
I Jumped Off the Bridge — and Woke Up as His Luna
I Jumped Off the Bridge — and Woke Up as His Luna Chapter 1
The watch box felt heavier than it should have as I climbed the stairs to our bedroom, my heart hammering with anticipation. Five years. Five years of marriage deserved something special, something that would make Derek's eyes light up the way they used to when we first met.
I'd spent weeks planning this surprise, sneaking out during lunch breaks to visit the jeweler, carefully selecting the inscription: "To my forever - D&H, June 15th." Our wedding date, etched in silver on the back of the vintage Omega he'd admired in that shop window months ago.
The bedroom door was ajar, and I could hear voices inside—Derek's low murmur and someone else. Someone familiar.
"Sign the papers, Harper. Sienna's carrying my real family now."
The words hit me like a physical blow. I stood frozen in the doorway, the gift box slipping from suddenly nerveless fingers and hitting the hardwood floor with a sharp crack.
Derek was sitting up in our bed—our bed—completely naked, not even bothering to cover himself. Beside him, equally undressed, was Sienna. My best friend since college. My maid of honor. The woman who'd helped me pick out the lingerie I'd planned to wear tonight.
She was wearing my silk robe, the one Derek had given me last Christmas. The pale blue fabric looked obscene against her flushed skin.
"Harper." Derek's voice was flat, businesslike, as if he were addressing a subordinate at his law firm. "Perfect timing. I was just explaining to Sienna how this is going to work."
My eyes found the papers scattered across the nightstand—divorce documents, already filled out, waiting only for my signature. Next to them sat a pregnancy test, the digital display showing a clear positive result. Three months, according to the small print.
Three months.
My legs felt like water. "Derek, what—"
"Don't make this harder than it needs to be." He gestured dismissively at the papers. "Everything's already divided fairly. The apartment stays with me, obviously—my name's on the mortgage. The BMW too. And your father's life insurance money will go toward setting up the nursery."
The insurance money. Dad's final gift to me after the cancer took him two years ago. The money I'd been saving for the house we'd talked about buying, the family we'd planned to start.
"You can't—that money is mine."
Derek's laugh was cold. "We're married, sweetheart. Community property. Besides, your dad's money should go toward building this family's future, don't you think?"
Sienna rose from the bed with fluid grace, completely comfortable in her nakedness, in my space. She padded over to my vanity—my vanity—and began applying my expensive face cream, the one I splurged on every few months.
"Don't blame me, Harper," she said, meeting my eyes in the mirror's reflection. "You couldn't keep him interested. A man like Derek needs... stimulation."
I watched, numb, as she opened my jewelry box and selected my grandmother's pearl earrings, the ones I'd worn on my wedding day. She put them on with casual ownership.
That's when I saw it—taped to the corner of the mirror, a black and white ultrasound image. The date stamp made my blood freeze: July 20th. The middle of our Hawaii trip. The romantic getaway Derek had planned to "reconnect" after a difficult year.
Except Derek had left three days early.
"Emergency at the firm," he'd said, kissing my forehead as he packed his suitcase. "You know how it is, babe. Duty calls."
I'd spent those three days alone on the beach, sending him pictures of sunsets, texting about how much I missed him. He'd responded with photos of himself at his desk, looking exhausted under the familiar glow of his office lamp.
But that lamp—I stared at it now, sitting on our nightstand. The same brass base, the same cream shade. He'd been here. In our bed. With her.
My phone was still in my hand, and with trembling fingers, I scrolled back through our text history from that week. There they were—his "working late" selfies, all timestamped during those three days I was alone in paradise. The background of each photo showed our bedroom, our sheets, our life.
While I was watching sunsets and missing my husband, he was creating a new family with my best friend.
"The timing works out perfectly," Derek was saying, pulling on his boxer shorts with casual efficiency. "Sienna's due in March. We can have the wedding in May, once everything's finalized."
Wedding. They were planning a wedding.
"I already have the dress picked out," Sienna added, now rifling through my jewelry box like it was a clearance bin. "Something simple, elegant. Beach ceremony, maybe. More intimate than that circus you put Derek through."
Our wedding had been beautiful. Small, yes, because we couldn't afford more, but filled with love and hope and promises that apparently meant nothing.
I walked to the nightstand on unsteady legs. The pen felt foreign in my hand, too heavy and too light at the same time. The divorce papers swam before my eyes—legal jargon that translated to the dissolution of everything I'd thought was real.
"That's my girl," Derek said as I signed my name. His voice held the same patronizing warmth he used with difficult clients. "I knew you'd be reasonable about this."
Reasonable. As if five years of marriage, of building a life together, of loving him with everything I had, was something to be reasonable about.
I set the pen down and walked toward the door, my bare feet silent on the hardwood.
"Harper." Derek's voice stopped me at the threshold. "Don't forget—I need your personal things out by this weekend. Sienna's going to need the closet space, and we want to start fresh."
Start fresh. In the home I'd helped create, with the furniture I'd helped choose, surrounded by the life I'd helped build.
I walked out of the bedroom, down the hallway lined with photos of our life together, and out the front door. The night air bit through my thin pajamas, but I kept walking. My phone buzzed in my pocket—a text from Derek.
"Don't forget to pack your things by weekend. Sienna needs the closet space."
I turned off the phone and kept walking, my slippers slapping against the empty sidewalk. The city was quiet at this hour, just the distant hum of traffic and the whisper of wind through the trees.
I walked for hours, block after block, until my feet were numb and my legs ached. When I finally looked up, I was standing at the edge of the Tacoma Narrows Bridge, the water stretching out below like a black mirror.
The wind was fierce here, whipping my hair across my face and cutting through my pajamas like ice. I climbed over the railing, my hands shaking as I gripped the cold metal.
The water was so far down. So dark. So quiet.
I let go.
I Jumped Off the Bridge — and Woke Up as His Luna of Contents
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