
Divorce Amidst Hit-and-Run Truth
Chapter 3
The mansion felt like a stranger's home as I stepped through the door. Three days had passed since the confrontation at the bar, and Nikolai was thankfully absent—probably at his downtown office, plotting new ways to break me. Samara waited in the car outside, ready for a quick getaway if needed.
I moved through the silent halls, gathering the remaining essentials I'd left behind during our hasty exit. My winter clothes. My mother's recipe box. The small collection of books that had kept me company during lonely nights when Nikolai worked late—or so he'd claimed.
The study door stood ajar. I hesitated, then pushed it open. This had been Nikolai's sanctuary, his private domain where I rarely ventured. But today, something pulled me forward. Maybe it was the need for closure, or maybe just the small, petty desire to invade his space as he had invaded my life.
His mahogany desk dominated the room, meticulously organized as always. I ran my fingers across the polished surface, remembering how he'd sit here for hours, ignoring my existence while I hobbled around the empty house, trying to feel useful. On impulse, I pulled open the top drawer.
Bills. Receipts. Nothing interesting. The second drawer contained office supplies, arranged with military precision. But when I opened the bottom drawer, my breath caught.
A manila folder lay atop a stack of documents, unmarked except for a date written in Nikolai's precise handwriting: 3 years ago. The same year as our camping trip.
My hands trembled as I lifted the folder. Inside was a single sheet of paper—an ultrasound report with my name at the top. My eyes fixed on the words that shattered my world: "Pregnancy confirmed. Estimated 8 weeks gestation."
The room tilted around me. I gripped the edge of the desk, staring at the date: three days before that camping trip. Three days before Nikolai had left me alone in the woods to drive to Kataleya. Three days before the cramping started, before I'd curled up in our tent, bleeding and terrified, with no way to call for help.
"What are you doing in here?"
Nikolai's voice cracked through the silence like a whip. I hadn't heard him come in. He stood in the doorway, his face pale as he registered what I held in my hands.
"I was pregnant." My voice sounded strange to my own ears, hollow and distant. "When you left me alone in the woods to go to her. I was carrying your child."
Something in Nikolai's expression collapsed. He took a step forward, then stopped, as if afraid I might shatter if he came too close.
"Leona, I can explain—"
"Explain?" The word came out as a whisper, then built to a scream. "EXPLAIN? I lost our baby that night! I was alone, bleeding, crying for you, and you were with HER!"
He sank into the leather chair behind his desk, his composure crumbling. "I knew," he admitted, his voice breaking. "I found the test in the bathroom trash before we left for the trip. I was going to tell you I knew, but then Kataleya called..."
"And she was more important than your pregnant wife?"
"She threatened to kill herself." His hands shook as he ran them through his hair. "She said she couldn't live without me, that she'd take pills if I didn't come. I thought—I was trying to protect you both."
The absurdity of it struck me like a physical blow. "Protect me? By abandoning me in the wilderness? By never acknowledging what I lost? By never once holding me while I cried myself to sleep night after night?"
"I didn't know how to face it," he whispered. "When I got back and found you... when I realized what had happened... I couldn't bear my own guilt. It was easier to pretend it never happened."
I clutched the ultrasound report to my chest, this precious proof of a life that had existed, however briefly. A child that would have been three years old now. Walking. Talking. Calling me mama.
"You let me believe I was barren," I said, each word precise and cutting. "You called me a barren cripple in front of an entire restaurant, when you KNEW what I had lost. What you caused me to lose."
Nikolai reached for me, but I stepped back, my prosthetic leg catching on the carpet. I steadied myself against the wall, refusing his help.
"Don't touch me. Don't ever touch me again."
The doorbell rang, sharp and insistent. Through the study window, I saw a familiar figure on the porch—Dr. Elena Vasquez, my physical therapist from after the accident. What was she doing here?
"I need to get that," I said, still clutching the ultrasound report as I limped toward the door, leaving Nikolai frozen in his guilt.
Elena's face brightened when she saw me, then immediately clouded with concern. "Leona, are you alright? You look like you've seen a ghost."
"I'm fine," I lied, stepping aside to let her in. "This is... unexpected."
"I know, I'm sorry for dropping by. I heard about the divorce—Seattle's a small town for gossip—and I wanted to check on you." Her eyes drifted past me to where Nikolai now stood in the hallway. Her expression changed instantly, color draining from her face.
"You," she whispered, staring at Nikolai as if seeing a monster. "It was you."
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