
When My Husband Chose My Twin Over Our Baby
When My Husband Chose My Twin Over Our Baby Chapter 1
The pregnancy test trembled between my fingers as I stared at the two pink lines, my heart hammering against my ribs. Positive. I was pregnant with Dutton Armstrong's child.
The bathroom in the Armstrong penthouse was all gleaming marble and soft lighting—a space as cold and perfect as everything else in this borrowed life. But the emotion swelling inside me was anything but cold. It was warm, fierce, terrifying, and for the first time in my life, entirely mine.
I pressed my trembling hand to my still-flat stomach, and something shifted in my chest—a door opening to a room I never knew existed. This baby, this tiny spark of life growing inside me, belonged to no one but me. Not to the Lawson family who had used me as a placeholder. Not to Meredith, whose identity I'd worn like an ill-fitting coat. This was mine alone.
'I'm going to be a mother,' I whispered, the words foreign and precious on my tongue.
Joy bubbled through me, bright and effervescent, as I tucked the test into my pocket. Dutton needed to know. He deserved to know. Maybe this would change everything between us—this tangible proof that what had grown between us was real, not just a product of an arrangement.
I caught my reflection in the mirror—my face flushed, eyes bright with hope. For once, I didn't see Meredith's shadow. I saw only myself.
Riding the elevator to Armstrong Tower, I rehearsed what I would say. 'Dutton, I have something to tell you.' Too formal. 'I have news.' Too vague. Maybe I would simply hand him the test and let his brilliant mind connect the dots. The thought made me smile.
The elevator doors slid open to the executive floor, and I stepped into the hushed, powerful space. His assistant's desk was empty—perfect timing. I approached his office, my steps light with anticipation, and peered through the glass door.
My world stopped.
There was Dutton, his tall frame unmistakable, his dark hair slightly tousled the way it was when he was deep in thought. But he wasn't alone. Meredith—my twin, my sister, the woman whose place I'd taken—was pressed against his chest, her face tilted up toward his. His arms were around her, holding her with a tenderness I recognized, a tenderness I thought had been mine.
The pregnancy test crumpled in my fist.
I must have made a sound because Dutton's head turned slightly, his profile sharp against the light. I stumbled backward, my hand finding the elevator button before I could think. The doors opened, and I stepped inside, pressing the lobby button with desperate fingers.
Down, down, down I went, each floor taking me further from the life I'd thought was mine, from the man I'd foolishly believed might love me for me.
That evening, I sat in the living room of the penthouse, staring at the Manhattan skyline through tears I refused to shed. The door clicked open, and I turned to see Meredith wheeling two suitcases in, a carry-on bag slung over her shoulder. She looked at me with the casual entitlement of someone returning home.
'The arrangement is over, Anais,' she said, her voice light, as if discussing the weather. 'I want my life back. My husband. My home.'
I stared at her, this woman who had always taken what she wanted without consequence. 'Your husband,' I echoed, the words hollow.
'Yes, Dutton.' She smiled, tossing her hair. 'I assume you've grown attached, but we both know this was never about you. It was about what you could do for the family.'
I couldn't tell her the truth—that I loved him, that I carried his child. I couldn't shatter the careful lies that had kept our family afloat. So I did what I had always done. I stepped aside.
I packed a single suitcase and walked out into the rainy Manhattan night, leaving behind the only home I'd ever known and the only man I'd ever loved.
Raelynn was waiting at the curb, her battered Honda idling. She took one look at my face, at the suitcase in my hand, and didn't ask questions. She popped the trunk, and I slid into the passenger seat.
We drove in silence over the bridge to Brooklyn, the city lights blurring through my tears. Finally, she spoke. 'What happened?'
'Meredith came back,' I said, my voice breaking. 'She wants her life back.'
Raelynn's hands tightened on the steering wheel. 'And Dutton?'
I closed my eyes, the image of them together burning behind my eyelids. 'He's hers now.'
Three days later, I woke at 4 a.m. in Raelynn's cramped Brooklyn apartment, my stomach churning violently. I barely made it to the bathroom before morning sickness overtook me. I crouched on the cold tile floor, retching until there was nothing left.
Raelynn appeared in the doorway, her hair messy from sleep. She knelt beside me, pulling my hair back from my face and pressing a glass of water into my shaking hand.
'Tell me,' she said softly. 'All of it.'
I looked into her steady gaze and knew I couldn't hide it anymore. 'I'm pregnant,' I whispered. 'Eight weeks, maybe. And Dutton... he can't know.'
Raelynn sat on the tile beside me, her shoulder against mine. For a long moment, she said nothing. Then she squeezed my hand. 'Okay,' she said firmly. 'We figure this out. But you're going to a doctor tomorrow.'
I nodded, too exhausted to argue, too broken to hope. In the pale light of dawn, I wondered if the baby and I would ever be enough, if I would ever find the strength to stand on my own. But as Raelynn held me, I felt something stir within me—not just the child, but a spark of defiance. I had survived the Lawson family. I had survived Meredith. I would survive this too.
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