
Love Lost, Justice Served
Chapter 1
The sound of the front door slamming echoed through our penthouse like a gunshot, making me look up from the financial reports I'd been reviewing at the coffee table. Jaxon wasn't supposed to be home for another hour, and the violence of his entrance sent an immediate chill down my spine.
But it wasn't Jaxon who swept into our living room like a conquering queen.
Kenna Harvey stood in our doorway, her designer coat draped elegantly over what was unmistakably a pregnant belly. My breath caught in my throat as she placed one perfectly manicured hand on the swell of her stomach, her lips curved in a smile that didn't reach her eyes.
"Hello, Samira," she said, her voice dripping with false sweetness. "I think it's time we had a little chat."
My hands trembled as I set down the papers, the numbers blurring before my eyes. "Kenna, what are you doing here? How did you get in?"
She laughed, a sound like breaking glass. "Oh, darling. I have keys. Jaxon gave them to me months ago." She reached into her oversized purse and withdrew a thick manila envelope, so heavy it seemed to strain her delicate wrists. "But I'm not here to talk about keys."
With theatrical precision, she upended the envelope over my coffee table. Papers cascaded down like snow, hundreds of pages scattered across the mahogany surface. Bank statements, hotel receipts, photographs, text message printouts – a mountain of evidence that made my stomach lurch.
"What is this?" I whispered, my voice barely audible over the thundering of my heart.
Kenna's smile widened, predatory and cold. "This, my dear placeholder, is the truth about your precious marriage." She picked up a photograph from the pile – Jaxon's face clearly visible as he entered what looked like a hotel. "Three years of lies, Samira. Three years of you playing house while I was the woman he actually loved."
I reached for the photo with shaking hands, but she snatched it away. "Oh no, don't touch. These are originals, and I need them intact for the lawyers."
"This is impossible," I breathed, scanning the papers spread before me. "Jaxon would never—"
"Wouldn't he?" Kenna's voice turned sharp, cutting through my denial like a blade. "Look at the dates, Samira. Look at the bank transfers. Every business trip, every late night at the office, every time he told you he was working – he was with me."
My vision blurred as I stared at a bank statement showing regular transfers to an account I didn't recognize. The dates lined up perfectly with Jaxon's recent absences, each one a knife twisting deeper into my chest.
"You're lying," I said, but my voice cracked on the words. "These could be fabricated, photoshopped—"
"Could they?" Kenna laughed again, placing both hands on her belly in a gesture that made my blood run cold. "What about this, then? What about the baby your husband put inside me while you were playing the devoted wife?"
The room spun around me. I gripped the edge of the coffee table, my knuckles white against the dark wood. "No. No, this isn't real. Jaxon loves me. We've been trying for a baby ourselves—"
"Oh, sweet Samira." Kenna's voice dripped with mock sympathy. "Did you really think he wanted children with you? You were never meant to be permanent. You were just... a placeholder. A warm body to keep his bed occupied while he figured out how to get me back."
The front door opened again, and this time it was Jaxon who entered. His face was pale, his usually perfect hair disheveled. He stopped short when he saw the scene before him – Kenna standing triumphant beside my chair, the evidence scattered across our coffee table like the remains of our marriage.
"Samira," he said, my name falling from his lips like a prayer. But his eyes weren't on me. They were fixed on Kenna's pregnant belly, and in that moment, I saw something die in his gaze.
"Jaxon," I stood on unsteady legs, reaching toward him. "Please, whatever she's told you, whatever this is – we can talk about it. We can work through this."
He finally looked at me, and the coldness in his eyes made me step back. "Can we, Samira? Can we really?" He reached into his jacket and withdrew a manila folder of his own. "Because I have something for you too."
My heart stopped as he placed the folder on top of Kenna's evidence. Divorce papers. The words swam before my eyes, but the meaning was crystal clear.
"Three years," he said, his voice hollow. "Three years of lies, of you playing the perfect wife while planning God knows what. Did you think I wouldn't find out about your real family? About the oil money you've been hiding?"
"Jaxon, please—" I reached for him, but he stepped away from my touch like it burned him.
"You're just another gold digger, Samira. Just like all the rest." His words hit me like physical blows. "At least Kenna was honest about what she wanted."
Kenna's triumphant smile was the last thing I saw clearly before the tears came. Through my blurred vision, I watched my husband – my former husband – hand me a pen.
"Sign it," he said quietly. "Let's end this charade."
My hands shook so violently I could barely hold the pen. But I signed anyway, each letter of my name feeling like a small death. When I finished, Jaxon took the papers without another word.
As the door closed behind them both, I sank to my knees among the scattered evidence of my destroyed life. It was only hours later, alone in the bathroom with a pregnancy test in my trembling hands, that I discovered the cruelest irony of all.
Two pink lines stared back at me, announcing the child I now carried – Jaxon's child – just as our marriage lay in ruins around me.
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