
From Fiancée to Avenger
Chapter 3
The hospital room felt smaller each day, walls closing in like a trap. Three days since I'd lost my baby. Three days of lying in this sterile prison while my world collapsed outside these walls. The pain medication dulled the physical agony but did nothing for the hollow ache in my chest where my child should have been growing.
A soft knock interrupted my thoughts. The door creaked open, revealing Naomi's delicate frame. She stood hesitantly in the doorway, clutching two coffee cups and wearing an expression of perfect contrition.
"May I come in?" Her voice was gentle, eyes downcast. "I brought you coffee. I thought... I thought we should talk."
Every instinct screamed danger, but what could she possibly do to me here? What more could she take?
"Fine," I said, my voice hoarse from disuse.
She placed one coffee cup on my bedside table and perched on the visitor's chair, her movements careful and measured. "I'm so sorry about the baby, Serena. I never meant for any of this to happen."
I said nothing, watching her performance with detached fascination. The trembling lip. The glistening eyes. The perfectly timed catch in her voice.
"I know you probably hate me," she continued, "but I hope someday you'll understand that it really was an accident. I would never intentionally hurt—"
"Stop." The word came out sharper than I intended. "Just stop."
Naomi blinked, her mask slipping for just a second before she recovered. "I understand you're upset, but—"
"No, you don't understand anything about me."
Something shifted in her eyes then—a coldness seeping through the cracks of her performance. She glanced toward the door, then back at me. When she spoke again, her voice had lost its tremulous quality.
"You're right. I don't understand you." She leaned closer. "I don't understand how someone as pathetic as you managed to hold Dallas's attention for so long. But that's over now."
The transformation was chilling—from wounded innocent to predator in seconds. She stood, picking up the coffee cup she'd brought for me.
"You know what's funny, Serena? Dallas never believed you. Not once." Her smile was razor-sharp. "He's been helping me gather evidence of your 'mental breakdown' for weeks. Those emotional outbursts in meetings? All on video. Those 'paranoid' texts you sent him? Saved and shared with HR."
She moved closer, coffee cup tilted dangerously. "You've lost. Your career. Your fiancé. Your baby. And now, I'm going to take everything else."
The movement was so quick I barely registered it—her hand jerking forward, hot coffee splashing across my arm. The pain was immediate and searing. I gasped, trying to reach for the call button, but she was faster.
"Oh no, an accident!" she exclaimed, her voice back to its sugary pitch. Then she reached for the hand sanitizer dispenser on the wall, pumping a generous amount directly onto my burned skin.
The pain exploded like fire. I screamed, the sound tearing from my throat as the alcohol in the sanitizer penetrated the fresh burn.
"No one will believe you," she whispered, leaning close while I writhed in agony. "Dallas is already convincing his parents you're unstable. By the time I'm done, you'll have nothing and no one."
Nurses rushed in, responding to my scream. Naomi had already stepped back, her face a portrait of horrified concern.
"I don't know what happened!" she cried. "She just started screaming when I tried to help her with the spilled coffee!"
Through tears of pain, I saw the nurses exchange glances. One of them muttered something about "calling psych" while another tended to my burn.
Hours later, Dallas arrived with his parents. I expected concern, comfort—some shred of the love we'd once shared. Instead, his eyes were cold, evaluating me like a problem to be solved.
"Serena," Mrs. Gray began, her voice gentle but distant, "we're very concerned about you. Dallas has shown us some... troubling behavior patterns."
"She attacked Naomi," Dallas said flatly. "The hospital staff confirmed it."
"I didn't—she burned me deliberately!" The words sounded hysterical even to my own ears.
Mr. Gray cleared his throat. "Given your recent... emotional state, we think it might be best to postpone the wedding. For everyone's well-being."
I looked from face to face, searching for any sign of doubt, any crack in their united front against me. There was none. In that moment, I realized Naomi had been right—I had lost everything. But as Dallas's parents continued their rehearsed speech about "getting help" and "taking time," something hardened inside me.
I would not remain their victim forever.
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