is Emilia Grant," I said, my voice growing stronger with each word. "I need to arrange immediate medical consultation and treatment for my mother, Margaret Grant. Money is no object."
The representative's Swiss-accented English was crisp and professional. "Of course, Ms. Grant. We can have our medical team review her case within forty-eight hours. Will you be accompanying her?"
I looked around the penthouse that had been my prison, its marble surfaces and designer furniture suddenly feeling as cold as a mausoleum.
"Yes," I said, touching my grandmother's locket. "We'll both be coming to Switzerland."
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