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Breaking Free from Toxic Love Novel Cover

Breaking Free from Toxic Love

The hotel corridor stretched before me like a gilded prison, its plush burgundy carpet muffling my footsteps as I made my way toward Roman's suite. Tomorrow was supposed to be the happiest day of my life—our wedding day. Eight years of love, laughter, and dreams culminating in a perfect ceremony. I clutched the final guest list in my trembling hands, wanting to surprise him with the last-minute changes his mother had insisted upon. The elevator dinged softly behind me as I approached his door, my heart fluttering with that familiar excitement I always felt when seeing him. I'd spent the entire day coordinating with vendors, ensuring every detail was perfect, from the white roses he loved to the champagne his mother preferred. My feet ached in these heels, but it would all be worth it when I saw his face tomorrow. I slipped my key card into the lock—Roman had given it to me weeks ago, laughing about how I was already acting like his wife. The door clicked open, and I stepped inside, calling out softly, "Roman? I have the updated guest—" The words died in my throat.
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Chapter 3

"Ordinary. Pathetic. Suffocating."

Roman's words echoed in my head as I stared at the computer screen, the numbers blurring before my eyes. Two weeks had passed since I'd overheard him on the phone with Aubree, two weeks since my world had imploded. I'd moved out of my apartment, unable to bear the sight of the wedding dress still hanging in my closet like a ghost of futures lost.

The office around me buzzed with activity, but I felt disconnected from it all, as if watching my life through frosted glass. My colleague Sarah had offered her spare room until I could find a new place, and I'd thrown myself into work, desperate for any distraction from the hollow ache in my chest.

"Rose? The Henderson file?" My boss's voice cut through my fog. I nodded mechanically, reaching for the folder, but as I stood, the room tilted violently. The fluorescent lights overhead blurred into streaks of white, and the floor seemed to rise up to meet me.

Then darkness.

I came to with concerned faces hovering above me, voices overlapping in a cacophony of worry.

"Give her space!"

"Should we call an ambulance?"

"Rose, can you hear me?"

I tried to sit up, but my body felt impossibly heavy. "I'm fine," I mumbled, though the words sounded distant even to my own ears. "Just dizzy."

Someone—Sarah, I realized—pressed a cool hand to my forehead. "You're not fine. You're pale as a ghost and you just collapsed. We're taking you to the hospital."

I wanted to protest, but another wave of dizziness washed over me, and I surrendered.

The hospital corridor was painted a sickly shade of beige, the kind meant to be soothing but that only reminded me of illness and worry. I sat alone on a plastic chair, waiting for the doctor to return with my test results, picking at a loose thread on my blouse.

When the doctor finally appeared, clipboard in hand, her expression was gentle. "Ms. Hart?"

"Yes?" My voice sounded small in the sterile hallway.

"Your test results are back." She sat beside me, her white coat crinkling. "You're about six weeks pregnant."

The world seemed to stop. "Pregnant?"

"Yes. Your hormone levels are quite elevated, which explains the fainting spell. Have you been experiencing any other symptoms? Morning sickness, fatigue?"

I nodded numbly, thinking back to the exhaustion I'd attributed to heartbreak, the nausea I'd blamed on stress. Six weeks. The timing meant...

"The baby is Roman's," I whispered, more to myself than to the doctor.

She patted my hand. "I'll give you some time to process this. When you're ready, we should discuss prenatal care options."

As she walked away, I pressed my hands against my still-flat stomach, trying to comprehend that within me grew a new life—a life created with a man who'd called me ordinary, pathetic, suffocating. A man who'd betrayed me in every possible way.

A baby. Our baby.

Despite everything, a tiny spark of hope flickered in my chest. Maybe when Roman knew about the baby, things would be different. Maybe he would realize what he was throwing away. Maybe...

With trembling fingers, I pulled out my phone and dialed his number. Each ring seemed to last an eternity before he finally answered, his voice cold and distant.

"What do you want, Rose?"

I took a deep breath. "Roman, I need to tell you something important."

"Make it quick. I'm busy."

"I'm pregnant." The words hung in the silence between us, heavy with implication.

The silence stretched for so long I thought he might have hung up. Then came a sound—a harsh, bitter laugh that sent chills down my spine.

"Pregnant?" His voice dripped with contempt. "And I'm supposed to believe it's mine?"

The hope that had begun to bloom withered instantly. "Of course it's yours. Who else would—"

"Don't play innocent," he snarled. "I haven't touched you in months. You think I don't know why you're doing this? Trying to trap me with some other man's child?"

His words hit me like physical blows. "That's not true. You know that's not true."

"Save your lies for someone who cares." His voice rose, echoing through the hospital corridor. "I'm done with you, Rose. Stop calling me. Stop trying to ruin my life with your pathetic schemes."

"Roman, please—"

"The child isn't mine!" he shouted. "And even if it was, I want nothing to do with it—or you."

The call ended with a decisive click, leaving me alone in the corridor, one hand still pressed to my stomach, the other clutching my phone as tears streamed down my face.

Two weeks later, I sat in the same hospital for my first proper prenatal appointment. The waiting room was crowded, forcing me to squeeze between an elderly couple and a woman with twins climbing over her lap. I'd barely slept since Roman's rejection, torn between grief and a growing determination to face this new reality alone.

I was flipping absently through a parenting magazine when a familiar voice cut through the ambient noise like a knife.

"Rose? Is that you?"

I looked up to find Roman's mother standing before me, her pearl necklace gleaming under the fluorescent lights, her eyes narrowed with suspicion.

"Mrs. Jackson," I acknowledged, my throat suddenly dry. "What are you doing here?"

"Routine checkup," she said dismissively, her gaze sweeping over me. "But you... this is the maternity ward."

I said nothing, but my hand instinctively moved to my stomach—a gesture she caught immediately. Her eyes widened, then narrowed with calculation.

"You're pregnant," she stated, not a question but an accusation.

I nodded once, bracing myself for her scorn. Instead, her face transformed, breaking into a triumphant smile that chilled me to the bone.

"A grandchild," she breathed, sinking into the chair beside me. "Roman's child."

"Yes," I admitted, "but Roman doesn't—"

"This changes everything!" She gripped my arm with surprising strength. "You must come back immediately. I'll have the guest suite prepared. A baby needs its father, Rose. This will fix everything between you."

"Mrs. Jackson—"

"We'll need to plan the nursery. The Jackson heir should have the best of everything. I'm thinking the east wing, with that lovely morning light."

As she rambled on, making plans for my child—for my life—without once asking what I wanted, a strange calm settled over me. The same calm I'd felt when I'd overheard Roman's true feelings about me.

"No," I said quietly.

She stopped mid-sentence, her smile freezing. "Excuse me?"

"I said no. I'm not coming back. I'm not using this baby to fix a relationship that was built on lies."

Her eyes hardened. "Don't be foolish. You're carrying the Jackson heir. Roman will—"

"Roman said the baby isn't his," I interrupted, my voice steady despite the pain the words caused. "He accused me of trying to trap him with another man's child."

"He was upset. He didn't mean it."

"He meant every word." I stood, gathering my purse. "And so do I. I'm raising this child alone."

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