
Breaking Free from Betrayal
Chapter 1
The pregnancy test trembled in my hands, two pink lines blazing like beacons of hope against the white plastic. After three years of marriage, three years of doctors' appointments and whispered conversations about my "condition," three years of Benedict's family's pointed silences at dinner tables – finally, finally, I was pregnant.
My heart hammered against my ribs as I clutched the test to my chest. Benedict would be overjoyed. All those nights he'd held me while I cried, assuring me that it didn't matter, that he loved me regardless – now we could put all of that behind us. Our child would silence the cruel whispers, would prove that our love was enough to create life.
I practically flew down the hospital corridor, my purse bouncing against my hip as I rushed toward the parking garage. The late afternoon sun streamed through the windows, painting everything golden, and for the first time in months, the world felt bright again. I had to tell Benedict immediately. I had to see his face when he learned he was going to be a father.
The drive home passed in a blur of anticipation. I rehearsed the words in my head – "Benedict, we're having a baby" – imagining how his eyes would light up, how he'd sweep me into his arms and spin me around our living room. Maybe we'd call his parents tonight, maybe we'd start planning the nursery this weekend. The future stretched before us, golden and perfect.
I burst through our front door, my keys still jangling in my hand. "Benedict! Benedict, you'll never guess what—"
The words died in my throat.
There, in our living room, sat Salem Morris.
She looked exactly as she had in college – perfectly styled blonde hair, manicured nails, that same cruel smile that had haunted my memories. But now she wore an expensive dress that hugged her curves, and her hand rested protectively over a small but unmistakable bump.
Benedict rose from the armchair beside her, his face carefully composed. "Sophie. You're home early."
I stared at Salem, my mind struggling to process her presence in our home. The last time I'd seen her was seven years ago, when Benedict had broken off their engagement to be with me. She'd screamed at me then, called me pathetic, worthless. Benedict had shielded me from her fury, had chosen me over her wealth and status.
Now she sat in my living room like she belonged there.
"Hello, Sophie," Salem purred, her voice honey-sweet with an undertone of venom. "It's been so long."
"What is she doing here?" The pregnancy test crinkled in my grip, still hidden behind my purse.
Benedict's jaw tightened. "Salem has something to tell us. Something important."
Salem's smile widened as she caressed her belly. "I'm pregnant, Sophie. With Benedict's child."
The world tilted. The golden afternoon light suddenly felt harsh, exposing every cruel detail of this moment. My own pregnancy test seemed to burn through my purse, mocking me with its timing.
"That's impossible," I whispered.
"Is it?" Salem's eyes glittered with malicious satisfaction. "Benedict and I have been... reconnecting. Haven't we, darling?"
I looked at my husband, searching his face for denial, for outrage, for anything that would make this nightmare make sense. Instead, I found only cold resignation.
"It happened a few months ago," Benedict said, his voice flat. "I was drunk. I made a mistake."
A mistake. Our marriage, our love, our future – reduced to a mistake.
"Salem will be staying here during her pregnancy," Benedict continued, as if discussing a business arrangement. "She needs proper care, and I intend to take responsibility for my child."
"Your child?" My voice cracked. "What about us? What about our marriage?"
Salem laughed, a tinkling sound like breaking glass. "Oh, Sophie. Still so naive. Did you really think Benedict would stay faithful to someone who can't even give him children?"
The pregnancy test slipped from my nerveless fingers, clattering to the hardwood floor. Both Benedict and Salem stared at it, the two pink lines visible to everyone now.
For a moment, hope flickered in Benedict's eyes. Then Salem's face twisted with rage.
"How convenient," she spat. "Suddenly fertile the moment another woman carries his heir."
Benedict's expression hardened again. "It doesn't matter now. Salem's child comes first. She was pregnant first."
I bent to retrieve the test with shaking hands, my dreams crumbling around me like ash. In the space of five minutes, my miracle had become meaningless. My husband had chosen his mistress and her child over me and mine.
Salem's satisfied smile was the last thing I saw before I fled upstairs, her laughter echoing behind me like the sound of my heart breaking.
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