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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 2

I woke before dawn, my decision crystallized in the darkness. The pink lines on that test had changed everything. Not just my body—my entire future.

Moving silently through our duplex, I gathered only what I couldn't leave behind. Clothes. The small lockbox containing my meager savings. The worn photo of my parents I'd rescued from foster care files.

My hands trembled as I packed a pair of tiny booties I'd impulsively purchased last month, before I even knew. They were impossibly small, pale yellow with white trim. A foolish purchase for a future that would never exist—not with Lucas, not now.

In the kitchen, I started a note. 'Lucas—' The pen hovered over paper, words failing me. What could I possibly say? That I'd overheard him calling me a distraction? That I'd discovered his ongoing relationship with the woman who had orchestrated my destruction? That I was carrying his child but couldn't bear to let another Blackwell into my life?

I crumpled the paper, then tore it into tiny pieces, scattering them in the trash beneath coffee grounds. No note. No explanations. No goodbyes. Clean breaks healed faster—I'd learned that lesson in foster care.

The taxi arrived at 5:43 AM. The driver, a middle-aged man with kind eyes, asked no questions when I requested the Greyhound station. The streets of Philadelphia blurred outside my window, the city still wrapped in pre-dawn shadows.

'Where to?' the ticket agent asked, fingers poised over her keyboard.

I hesitated. Not Boston—too many connections to my past. Not New York—too expensive for a single mother with limited funds.

'Cincinnati,' I said, the name chosen almost at random. Midwest. Affordable. Far enough away.

Sitting on that bus, watching Philadelphia shrink in the distance, I placed my hand over my still-flat stomach. 'It's just us now,' I whispered. 'We'll be okay.'

---

The Cincinnati budget motel smelled of industrial cleaner and stale cigarettes, but it was clean enough and, more importantly, asked no questions when I paid cash for a week's stay under the name Quinn Evans.

In the bathroom's harsh fluorescent light, I stared at my reflection. Evelyn Foster looked back at me—the woman Lucas had 'saved,' the woman James had betrayed, the woman Olivia had nearly destroyed.

She couldn't exist anymore.

From my bag, I removed the box of hair dye I'd purchased at a drugstore near the bus station. 'Midnight Espresso,' the package promised. Darker. Different. Unrecognizable.

As the dye set, I practiced speaking with a slight Southern accent—nothing too dramatic, just enough to alter my speech pattern. 'Hello, I'm Quinn Evans,' I repeated to the mirror, watching a stranger's lips form the words.

On the bathroom counter lay the shredded remains of Evelyn Foster's driver's license and social security card. Quinn Evans was born from those fragments, emerging fully formed like a phoenix from ashes.

---

'Your portfolio shows promise,' David Chen said, studying the samples I'd hastily assembled. His office was small but neat, with framed architectural prints on the walls. 'But you have limited professional experience.'

'I'm a quick learner,' I replied, maintaining eye contact despite my racing heart. The interview at Chen Design Associates had been a long shot—a small firm I'd found through a local paper.

David tilted his head, studying me with intelligent eyes that seemed to see more than I wanted to reveal. 'Why Cincinnati, Ms. Evans?'

I delivered the practiced line: 'A fresh start. Sometimes that's what we all need.'

Something in his expression shifted—recognition, perhaps, of a fellow traveler who understood life's unexpected detours.

'We need an administrative assistant,' he said finally. 'The pay isn't much, but there's room to grow if you prove yourself.'

Relief flooded through me. A job. A foothold. The first step toward building a life for my child—a life free from the Blackwells and their toxic legacy.

'When can you start?' David asked.

I thought of the motel room with its peeling wallpaper, of the dwindling cash in my lockbox, of the tiny life growing inside me who would need so much more than I currently had to offer.

'Tomorrow,' I said firmly. 'I can start tomorrow.'

As I left the office, stepping into Cincinnati's unfamiliar streets, I felt something I hadn't experienced in years—the tentative, fragile beginnings of hope.

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