
Divorce Over Secret Son
Chapter 2
"Get away from my son!"
My son.
The words hung in the air between us, each syllable a knife twisting deeper into my chest. I stared at James, then at the gasping child—the son who was supposed to be dead—as the ground beneath me seemed to vanish entirely.
Around us, the few parents and attendants in the children's room fell silent, their shocked gasps barely registering in my consciousness. The world had narrowed to just the three of us: me, my husband, and the living proof of his betrayal.
"What did you do to him?" James's voice sliced through the silence, razor-sharp with accusation. His eyes, once warm when they looked at me, now blazed with something I'd never seen directed at me before—hatred. "Why did you scare him?"
"I—I didn't," I stammered, my surgeon's composure deserting me completely. "He spilled water, fell... I only tried to help him."
My words evaporated into the tension-thick air. James wasn't listening. He was focused entirely on the boy, administering puffs from the inhaler with the practiced movements of someone who had done this countless times before. Each motion was a new revelation, another piece of evidence of the double life he'd been living while I carried his child and believed in our healing marriage.
"It's okay, Lucas," he murmured, his voice gentle in a way that made my stomach turn. "Breathe slowly. That's it."
Lucas. Even his name was a knife twist. The son who supposedly died at birth had a name, a face that echoed James's features, and asthma—just like our Emma.
The click of heels against the hardwood floor drew my attention to the doorway. Victoria Hamilton stood there, her elegant figure draped in a crimson gown that seemed to flow like blood down her body. Her eyes found mine immediately, and the smile that curved her perfect lips sent ice through my veins.
It wasn't just a smile. It was triumph. Victory. The look of a predator who had finally cornered her prey.
"James," she purred, gliding into the room and placing a possessive hand on Lucas's shoulder. "What happened?"
"She happened," James spat, jerking his head toward me without looking up. "She scared him somehow."
Victoria's eyes gleamed with malicious satisfaction as she turned to me. "Dr. Morgan," she said, my professional title dripping with contempt. "How... unfortunate to meet under these circumstances."
I forced myself to stand straighter, though my body felt like it might collapse in on itself at any moment. The baby—our second child—seemed to flutter inside me, a cruel reminder of everything I thought we were building together.
"The boy scraped his knee when he fell," I said, my voice clinical, detached, as though I were discussing a patient chart rather than the child my husband had hidden from me for years. "He was startled, which likely triggered his asthma attack. I was only trying to help."
"Help?" James finally looked up at me, his face contorted with fury and fear. "You've done enough. Just stay away from him!"
The venom in his voice struck me physically, like a slap. In that moment, as he cradled Victoria's son—his son—I saw with perfect clarity where his loyalties truly lay. Not with me. Not with Emma. Not with our unborn child. But with this secret family he'd maintained while lying to my face every single day.
"James," I whispered, one hand instinctively moving to my belly, "you told me he died."
Something flickered across his face—guilt, perhaps, or simply irritation at being confronted with his lie. But it vanished as quickly as it had appeared, replaced by cold dismissal.
"Not now, Catherine," he said, turning back to Lucas. "Can't you see he needs me?"
Victoria's smile widened, her arm sliding around James's shoulders as she leaned in to check on her son. Our eyes met over James's bent head, and in that single, electric moment of connection, I understood with bone-deep certainty that none of this was accidental.
She had orchestrated this. Somehow, she had engineered this moment of revelation, this public unmasking of James's betrayal.
And from the predatory gleam in her eyes, I knew with sickening clarity: this was only the beginning.
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