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Marrying The Protector: My Second Chance

Marrying The Protector: My Second Chance

The clerk at the DMV looked at me like I was stupid, or perhaps just clinically insane. She slid my paperwork back under the thick glass partition, her expression flat, and said the words that ended my life: "Ma'am, I cannot renew a license with your married name. Your marital status in the system is listed as 'Divorced.' It has been for three years." My husband, Jackson, had just kissed me goodbye, yet the clerk revealed he remarried three years ago, having a son with his new wife, Candida. My entire marriage, our five years, was a monstrous lie. Stunned, I’d lived a cruel charade, trying for a baby with a man who already had one. Pregnant, Jackson pushed me at a gala, publicly choosing his new family. My pregnancy tragically ended. Every tender word he’d spoken was a performance. He kept me as a "PR shield," letting me mourn a future he’d already built. His betrayal was absolute. With nothing left, I chose to die. A death certificate was arranged, my past cremated. Lena Rose was born in France, ready to paint my pain into power, authoring my own story.
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Chapter 6

Elena POV The ink on the divorce papers was barely dry before Jackson disappeared again. It was his signature move. When the water got hot, when emotions got messy, Jackson Medina didn't fight. He didn't yell. He simply evaporated. He treated our marriage like a failing subsidiary-a business deal that had gone sour. He signed the contract to terminate the partnership, cut his losses, and pivoted back to the merger that actually mattered to him. Candida. I sat propped up in the hospital bed, staring at the silent screen of my phone. I had blocked his number, but I could see the blocked call log filling up. Three times yesterday. Five times today. He wasn't calling to apologize. He was calling because he realized I hadn't signed the Non-Disclosure Agreement yet. He was calling to manage the fallout. I didn't answer. I let the silence stretch between us until it snapped. The door to my room opened. I expected a nurse. I expected Hamilton. I didn't expect her. Candida Lewis breezed in like she owned the hospital. She was wearing white, a color that should have looked innocent but on her looked like a shroud. She held a leather portfolio against her chest. "Elena," she said. Her voice was soft, dripping with a saccharine sweetness that made my teeth ache. "I hope I'm not disturbing you." "Get out," I said. She didn't flinch. She closed the door behind her and walked to the foot of the bed. "I know you're hurting," she said, her eyes wide and glistening with practiced empathy. "I never wanted this to happen. Jackson... he loves deeply. Sometimes too deeply. He's torn apart by all this." "Save the speech, Candida. What do you want?" She placed the portfolio on the tray table. "Jackson is generous. Too generous. He's offering you a lot of money in that divorce settlement. But the board... the shareholders... they're worried." She slid a document toward me. "It's a waiver," she explained. "Renouncing any claim to the Medina family trust and future stocks. It's just a formality. To protect Joey's future." I looked at her. Really looked at her. She wasn't here for Jackson. She was here for herself. She wanted to make sure that when I left, I took nothing that could belong to her son. "You think I want his money?" I asked. "I think you're angry," she said, her mask slipping just a fraction to reveal the steel beneath. "And angry women do expensive things." The memory of the phone call I had overheard flashed in my mind. Jackson promising her he would handle me. Promising her that their "little family" wouldn't be affected. I picked up the pen. "You're right," I said. "I am angry." I signed the paper. I didn't read it. I scrawled my name across the line, pressing down so hard the tip of the pen tore through the paper. "Take it," I said, shoving the portfolio back at her. "Take the money. Take the stocks. Take him. I don't want any of it." Candida blinked, surprised by my surrender. She snatched the papers before I could change my mind. "You're doing the right thing, Elena," she said, a smug smile curling her lips. "He was never really yours, you know. Even when he was with you, he was thinking of me." "Get out," I repeated. She turned on her heel and left. I sank back into the pillows. I felt lighter. Not happy, but lighter. Like I had just severed a limb that was gangrenous. My phone buzzed. A text from Hamilton. I'm outside. I have something you need to see before we go. I got dressed. My movements were stiff, my body still aching from the fall and the surgery, but adrenaline numbed the worst of it. I walked out of the room without looking back. Hamilton was waiting in his car at the curb. He opened the door for me, his face grim. "Are you sure about this?" he asked as I buckled my seatbelt. "Show me," I said. He drove in silence. We left the city center, heading toward the affluent suburbs on the coast. I knew this road. Jackson had bought a property out here years ago. He told me it was a diversified asset. A rental property. We pulled up to a gated driveway. Hamilton killed the engine. "Look," he whispered. Through the wrought-iron gates, I could see the sprawling lawn of the villa. It was beautiful. Lush green grass, manicured hedges, a fountain bubbling in the center. And there they were. Jackson was sitting on a blanket in the grass. He was wearing casual clothes-a t-shirt and jeans. He looked relaxed. Happy. Candida was sitting next to him, laughing at something he said. And running between them, chasing a golden retriever, was Joey. The boy tripped and fell. Jackson didn't call for a nanny. He didn't look annoyed or inconvenienced. He jumped up, scooped the boy into his arms, and tossed him into the air. Joey shrieked with delight. "Daddy! Again!" Jackson laughed. It was a sound I hadn't heard in years. A genuine, unburdened laugh. "Again, buddy. Let's go." He kissed the boy's cheek. Then he looked at Candida and smiled. It was a look of pure, unadulterated adoration. I felt the bile rise, burning my throat. This wasn't an affair. This wasn't a mistake. This was a life. A whole, complete, beautiful life that he had built parallel to ours. While I was at home, staring at negative pregnancy tests and crying in the bathroom, he was here. Playing catch. Being a father. Being a husband to someone else. He hadn't just cheated on me. He had replaced me before he even got rid of me. I looked down at my left hand. The diamond ring on my finger glittered in the sunlight. It felt heavy. Like a shackle. I rolled down the window. "Elena, wait," Hamilton said. I didn't wait. I wrenched the ring off my finger. The metal scraped against my skin. I opened the car door and stepped out. Jackson saw me. He froze, Joey still in his arms. The laughter died in his throat. Candida turned, following his gaze. Her eyes narrowed. I walked up to the gate. I didn't scream. I didn't cry. I reached through the cold iron bars and pitched the ring. It landed in the grass with a dull thud, just a few feet from their picnic blanket. "Elena," Jackson said. He put Joey down and took a step toward me. "Elena, what are you doing here?" "I'm returning your property," I said. My voice was dead calm, flatlining. "Since you're so worried about your assets." "It's not what it looks like," he started, the automatic lie falling from his lips. "I'm just... Joey needed me. It's for the boy." "Stop," I said. "Just stop." Candida stood up, walking over to stand beside him. She looped her arm through his, staking her claim. She looked at me with that same triumphant smirk she had worn at the gala. "She knows, Jackson," Candida said. "She signed the papers. It's over." Jackson looked from her to me. He looked torn. Not because he loved me, but because he hated losing control. "You signed?" he asked. "I did." I looked at the three of them. The perfect family. "You chose this," I said to him. "So keep it. All of it." I turned around and walked back to Hamilton's car. My knees were shaking, but my head was high. "Drive," I told Hamilton. As we pulled away, I saw Jackson standing at the gate, watching me go. He looked small in the rearview mirror. I touched my bare ring finger. It felt strange. Naked. But for the first time in five years, it felt clean.