
Hiding My Son from My Billionaire Ex-Husband
Chapter 5
The silence stretched like a taut wire, ready to snap. Julian's declaration hung in the air between us, his words echoing off the crystal chandelier and polished marble floors. I could feel every eye in the room boring into me, waiting for my reaction, waiting to see how the discarded wife would handle her public execution.
Sophia stepped forward then, her red heels clicking against the floor with predatory precision. She reached into her designer clutch and withdrew a thick stack of papers, sliding them across the mahogany table toward me with a smile that could have cut glass.
"I took the liberty of having the divorce papers prepared," she said sweetly, producing an expensive Mont Blanc pen from her purse. "All you need to do is sign, Isabella. Make this easy for everyone."
The papers landed in front of me with a soft whisper, the legal documents that would officially end my marriage laid out like a death certificate. I stared down at the typed words—"Petition for Dissolution of Marriage"—and felt something crack inside my chest.
Julian watched me with those cold gray eyes, his arm still wrapped around Sophia's waist. There was no emotion in his face, no regret or hesitation. Just the clinical detachment of a businessman closing an unprofitable deal.
"Sign them, Isabella," my father commanded from across the room, his voice sharp with impatience. "Stop making a spectacle of yourself."
My hands trembled as I picked up the pen. The weight of it felt enormous, like holding the instrument of my own destruction. Around me, the dinner guests shifted uncomfortably, some averting their eyes while others leaned forward with barely concealed fascination at the drama unfolding before them.
I signed my name on the first page, then the second, my signature growing shakier with each stroke. When I reached the final page, I set the pen down and looked up at the check my father had placed beside the papers—twenty million dollars, the price they'd put on my silence and compliance.
Standing slowly, I pushed the check back across the table, my voice steady despite the earthquake happening inside me. "I won't be bought like a commodity."
My father's face darkened. "Isabella—"
"No." The word came out stronger than I felt. "You can have your divorce, Julian. You can have your perfect blonde princess. But I won't take your money. I won't pretend this was anything other than what it was—a complete betrayal by the people who were supposed to love me."
I turned to walk away, to preserve what little dignity I had left, when I felt a gentle touch on my arm. Eleanor stood beside me, her weathered face etched with sympathy and something else—determination.
"Mrs. Sinclair," she whispered, pressing something small and hard into my palm. "He doesn't deserve your silence."
I looked down to see a USB drive, black and innocuous, but Eleanor's meaningful glance toward the entertainment system built into the dining room wall told me everything I needed to know.
For three years, I'd been the perfect wife. I'd smiled through humiliations, ignored obvious affairs, and pretended not to see the evidence of Julian's betrayal scattered throughout our home. I'd protected his reputation, his family's standing, his precious business deals.
But as I looked around the room at the faces of people who'd just watched my public destruction without lifting a finger to help me, I felt that cold hardness in my chest crystallize into something sharp and unforgiving.
If Julian wanted to humiliate me in front of everyone who mattered, then perhaps it was time they all saw exactly who they'd been protecting.
I walked to the entertainment console, my emerald gown rustling with each step. The USB drive slid into the port with a soft click, and the large screen mounted on the wall flickered to life.
"Since we're sharing truths tonight," I said, my voice carrying clearly through the room, "I think everyone should see the whole picture."
The first image appeared on the screen—Julian and Sophia in our bedroom, her red dress pooled on the floor beside our marriage bed. The timestamp showed last Tuesday, when Julian had told me he was working late at the office.
Gasps echoed through the room. Mrs. Pemberton's champagne flute slipped from her fingers, shattering against the marble floor. Several guests fumbled for their phones, either to record the scandal or to flee from it.
But I wasn't finished.
The video continued, showing Julian and Sophia in the library, in his study, in the guest room where I'd sometimes retreated when the loneliness became too much. Room after room of my home, violated by their affair, all captured by the security cameras Julian had installed to protect his precious belongings.
"Three years," I said, my voice cutting through the chaos. "Three years of this, in my home, in my bed, while I tried to be the perfect wife."
Julian's face had gone white, his jaw clenched so tight I could see the muscle jumping beneath his skin. Sophia looked like she might be sick, her perfect composure finally cracking.
"Turn it off," Julian commanded, but I was already moving toward the grand staircase that overlooked the dining room.
I climbed several steps, my hand gripping the polished banister, until I stood above them all like a queen addressing her court. The emerald gown caught the light, making me feel powerful for the first time in years.
"There's one more truth you all need to know," I announced, my voice echoing off the vaulted ceiling. My hand moved protectively to my stomach, to the secret I'd carried alone for days. "I'm pregnant."
The silence that followed was absolute. Even the grandfather clock in the corner seemed to hold its breath.
"This child will be the only Sinclair heir," I continued, my eyes finding Julian's shocked face in the crowd below. "But you'll never see him. I won't let my baby grow up in this poisonous family, surrounded by people who trade love like stocks and bonds."
Julian's composure finally shattered completely. "You can't take my child!" he roared, lunging toward the staircase with fury blazing in his eyes.
I stepped backward, my hand still protective over my belly, as he started up the stairs toward me. Behind him, the chaos of the dinner party erupted—guests shouting, Sophia crying, my father demanding explanations.
But all I could see was Julian's face, twisted with rage and desperation, as he reached for something he'd already thrown away.
"Watch me," I whispered, taking another step back.
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