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I Fled His Betrayal With His Unborn Child Novel Cover

I Fled His Betrayal With His Unborn Child

The scent of garlic and tomatoes filled our tiny kitchen as I stirred the sauce, watching Lucas chop onions with methodical precision. After a nine-hour shift at the café, my feet ached, but there was something soothing about our evening ritual—cooking together in this cramped space we called home. "How was work?" Lucas asked, his voice gentle as always. Three years of living together, and he still asked every day. "The usual. Mrs. Henderson complained about her coffee being too hot, then too cold." I smiled, remembering the ornery old woman who secretly left generous tips. "How about your day?" Lucas shrugged, his broad shoulders rising beneath his faded t-shirt. "Meetings. Phone calls.
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Chapter 1

The scent of garlic and tomatoes filled our tiny kitchen as I stirred the sauce, watching Lucas chop onions with methodical precision. After a nine-hour shift at the café, my feet ached, but there was something soothing about our evening ritual—cooking together in this cramped space we called home.

"How was work?" Lucas asked, his voice gentle as always. Three years of living together, and he still asked every day.

"The usual. Mrs. Henderson complained about her coffee being too hot, then too cold." I smiled, remembering the ornery old woman who secretly left generous tips. "How about your day?"

Lucas shrugged, his broad shoulders rising beneath his faded t-shirt. "Meetings. Phone calls. Nothing interesting."

That was typical Lucas—minimizing his work with the charitable foundation he'd established away from his family's influence. He never brought the Blackwell name or fortune into our modest duplex on the outskirts of Philadelphia.

"Here, taste this," I offered, holding out a spoonful of sauce. As he leaned forward, our eyes met, and that familiar flutter returned to my stomach—the one I'd been trying to ignore for months.

When his fingers accidentally brushed mine, I dropped the spoon, splattering red sauce across the linoleum floor. The ceramic bowl slipped from my grasp next, shattering against the tile.

"I'm sorry," I blurted, immediately dropping to my knees. My hands trembled slightly as I gathered the broken pieces.

"Hey, it's just a bowl." Lucas knelt beside me, his larger hands covering mine, stilling their tremor. "Are you okay?"

I nodded, not trusting my voice. These moments of kindness still caught me off guard—even after three years. Before Lucas, kindness had always come with conditions, with expectations. James had taught me that lesson all too well.

Lucas's laughter broke through my thoughts. "Look at us," he said, gesturing to our sauce-splattered clothes. "What a disaster."

His laugh was infectious, and soon I was giggling too, the tension dissipating as we cleaned up the mess together. This was us—imperfect, sometimes broken, but somehow whole when we were together.

Later, after we'd salvaged enough sauce for dinner, we sat at our small table by the window, the lasagna steaming between us.

"I almost forgot to mention," Lucas said between bites, "there's a small charity event at the foundation next week. Nothing fancy—just a fundraiser for the children's hospital."

I nodded, fork paused halfway to my mouth. Lucas rarely mentioned events connected to his family, even indirectly.

"You don't have to come," he added quickly. "I know how you feel about crowds."

About the Blackwells, he meant. About the world that had nearly destroyed me.

"I'll think about it," I offered, watching his face light up with a smile that reached his eyes—those kind eyes that had been my anchor when I was drowning.

For the first time in years, I allowed myself to imagine a future—one where the shadows of my past didn't loom quite so large. One where Lucas and I could build something real, something lasting. The thought was terrifying and exhilarating all at once.

That night, I woke with a dry throat, the digital clock on my nightstand reading 2:17 AM. Slipping from beneath the covers, I padded down the hallway toward the kitchen, stopping when I heard Lucas's low voice from his study.

"She's just a distraction—keep me posted." His tone was clipped, dismissive—nothing like the warm voice I knew.

I froze, my bare feet suddenly cold against the hardwood floor. A distraction? Was that all I was to him?

"Marcus, I need to know everything Olivia's planning," Lucas continued, unaware of my presence. "Yes, I understand the risks."

Olivia. The name hit me like a physical blow. Olivia Blackwell—the architect of my humiliation, the woman who had orchestrated James's betrayal and my subsequent accident. The woman whose brother had supposedly saved me.

I retreated silently to my room, my heart hammering against my ribs. Sleep was impossible now, my mind racing with questions, with doubts. Had these three years been another elaborate deception? Was I simply a pawn in some game between Lucas and his sister?

Morning light found me hollow-eyed and resolute. While Lucas showered, I searched his desk—something I'd never done before. Behind a false drawer bottom, I found them: messages, photos, evidence of an ongoing relationship with Olivia. Their communications spanned our entire time together.

My hands shook as I replaced everything exactly as I'd found it. Then, almost mechanically, I went to the bathroom to splash cold water on my face. That's when I saw it—the small plastic stick I'd hidden in the drawer beneath the sink two days ago, its result window displaying two unmistakable pink lines.

Pregnant. With Lucas Blackwell's child.

I stared at my reflection, barely recognizing the pale, wide-eyed woman looking back at me. In that moment, I made a decision: I would never be anyone's distraction again.

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