
When My Husband Sacrificed Our Baby to Protect Her
Chapter 1
The silence in the penthouse was a heavy, suffocating thing, thicker than the November chill lingering on my coat. I had left the charity gala early, the weight of the socialite mask finally cracking my resolve. I slipped out of my heels in the foyer, the marble freezing against my arches, and walked toward the faint amber glow of the living room.
I stopped in the archway. The breath died in my throat.
Finn sat on the edge of the velvet sofa, his broad shoulders hunched forward in a posture of absolute devotion. Beside him was Mazie. His late sister’s adopted daughter had her knees tucked under her, leaning so far into his space that the scent of her cloying vanilla perfume reached me across the room. Finn’s hands—the same hands that had frantically dug me out of a suffocating tomb of avalanche snow a year ago—were currently enveloping hers. He was murmuring something low, his thumb stroking her knuckles.
I pressed my own thumb hard into the inside of my wrist, letting the sharp pressure ground me.
"Finn."
My voice didn't shake, but it shattered the quiet. Mazie flinched violently, snatching her hands back and shrinking into the cushions like a beaten dog. Finn stood up, his spine snapping straight. The tenderness in his face vanished, replaced instantly by a defensive, hardened mask.
"You're home early," he said, his tone flat, carrying the authority of a man who never expected to be questioned.
"Clearly." I kept my eyes on Mazie, noting the dry, calculating gleam beneath her wide, doe-like gaze. "It’s past midnight. There are boundaries, Finn. This crosses them."
"Oh, Scout, please don't be mad at him," Mazie whimpered, her voice trembling with manufactured fragility. "I was just feeling so alone. I miss my mother. I didn't mean to intrude on your marriage."
"You aren't," Finn snapped, though the bite of his words was meant for me. He stepped in front of Mazie, shielding her from my line of sight. The heat in my chest turned to pure ash. "She’s an orphan, Scout. She has no one else. Have some grace instead of projecting your petty jealousy onto a grieving girl."
Jealousy. The word struck like a physical blow. I looked at my husband—the man I had remarried because I mistook his desperate rescue on a frozen mountain for love. He wasn't looking at me like a wife. He was looking at me like an obstacle.
I didn't scream. I didn't cry. I simply turned on my heel and walked down the hall.
Inside my study, the air was mercifully cold. I locked the door and leaned against it, my thumb finding the pulse point on my wrist again. The heavy gold of the Wheeler mother’s bracelet—a family heirloom Finn had clasped around my wrist on our second wedding day—slid down my arm. It felt less like a promise and more like a shackle.
I moved to my desk and opened my laptop. The screen cast a harsh, blue glare over the mahogany. My fingers hovered over the keyboard before I opened an encrypted email client. I hadn't spoken to Bellamy Perkins in months. I had been too ashamed to admit to my oldest confidant that I had climbed back into a cage just because the man holding the key had once saved my life.
*Bellamy,* I typed, the keystrokes sharp and rapid. *I am suffocating here. I don't know how much longer I can do this.*
I hit send, the finality of it making my hands shake. I didn't expect a reply until morning. But less than an hour later, a notification chimed.
*I’m here. I’ve always been here. Come when you’re ready.*
I stared at the words. There was no judgment, no 'I told you so.' Just the steady, unmovable strength Bellamy had possessed since our college days in New York. A fractured piece of my chest settled. Empowered by the glow of his unconditional anchor, I opened a new, blank document.
*November 12th. 12:15 AM,* I typed. *Caught Finn holding Mazie's hands in the dark. He called me jealous. Defended her.*
I saved the file. If I was going to be trapped in this debt, I was going to keep a ledger of my own.
Three days later, the ledger grew.
The Wheeler family luncheon was a blinding display of high-society wealth, held in the sun-drenched conservatory of the estate. The clinking of silver against china and the low murmur of New York’s elite masked the tension at our table.
Mazie sat directly across from me, swirling a heavy crystal glass of Bordeaux. Her eyes met mine, a smirk playing on her lips right before her hand 'slipped'.
The dark red wine splashed violently across the bodice of my cream silk dress, bleeding outward like a fresh wound. The surrounding conversation died instantly.
"Oh, my goodness!" Mazie gasped loudly, ensuring every eye in the room turned toward us. "I am so clumsy! But I suppose you’re used to cleaning up messes, aren't you, Scout? Just like your first try at this marriage."
The silence that followed was deafening. I didn't look at the whispering guests. I looked at Finn. He was sitting at the head of the table, his hands flat on the linen cloth—his tell when he was suppressing guilt. I waited for him to speak. I waited for my husband to defend my dignity.
Instead, his jaw tightened in irritation. He looked at my ruined dress, then at Mazie, who was already forcing tears into her eyes.
"Don't make a scene, Scout," Finn commanded, his voice a low, warning rumble. He stood up, completely ignoring me, and placed a protective hand on Mazie's shoulder. "Come on, Mazie. Let's get you some air."
He escorted her out of the conservatory, leaving me sitting alone at the table, a spectacle for his family to dissect.
I didn't weep. I calmly picked up my napkin, dabbed the spreading red stain over my heart, and stood up. I walked out of the room with my spine perfectly straight, the phantom chill of the avalanche settling permanently into my bones.
When I returned home, I didn't bother changing the dress before opening my laptop.
*November 15th. 1:30 PM. Public humiliation.*
You may also like





