
Past Love, Present Fear
Chapter 1
I woke before dawn, heart fluttering with anticipation. Today wasn't just my birthday—it was our third wedding anniversary. Three years since James and I had promised forever to each other, fifteen years since we'd found each other in that Chicago group home. Two orphans who'd built a life, a love, a business together.
I slipped from bed, careful not to wake James. He stirred slightly, mumbling something in his sleep, his dark hair tousled against the pillow. I pressed a gentle kiss to his forehead before padding barefoot across our Lincoln Park apartment.
The string lights came alive under my fingers, casting a warm glow across our living room. I arranged framed photographs on the mantel—us as awkward teenagers, graduation day at Northwestern, the opening of our marketing firm, our wedding day. Each image a testament to our journey, to everything we'd overcome together.
"Perfect," I whispered, adjusting the last frame.
In the kitchen, I prepared James's favorite Italian dishes—the homemade gnocchi he loved, tiramisu for dessert. The scent of garlic and basil filled our home as I hummed softly, imagining his face when he returned from work.
By afternoon, I slipped into the teal dress I'd bought specially for tonight, the fabric hugging my curves in a way I knew would make James's eyes darken with desire. I applied my makeup carefully, swept my hair into an elegant updo, and spritzed his favorite perfume at my wrists and neck.
Everything was ready. Everything was perfect.
Except James wasn't home.
Six o'clock came and went. Seven. Eight. The candles burned lower, the food grew cold. I checked my phone repeatedly, but there were no messages, no missed calls.
At nine, anxiety gnawing at my stomach, I called his office.
"Mr. Morrison? He left hours ago," his assistant told me, confusion evident in her voice. "Around three, I think."
Six hours. Where had he been for six hours?
With trembling fingers, I opened our shared location app. The little blue dot that represented James blinked steadily at a location downtown—The Langham Hotel.
My chest tightened. A hotel? On our anniversary?
I grabbed my purse and keys, mind racing with possibilities. A surprise, perhaps? A special room booked for our celebration? But why not tell me? Why let me wait, worried and alone?
The taxi ride downtown passed in a blur of city lights and rising dread. At the hotel, I moved through the elegant lobby like a ghost, following the location on my phone to the eleventh floor.
Room 1127. I stood outside, hand raised to knock, when I noticed the door wasn't fully closed. A sliver of light spilled into the hallway.
And then I heard it—James's laugh. Low, intimate. A sound I thought belonged only to me.
I pushed the door open just enough to see inside, my body moving on instinct while my mind screamed at me to stop, to turn away, to preserve the life I thought we had.
James stood by the bed, his shirt unbuttoned, hands tangled in long blonde hair. The woman's back was to me, but when she turned to kiss him, I saw her face.
Rachel Stevens.
My high school tormentor. The girl who'd made my scholarship years a living hell, who'd mocked my orphan status, who'd whispered "charity case" whenever I walked past.
And now James—my James—was holding her, kissing her, looking at her with the eyes I thought were only for me.
A sound escaped me, something between a gasp and a sob. James's head snapped up, his eyes widening in horror as they met mine.
"Isabella—" he started, pushing away from Rachel.
I couldn't breathe. Couldn't think. I backed away, my vision blurring with tears.
"Happy anniversary," I whispered, the words like glass in my throat.
I turned and ran, hearing James call my name behind me. The hallway tilted and swayed. I reached the marble staircase, my heel catching on the first step.
Then I was falling, tumbling down, pain exploding through my body. The last thing I remembered was James's face appearing above me, his mouth forming my name as darkness claimed me.
I woke to the sterile white of a hospital room, the steady beep of monitors, the antiseptic smell of Northwestern Memorial. A doctor stood at the foot of my bed, clipboard in hand, expression carefully composed into professional sympathy.
"Mrs. Morrison," she said gently. "I'm afraid I have some difficult news."
I already knew. Somehow, I already knew what she would say. I felt the emptiness inside me, the absence where hope had been growing.
"The fall caused significant trauma," she continued, her voice seeming to come from very far away. "I'm sorry, but you've lost the baby."
The baby. Our baby. The child I hadn't even told James about yet. The surprise I'd planned to share tonight, on our anniversary.
Gone.
I turned away from the doctor's sympathetic gaze, clutching the thin hospital blanket as tears slid silently down my face. In the space of a few hours, I'd lost everything—my husband, my child, my past, my future.
Alone in the sterile ward, I curled around my grief and let the waves of it wash over me, wondering how I would ever find my way back to solid ground.
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