
He Killed Me Once, But I Was Reborn
Chapter 2
"What—" The word came out as a strangled whisper. I tried again, louder. "What the hell is going on here?"
Ambrose straightened his tie with practiced nonchalance, his face already shifting into that cold, dismissive expression I'd been seeing more often lately. "Anatole. What are you doing here?"
"I brought you lunch," I said stupidly, gesturing at the spilled container on the floor, truffle risotto seeping across Italian marble. "I wanted to surprise you."
Mireille smoothed her pencil skirt and stepped away from the desk, but I caught the flash of something in her eyes—triumph? Amusement? Her lips curved in the barest hint of a smirk before she arranged her features into a mask of professional concern.
"Mrs. Sterling," she said in that honey-sweet voice that had always grated on my nerves, "I was just helping Mr. Sterling with some... tension. He's been working so hard lately."
Tension. The word hit me like a slap.
"Tension," I repeated, my voice rising. "That's what you call it?"
Ambrose's jaw tightened. "Don't be ridiculous, Anatole. You're making a scene over nothing."
"Nothing?" I stared at him in disbelief. "I walked in on you about to kiss your assistant and you call it nothing?"
"You walked in on me relaxing during my lunch break," he said coldly, each word precisely enunciated. "Mireille was simply helping me work out some knots in my shoulders. If your mind immediately jumps to something sordid, perhaps you should examine your own paranoia."
The casual cruelty of his words knocked the breath from my lungs. Paranoia. As if my eyes had deceived me, as if the intimate scene I'd witnessed was a figment of my imagination.
Mireille nodded sympathetically. "I understand how it might have looked, Mrs. Sterling. But truly, it was completely innocent. Mr. Sterling has been under such tremendous pressure with the merger."
Her voice dripped with false sincerity, and I wanted to scream. Instead, I found myself backing toward the door, my perfect world crumbling around me like a house of cards.
"I... I should go," I managed, my voice barely audible.
"Yes," Ambrose said, already turning back to his desk. "You should. And next time, knock."
The dismissal was final, absolute. I bent to gather the scattered remains of the lunch I'd so lovingly prepared, my hands shaking as I scraped risotto off the marble. Neither of them moved to help me.
As I straightened, I caught Mireille watching me with those pale blue eyes, and for just a moment, her mask slipped. The look she gave me was pure, undiluted hatred—the look of a predator who'd been interrupted while stalking her prey.
Then she smiled, sweet as poison honey.
"Drive safely, Mrs. Sterling," she called as I fled.
The elevator ride down felt endless. Fifty floors of falling, my reflection multiplying into infinity in the polished steel. I looked the same—every hair still in place, makeup still flawless—but something fundamental had shifted. The woman who'd entered this building was gone, replaced by someone I didn't recognize.
The Manhattan streets blurred past the window of my Bentley as my driver navigated the afternoon traffic. I pressed my face against the cool glass, fighting back tears that threatened to ruin my carefully applied mascara.
Our penthouse loomed before me like a mausoleum of shattered dreams. The doorman tipped his hat with practiced deference, and I smiled automatically, the perfect society wife returning from an afternoon errand.
Inside, the silence was deafening. Twenty-four hundred square feet of marble and crystal and imported silk, all of it suddenly feeling like a beautiful cage.
I sank onto the Italian leather sofa in our living room, staring at the family photos that lined the mantelpiece. Ambrose and me at our wedding, radiant with hope. At charity galas, his arm around my waist. On vacation in the Hamptons, laughing at some shared joke I could no longer remember.
When had it all become performance? When had I become so blind?
The doorbell chimed, its melodic notes echoing through the apartment. I didn't move, couldn't move, until I heard Maria, our housekeeper, opening the door.
"Mrs. Sterling?" Mia, our doctor's familiar voice carried from the foyer. "I have your test results."
I forced myself to stand, to smooth my hair, to arrange my features into something resembling composure. Mia had been our family doctor for three years, discrete and professional, the kind of physician Manhattan's elite trusted with their secrets.
"Come in," I called, my voice steadier than I felt.
Mia entered the living room carrying her medical bag, her expression bright with barely contained excitement. She was petite and efficient, her dark hair pulled back in a neat bun, wearing the same conservative navy suit she favored for house calls.
"Anatole," she said, setting down her bag and pulling out a manila folder. "I have wonderful news."
Something in her tone made me sink back onto the sofa, my hands clasping together in my lap.
"The blood work came back," she continued, her smile widening. "Congratulations. You're pregnant."
Pregnant. After three years of trying, of hoping, of monthly disappointments that had carved hollow spaces in my heart. I was finally pregnant…
It would be such a joy if I didn’t find my husband cheating an hour ago.
"How far along?" I whispered.
"About six weeks," Mia said, consulting her notes. "Everything looks perfect. Strong HCG levels, no complications. The Sterling family's third-generation heir is on the way."
A sob escaped me—part joy, part devastation. Six weeks. Which meant the baby had been conceived during that weekend in the Hamptons, when Ambrose had been tender and attentive, when I'd thought we were finding our way back to each other.
Before Mireille had sunk her claws so deep.
"This is exactly what you and Ambrose have been hoping for," Mia continued, her professional warmth faltering as she noticed my tears. "Anatole? Are you alright?"
I pressed my hands to my still-flat stomach, where our child was growing, unaware of the chaos surrounding its existence. This baby—this miracle I'd prayed for—was supposed to be the answer to everything. The missing piece that would make us whole again.
Instead, it felt like the cruelest joke of all.
"I'm fine," I lied, wiping away tears with the back of my hand. "Just overwhelmed. Happy tears."
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