
Ryan's Choice: Chloe Over Us
Chapter 3
Sunday mornings had become our sanctuary. Jake and I would make pancakes shaped like dinosaurs, and for a few precious hours, I could pretend we were just a normal family—that my sister wasn't gone, that my wedding dress wasn't still hanging in my closet like a ghost, that the father of my unborn child wasn't perpetually absent.
This Sunday, I'd set the small dining table with my mother's china—the good plates we rarely used. Jake had insisted, saying it made our dinosaur pancakes feel "special." His smile, so much like my sister's, was the only light in my increasingly dark world.
"Can I have more syrup, Auntie Isa?" Jake asked, his legs swinging beneath the chair.
I passed him the bottle, watching him carefully pour a perfect puddle. "Not too much, buddy. Remember what happened last time?"
He giggled. "I got a sugar rush and ran around the apartment like a T-Rex!"
The doorbell rang, cutting through our laughter. Jake and I exchanged confused glances—we weren't expecting anyone.
"I'll get it," I said, setting down my napkin.
When I opened the door, my stomach dropped. Chloe Anderson stood in my doorway, her perfect blonde hair cascading over her shoulders, her lips curved in that familiar, artificial smile.
"Isabella! I was just in the neighborhood and thought I'd stop by to say hello." Her voice dripped with false sweetness as she brushed past me into my apartment without waiting for an invitation.
I followed her, anxiety creeping up my spine. Chloe never "just stopped by." Every appearance was calculated, every move designed to remind me of my place in Ryan's priorities.
She paused when she saw Jake at the table, her smile tightening. "Oh, I didn't realize you had...company."
"This is my nephew, Jake," I said, moving protectively toward him. "My sister's son."
"Right, the orphan," she said, her voice dropping to a stage whisper. "So sad."
Jake's eyes widened at the word, and I felt a surge of anger. Before I could respond, something caught the light around Chloe's neck, drawing my attention.
My heart stopped.
Hanging from a delicate chain was my sister's sapphire pendant—an antique piece that had been in our family for generations. My mother had given it to my sister on her twenty-first birthday. It was supposed to come to me after...
"Where did you get that necklace?" My voice sounded distant, even to my own ears.
Chloe's hand went to the pendant, caressing it with false innocence. "Oh, this old thing? Ryan gave it to me. Isn't it lovely?"
Jake's chair scraped against the floor as he stood up. "That's my mommy's necklace! You're lying!"
Chloe's smile vanished. "Ryan said I could have it. He knows how much I love sapphires."
"That's not true!" Jake shouted, tears welling in his eyes. "That's my mommy's special necklace! Grandma gave it to her!"
I stood frozen, unable to process the magnitude of this betrayal. That necklace had been in my sister's jewelry box—the one Ryan had helped me move to my bedroom after her funeral. He knew what it meant to us.
"Jake, honey, calm down," I started, but he was already moving toward Chloe, his small face contorted with grief and rage.
"Give it back!" he cried, reaching for the pendant. "It's ours! It's all we have left of her!"
What happened next seemed to unfold in slow motion. Jake's fingers brushed the necklace, and Chloe's face transformed into a mask of fury. She shoved him—hard—sending his small body tumbling backward down the three steps that led from our dining area to the living room.
The sound of his cry as he hit the floor tore through me like a physical pain.
"Jake!" I rushed to him, heart pounding as he clutched his arm, his face pale with shock and pain.
Chloe stood at the top of the steps, her hand still on the necklace. "He attacked me," she said coldly. "You should teach your nephew some manners."
Jake's arm was already swelling, his sobs piercing the air as I gathered him against me. My phone was in my hand, dialing Ryan before I even realized what I was doing.
"Ryan," I said when he answered, my voice shaking with rage and fear. "Chloe just pushed Jake down the stairs. We're going to the emergency room. And she's wearing my sister's necklace—she says you gave it to her."
