
He Tore My Heart Apart
Chapter 3
After leaving the hospital, I'd gone straight to the grocery store, filling my cart with ingredients for a perfect dinner. I'd spent the afternoon cooking, cleaning, and preparing.
I smoothed down the front of my dress and checked my reflection in the polished surface of our refrigerator. The dark circles under my eyes were still visible despite my careful makeup application. I looked tired, fragile. But there was something else there too—a glimmer of hope that hadn't been present for weeks.
"Alice?" Jaxon's voice carried from the foyer, tinged with surprise. He appeared in the doorway, his tailored suit impeccable as always, his expression wary. "What's all this?"
"I thought we should talk," I said, my voice steadier than I felt. "I made dinner."
He glanced at his watch. "I have calls to make before tomorrow's committee meeting."
"Please," I said softly. "It's important."
Something in my tone must have reached him because he sighed and loosened his tie. "Fine. Twenty minutes."
I poured wine for him, water for myself—a detail he didn't notice as he sat down and immediately checked his phone. I served the food with shaking hands, rehearsing the words I'd practiced all afternoon.
"You're not eating?" he asked, noticing I'd barely touched my plate.
This was my opening. I took a deep breath.
"Jaxon, I found out something today." My voice quavered. "I'm pregnant."
The words hung in the air between us. I watched his face, searching for any flicker of joy, any softening of his features. For a moment, there was nothing—just blank surprise as he processed my words.
Then his expression hardened, eyes turning cold and calculating.
"How far along?" he asked, his voice flat.
"Six weeks," I whispered, the hope in my chest beginning to crack. "Jaxon, we're going to have a baby."
He set down his fork with deliberate care. "No, we're not."
The words hit me like physical blows. "What?"
"You need to handle this situation, Alice." His voice was clinical, detached. "I'm eight months away from announcing my candidacy for state senate. This is the worst possible timing."
"Handle the situation?" I repeated, tears welling in my eyes. "This is our child, Jaxon. Our baby."
"It's a political liability," he countered, his jaw tight. "The campaign requires my full attention, and yours as the supportive wife. A pregnancy, a newborn—it would derail everything we've worked for."
"Everything you've worked for," I corrected, my voice breaking. "What about what I want? I want this baby, Jaxon. I want a family."
His laugh was cold. "Don't be naive. A child doesn't fit into our lives right now."
The doorbell rang, cutting through our conversation like a knife. Jaxon's expression shifted from annoyance to something darker.
"That's probably Olivia," he said, standing. "I asked her to stop by to discuss the charity gala next month."
My stomach twisted. "You invited her here? Tonight?"
He didn't answer, already moving toward the door. I sat frozen, one hand protectively covering my abdomen, as voices drifted from the foyer. Then Olivia swept into the dining room, her perfume overpowering the food I'd spent hours preparing.
"Alice!" Her smile was predatory. "How... domestic. Playing house tonight, are we?"
Jaxon returned to his seat, not bothering to explain the candles or the intimate setting to Olivia. Instead, he said bluntly, "Alice is pregnant."
Olivia's eyes widened, then narrowed as they fixed on me. "Oh, Alice. Was this your little plan? Trap Jaxon with a baby when you realized you weren't enough for him?"
"That's not—" I began, but she cut me off.
"Honey, a baby won't save your marriage." Her voice dripped with false sympathy. "And frankly, do you really think you're stable enough to be a mother? The way you've been acting lately—working yourself to exhaustion, barely eating?"
Jaxon nodded. "She nearly collapsed at the hospital today."
The betrayal of him sharing this with her stung fresh. "How did you—"
"Dr. Chen called my office," he said dismissively. "See? You can't even take care of yourself. Olivia's right."
"The poor child," Olivia murmured, placing her hand on Jaxon's arm. "Better not to be born than to have a mother who's falling apart."
I stared at them, these two people who had once been the closest to me, now united in their cruelty. Tears streamed down my face.
"Please," I whispered, looking directly at Jaxon. "Please don't ask me to do this."
"I'm not asking," he said coldly. "I'm telling you what needs to happen. I'll make an appointment at a private clinic. Discrete, expensive—no one will ever know."
"I'll know," I said, my voice breaking. "This is our child, Jaxon."
"No," he replied, standing abruptly. "It's a complication we don't need."
The next hours passed in a blur of tears and pleading. I followed Jaxon from room to room in our apartment, trying every argument I could think of. A family would humanize him to voters. Children photographed well for campaigns. We could time the announcement to coincide with his family values platform.
Olivia remained, watching my desperation with thinly veiled satisfaction, occasionally offering her own cutting remarks about my fitness as a mother.
Near midnight, Jaxon finally turned to me, his patience visibly exhausted.
"Enough, Alice. This discussion is over. Either you terminate this pregnancy, or our marriage is over. It's that simple."
I stared at him, finally seeing with perfect clarity the man I had married. Not the charismatic politician who had swept me off my feet, but a cold, calculating stranger who viewed even his own child as nothing more than an inconvenience.
"You don't mean that," I whispered, one final, desperate attempt.
"Try me," he replied, his eyes unflinching. "The appointment is tomorrow at 10 AM. I've already called in a favor with Dr. Levinson. You'll sign the consent forms, or you'll find your belongings packed when you return home."
As I collapsed onto our sofa, my tears finally spent, I felt the tiny spark of hope I'd been nurturing extinguish completely. In its place grew something new—a cold, hard seed of hatred for the man who stood before me, demanding I sacrifice our child for his ambition.
What terrified me most wasn't his ultimatum. It was the realization that, with nowhere to go and my career hanging by the thread of his political connections, I might actually have to comply.
You may also like





