
From Betrayal to Baby
Chapter 3
The coffee shop on Pine Street was nearly empty at three in the afternoon, just a few students hunched over laptops and the steady hum of the espresso machine. I sat in the corner booth, my hands wrapped around a lukewarm cup of tea, waiting for someone I hadn't seen since my mother's funeral six months ago.
Dr. Elizabeth Chen appeared in the doorway, her usually composed demeanor replaced by nervous energy. She scanned the room before spotting me, her medical bag clutched tightly in her hand as she approached.
"Sage," she said, sliding into the seat across from me. "Thank you for coming."
I studied her face, noting the dark circles under her eyes and the way her fingers trembled slightly as she set down her bag. "You said it was about my mother. What couldn't you tell me over the phone?"
Dr. Chen glanced around the coffee shop once more before opening her bag and withdrawing a manila folder. "I've been carrying this guilt for months. What happened that night... it wasn't natural causes, Sage. Not entirely."
My chest tightened. "What do you mean?"
"Your mother's heart attack was severe, yes, but she could have survived if we'd acted immediately." Her voice dropped to barely above a whisper. "I had the emergency cardiac team ready, the defibrillator charged, everything prepared for resuscitation."
"But you did act," I said, confusion clouding my thoughts. "You tried everything."
"No." The word fell between us like a stone. "Cassian arrived just as we were about to begin the procedure. He demanded that I and my entire team leave your mother to attend to Rosalie Lane's 'emergency' in the next room."
The coffee shop seemed to tilt around me. "What emergency?"
Dr. Chen opened the folder, revealing medical charts and photographs. "A superficial cut on her palm from a broken champagne glass. Required three stitches at most." She pointed to a timestamp on the records. "We spent forty-seven minutes treating what amounted to a paper cut while your mother lay dying."
I stared at the documents, the clinical notes blurring as tears filled my eyes. "Why didn't you refuse?"
"Crawford Enterprises funds half our hospital's cardiac wing," she said, her voice heavy with shame. "Cassian made it clear that our funding would disappear if we didn't prioritize his... companion."
The word 'companion' hit me like a slap. Even then, even during my mother's final moments, Cassian had chosen Rosalie over me. Over my dying mother.
"By the time we returned to your mother," Dr. Chen continued, "it was too late. The window for successful resuscitation had closed."
I pressed my palm to my mouth, fighting back a sob. My mother had died alone, abandoned by the medical team that could have saved her, all so Cassian could play hero to his mistress.
"I'm so sorry, Sage," Dr. Chen whispered. "I should have fought harder. Should have refused."
I took the folder with shaking hands, my mother's medical records now evidence of Cassian's ultimate betrayal. "Thank you for telling me."
* * *
The modest one-bedroom apartment I'd rented above the bookstore was a far cry from the Crawford mansion, but it was mine. No ghosts of broken promises haunted these walls, no memories of love turned cold lingered in the corners.
I'd been working at Pages & Poetry for two weeks, finding comfort in the quiet routine of shelving books and helping customers discover new stories. The elderly owner, Mrs. Henderson, asked no questions about my past and paid me enough to cover rent and groceries.
I was arranging a display of new releases when the bell above the door chimed. I looked up to see Rosalie and Aurelia Lane sweep in, their designer heels clicking against the worn wooden floors like the approach of predators.
"Well, well," Rosalie purred, her red lips curved in a familiar cruel smile. "Look what we found."
My hands stilled on the books. "The store is closing soon."
"Oh, we're not here to buy anything," Aurelia said, hefting a large paint bucket I hadn't noticed before. "We're here to deliver a message."
Other customers began to notice the tension, their quiet browsing interrupted by the sisters' theatrical entrance. Mrs. Henderson emerged from behind the counter, concern creasing her weathered face.
"You stole our rightful place," Rosalie announced loudly enough for everyone to hear. "Cassian was never meant to be with someone like you."
Before I could respond, Aurelia lifted the bucket and dumped its contents over my head. Cold, viscous paint cascaded down my hair and clothes—bright pink that reeked of chemicals and humiliation.
Gasps echoed through the store as I stood there, dripping and stunned. The paint burned my eyes and clung to my skin like shame made tangible.
"That's what thieves get," Rosalie said, her voice carrying to every corner of the store. "Maybe next time you'll remember your place."
They turned to leave, their laughter ringing out as I stood frozen, paint pooling at my feet. The other customers stared, some with pity, others with the uncomfortable fascination of witnessing someone else's complete degradation.
That's when I heard footsteps approaching—measured, confident steps that somehow cut through my humiliation. A gentle hand touched my shoulder, and a familiar voice spoke my name with such tenderness that it nearly broke me all over again.
"Sage."
I looked up through paint-stained lashes to see Cairo Harper, his dark eyes filled with fury and compassion in equal measure. He was exactly as I remembered from our childhood, only taller now, broader, with the quiet strength that had always made me feel safe.
"Let's get you cleaned up," he said softly, already guiding me toward the store's small bathroom, his presence a shield against the stares and whispers that followed in our wake.
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