There was a pause, then: "I'll meet you at the hospital."
I hung up without responding and turned to Chloe, who was watching us with cold detachment.
"Get out of my home," I said, my voice deadly quiet. "Now."
She smiled, fingering the sapphire pendant. "You know he'll always choose me, Isabella. Always."
As I carried my sobbing nephew to the car, her words echoed in my head. I just prayed that this time—with our child's safety at stake—she would finally be wrong.
* * *
The emergency room buzzed with its usual controlled chaos. Jake sat on the examination table, tears streaming down his face as the nurse gently examined his swollen arm.
"It looks like a fracture," she said kindly, wiping his tears with a tissue. "We'll need to take some X-rays to be sure."
Jake looked up at me, his eyes wide with fear. "It hurts, Auntie Isa."
"I know, sweetheart." I brushed his hair back from his forehead. "You're being so brave."
I heard Ryan's voice before I saw him, coming from the waiting area. My heart leapt with relief—he was here. He would make this right.
But when he appeared in the doorway of our exam room, he wasn't alone. Chloe clung to his arm, her face tear-streaked, her breathing exaggerated and ragged.
"Isabella," Ryan began, his expression tense. "How is he?"
Before I could answer, a commotion erupted in the hallway. A nurse was rushing toward Chloe, who had suddenly slumped against the wall, gasping dramatically.
"She's having a severe panic attack," the nurse called out. "We need assistance!"
Ryan immediately turned his attention to Chloe, supporting her as she was guided to a nearby chair. I watched in disbelief as medical staff swarmed around her, offering oxygen and comfort while my nephew sat forgotten with his broken arm.
"Ryan," I called, my voice breaking. "Jake needs you."
He glanced back, his expression torn for just a moment before Chloe let out another theatrical gasp. "I'll be right there," he said, but he didn't move from her side.
The pediatric nurse returned, her kind eyes taking in the scene. "We'll take good care of him," she assured me quietly.
As they wheeled Jake away for X-rays, Ryan finally approached, leaving Chloe in the care of two nurses.
"What happened?" he demanded, his tone accusatory. "Chloe said Jake attacked her over some necklace."
I stared at him, incredulous. "That 'some necklace' is my sister's sapphire pendant—a family heirloom. Chloe showed up at our home wearing it, claiming you gave it to her."
"I did," Ryan said, his voice lowering. "She was having a really rough time last week. I thought it might cheer her up."
The world seemed to tilt beneath my feet. "You gave away my dead sister's necklace without asking me? The necklace that was meant to be passed down to me?"
"It's just jewelry, Isabella," he said dismissively. "What matters is that your nephew physically attacked Chloe. She defended herself."
"She defended—" I couldn't even finish the sentence. "Ryan, she pushed a seven-year-old child down the stairs! He has a broken arm!"
"Maybe if you were supervising him properly, this wouldn't have happened," he snapped. "This is what I'm talking about—you're too emotional to see clearly. Jake is clearly ill-mannered and out of control."
I felt as if I'd been slapped. "Get out," I whispered.
"What?"
"Get out!" My voice rose, drawing stares from the hospital staff. "Take Chloe and get out. I don't want either of you near Jake."
Ryan's expression hardened. "You're being irrational. I'm trying to help."
"Help who, Ryan? Because it's certainly not your fiancée or the child she's raising. It's not your unborn baby." I placed a protective hand over my stomach. "It's never us. It's always her."
A flicker of something—guilt, perhaps—crossed his face before he glanced back at Chloe, who was watching our exchange with undisguised interest despite her supposed medical distress.
"We'll talk about this when you're calmer," he said finally. "I'm taking Chloe home. She's been traumatized enough."
As I watched him walk back to her, helping her to her feet with gentle care he never showed me, a cold realization settled in my heart. The nurse's words echoed in my mind: *You're not the first to do this alone.*
Perhaps I had been alone all along, I just hadn't wanted to see it.
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