
He Killed Me Once, But I Was Reborn
Chapter 4
The silence that followed Mireille's announcement stretched like a taut wire, ready to snap. I watched Ambrose's face transform, his features shifting from surprise to something far darker—disgust.
"Pregnant?" The word fell from his lips like a curse. His eyes, those green eyes I'd once thought held all the warmth in the world, turned cold as winter stone. "Now? Of all the goddamn times?"
I took a step toward him, my hand instinctively moving to my stomach. "Ambrose, I know it's unexpected, but—"
"Unexpected?" He laughed, a harsh sound that made me flinch. "It's completely inappropriate, Anatole. Inconvenient timing doesn't even begin to cover it."
The words hit me like physical blows. This wasn't how it was supposed to happen. In my dreams, he'd swept me into his arms, kissed me with joy, whispered sweet promises about our future. Instead, he was looking at me like I'd committed some unforgivable sin.
"A child would only complicate everything," he continued, running his hands through his dark hair. "The merger, the business expansion, the foundation gala—do you have any idea what kind of pressure I'm under right now?"
"But this is our baby," I whispered, my voice breaking. "The child we've been trying for."
Mireille shifted on the sofa, and I caught the gleam of satisfaction in her pale eyes. She was enjoying this, feeding off my humiliation like a parasite.
"That was before," Ambrose said flatly. "Before I realized what a mistake this marriage has been."
The room tilted around me. "What?"
"I want a divorce, Anatole." The words came out crisp and businesslike, as if he were discussing quarterly reports. "I've been unhappy for months. Hell, probably years. I just didn't want to admit it."
I gripped the back of a chair to keep from falling. "You don't mean that. You can't—"
"I do mean it." He straightened his tie, that gesture I'd once found endearing now seeming like armor against me. "Mireille has shown me what a real partnership looks like. What it means to have someone who actually understands the demands of my position."
Mireille's smile was radiant, victorious. She rose from the sofa with feline grace, moving to stand beside Ambrose. Not touching him, but close enough that her presence felt like a claim.
"I'm sorry you had to find out this way, Mrs. Sterling," she said, her voice dripping with false sympathy. "But perhaps it's better to be honest about these things."
Honest. The word was a mockery coming from her lips.
"Three years," I choked out, staring at my husband—my soon-to-be ex-husband. "Three years of marriage, and this is how you tell me it's over? In front of her?"
"Don't be dramatic," Ambrose said coldly. "You'll be well provided for. The prenup is generous, and I'm not unreasonable. You can keep the jewelry, some of the art. You'll land on your feet."
Land on my feet. As if I were some kind of performing animal he was discarding.
The tears came then, hot and unstoppable. All the careful composure I'd maintained, all the grace and poise that had made me the perfect society wife, crumbled like a sandcastle in the tide.
"I need... I can't..." The words wouldn't come. The room was spinning, the candlelit dinner I'd prepared mocking me from the next room, the pregnancy report that should have been joyful news now feeling like evidence of my own foolishness.
I turned and ran.
My heels clicked against the marble floor as I fled toward the grand spiral staircase that curved up to the second floor of our penthouse. Behind me, I could hear Ambrose's voice, calm and unaffected.
"She'll get over it. Women always do."
The staircase stretched above me like a twisted spine, its wrought-iron railings gleaming in the soft light. I gripped the banister and began to climb, my breath coming in ragged sobs. I needed to get away, needed to think, needed to process what had just happened.
Our bedroom was at the top of the stairs. Our bed, where we'd made love just weeks ago. Where this baby had been conceived. Where I'd dreamed of telling him about our child in whispered, intimate moments.
"Mrs. Sterling?"
I turned to see Mireille following me, her expression arranged in lines of concern. She moved with careful steps, her hand trailing along the marble banister.
"Please, let me help," she said softly. "I know this is difficult, but you don't have to face it alone."
I stared at her through my tears, this woman who had destroyed my marriage, who was now offering comfort with the same hands that had caressed my husband.
"Stay away from me," I whispered.
But she kept climbing, kept approaching with that false sympathy painted on her perfect features.
"I understand you're upset," she continued, her voice gentle as silk. "But surely you can see that this is for the best? Ambrose deserves to be happy."
"Happy?" I laughed bitterly. "With you?"
"Yes," she said simply. "With me."
I reached the top of the staircase and turned to face her, my back to the upper hallway. The chandelier cast fractured light across her face, making her look like some beautiful, terrible angel.
"You planned this," I said, the realization hitting me like a physical blow. "The lunch, the medical report—you knew exactly where to find it."
Her smile widened, and for a moment, the mask slipped completely. What I saw underneath was pure, concentrated malice.
"Of course I did," she said. "Did you really think someone like you could hold onto someone like him forever? You're nothing but a pretty ornament, Anatole. And ornaments can be replaced."
The words hit me like a slap, but before I could respond, before I could even process what was happening, I felt her hands—both of them—slam into my chest with surprising force.
The world tilted.
I was falling.
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