
Breaking Free from False Love
Chapter 2
I stared at the ceiling for hours, the revelation about Lincoln and Jessie echoing in my head like a cruel taunt. When the hospital door finally swung open around noon the next day, I felt a surge of relief that quickly evaporated when I saw Lincoln's face. There was no concern there, no remorse—just impatience.
"You're still here," he said, checking his watch as if my hospitalization was an inconvenience in his carefully scheduled day.
I stared at him, this stranger wearing my husband's face. "I called you ninety-nine times."
"My phone was off. I was in meetings." He didn't even attempt to make the lie sound convincing. "The doctor says you can be discharged this afternoon."
No "I'm sorry." No questions about how I was feeling or what had happened. Nothing about our lost baby.
"I lost our child," I whispered, my voice breaking. "I was alone, Lincoln. I needed you."
He shifted uncomfortably, his eyes darting to the door as if calculating how quickly he could escape. "These things happen, Autumn. We agreed we didn't want children anyway."
The casual cruelty of his words stole my breath. Yes, we had agreed to a child-free marriage, but this was different. This was a life—however brief—that had been inside me. A possibility. A future that had vanished before it could begin.
"We need to attend the Napa Valley retreat next week," he continued, already moving on as if we were discussing a minor scheduling conflict. "It'll be good for us. Get your mind off things."
I wanted to scream, to throw something, to make him feel even a fraction of the pain tearing through me. Instead, I nodded numbly, too exhausted to fight.
* * *
The Napa Valley retreat was a nightmare dressed as a dream. Rolling vineyards stretched under perfect blue skies, the air sweet with ripening grapes and California sunshine. Under different circumstances, it might have been healing.
Instead, I watched my husband fall in love with another woman right before my eyes.
"Jessie needed to come to handle some logistics," Lincoln had explained on the drive from the airport, not quite meeting my gaze. "You understand."
I understood perfectly when I saw her waiting in the hotel lobby—Jessie Vargas, Lincoln's secretary, with her perfect smile and flowing dark hair. The woman whose pregnancy was apparently worth celebrating while mine had been dismissed as an inconvenience.
"Autumn! I'm so glad you could join us," she said, her voice dripping with false sweetness. Her eyes, however, were calculating as they swept over me, taking in my pallor and the dark circles under my eyes. "Lincoln mentioned you weren't feeling well."
That's all my miscarriage had become—"not feeling well."
Throughout the wine tastings and business dinners, I became invisible. Lincoln and Jessie shared private jokes and lingering touches, their heads bent together in conversation that stopped whenever I approached. I watched him refill her glass with attentiveness he'd never shown me, saw him guide her through the vineyards with his hand resting possessively at the small of her back.
On our third evening, during a sunset reception at the vineyard's main terrace, I couldn't bear it anymore. Lincoln and Jessie stood by the railing, silhouetted against the golden sky, their laughter carrying across the terrace to where I sat alone. When Jessie placed her hand on Lincoln's arm and he covered it with his own, something inside me finally broke.
I slipped away from the gathering, past the manicured gardens and into the vineyard proper. The evening air was cool against my tear-stained face as I walked between the rows of grapevines, putting distance between myself and the mockery my marriage had become.
The setting sun cast long shadows across the uneven ground. Lost in grief and betrayal, I didn't notice the irrigation trench until my foot caught its edge. I fell hard, a sharp pain shooting through my ankle as I crumpled to the ground.
"Lincoln!" I called out instinctively, though I knew he was too far away—and too preoccupied—to hear. "Help!"
Only silence answered as the sun slipped below the horizon, leaving me alone in the gathering darkness.
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