
Divorce After His Cruel Betrayal
Chapter 2
The antiseptic smell of Dr. Reed's office made my stomach clench as I sat across from him, my bandaged hands resting limply in my lap. Three days had passed since the greenhouse incident, and my body still felt like it was waging war against itself. Each breath remained a conscious effort, my lungs never quite filling completely.
"Mrs. Cross, your reaction pattern is...unusual," Dr. Reed said, studying my chart with furrowed brows. The afternoon light caught on his silver-rimmed glasses as he looked up at me. "The intensity and specific inflammatory markers in your bloodwork suggest this isn't just a standard allergic response."
I shifted uncomfortably in my seat, wincing as the movement aggravated the raw patches of skin beneath my bandages. "What do you mean?"
"These markers are consistent with someone who's been exposed to certain experimental immunosuppressants." He tilted his head, studying me. "Specifically, compounds used in tropical disease treatment protocols about five years ago."
The room seemed to tilt sideways. Five years ago. South America. Nathan's poisoning.
"Mrs. Cross? Are you alright?" Dr. Reed's voice sounded distant as memories crashed through the carefully constructed walls in my mind.
The sterile research facility in Brazil. The desperate phone call from Nathan's business partner. The experimental treatment protocol that was his only hope.
"They needed a compatible donor to test the treatments," I whispered, more to myself than to Dr. Reed. "Someone with similar blood chemistry."
Dr. Reed set down his clipboard. "Elara, were you part of an experimental drug trial?"
I could almost feel the needles again, the burning sensation as unknown compounds entered my bloodstream. The researchers' warnings echoing in my ears: *permanent organ damage possible, reproductive risks significant, no guarantees of survival for either of us.*
"They said it was the only way to develop an antidote quickly enough," I said, my voice hollow. "Nathan was dying."
Dr. Reed's expression shifted from clinical concern to something deeper, more human. "And you never told him?"
I shook my head. "He was unconscious through most of it. By the time he recovered, I just wanted to put it behind us, start fresh." I didn't mention the miscarriage that followed, the first child we lost because of my choice.
"These compounds have permanently altered your immune response," Dr. Reed explained gently. "It explains why your allergic reactions are so severe now."
Something hardened inside me as I left the doctor's office, a crystalline clarity forming where confusion had been. I had given everything to save Nathan's life, and in return, he had nearly taken mine.
---
The next morning, I placed the manila envelope on the breakfast table just as Nathan reached for his coffee. The divorce papers inside represented my last hope for a dignified exit.
"What's this?" he asked, not bothering to look up from his tablet.
"I want a divorce," I said, my voice steadier than I expected.
That got his attention. His eyes flicked to mine, then to the envelope. With deliberate slowness, he opened it, skimmed the contents, and then—with a smile that chilled me to the bone—began methodically tearing the papers into tiny pieces.
"No," he said simply, letting the confetti fall onto his untouched breakfast plate.
"Nathan, please—"
"Did you forget our prenuptial agreement?" He leaned forward, his voice dropping to a dangerous whisper. "You leave with nothing. Not a penny. And after your little performance with Isabella, I'll make sure everyone knows exactly why."
"That video was fake," I insisted, my hands trembling despite my resolve.
"You belong to me, Elara." The possessive edge in his voice made my skin crawl. "You don't get to decide when this ends."
---
That afternoon, hunger drove me to the kitchen. I hadn't eaten since the doctor's appointment, my appetite diminished by both my physical condition and the morning's confrontation.
I froze in the doorway as Evelyn Davies, our head housekeeper for five years, blocked my path.
"I'm sorry, Mrs. Cross," she said, not sounding sorry at all. "The kitchen is being prepared for tonight's dinner. Ms. White's instructions."
"Ms. White doesn't give instructions in my home, Evelyn," I replied, attempting to step around her.
She didn't budge. "Mr. Cross confirmed the arrangement. Staff quarters have a small kitchenette you may use if necessary."
The betrayal stung more than it should have. Evelyn had once brought me tea during migraines, had helped select the artwork for the penthouse walls.
"I see," I said quietly, understanding washing over me like ice water. This wasn't just about Nathan and Isabella anymore. My entire world was being systematically dismantled, piece by piece.
As I turned away, heading toward the servants' quarters I'd never once entered in all my years here, I felt something shift inside me. The woman who had sacrificed everything for love was dying. And in her place, someone stronger—someone dangerous—was being born.
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