
Wife's Suicide, Husband's Awakening
Chapter 1
I stared at the pregnancy test in my trembling hands, the two pink lines blurring through my tears. Seven years of marriage had taught me to temper hope with caution, but I couldn't help the flutter in my chest. A baby. Our baby. Maybe this tiny life growing inside me could bridge the chasm that had grown between Mateo and me.
Sunlight streamed through the bathroom window, casting the marble countertop in a warm glow that felt like a benediction. I pressed a hand to my still-flat stomach.
"Hello, little one," I whispered, my voice catching. "I'm your mother."
The words felt strange and wonderful on my tongue. I'd dreamed of motherhood since I was a girl, imagining tiny hands and midnight feedings, first steps and bedtime stories. Now that dream was finally real—a fragile, precious reality I could lose at any moment if Mateo knew.
I hid the test in the bottom of my vanity drawer, beneath old makeup I never wore anymore. Tonight was our seventh wedding anniversary. Perhaps this news could be a new beginning for us.
* * *
The charity gala glittered with wealth and pretension, crystal chandeliers casting fractured rainbows across the ballroom. I stood alone near a marble column, nursing a glass of water I'd been pretending was champagne. The gardenia corsage pinned to my midnight blue gown released its sweet fragrance with every breath—gardenias, the flowers Mateo had once brought me every Friday during college, a tradition abandoned years ago.
"Mrs. Crawford! How lovely to see you again."
I turned, a practiced smile already forming, only to realize Victoria Sterling wasn't speaking to me. She swept past, air-kissing the cheeks of Sevyn Bell—my husband's mistress—who stood across the room in a crimson dress that clung to her perfect body like a second skin.
And beside her, his hand possessively at the small of her back, stood Mateo. My husband. The man who had promised to love and cherish me until death.
"I was just telling your husband how generous his donation to the children's hospital was," Victoria continued, oblivious to the knife she was twisting in my heart. "The Crawford name carries such weight."
Sevyn preened under the attention, leaning into Mateo's touch. "We're just happy to support such worthy causes, aren't we, darling?"
Mateo nodded, his smile genuine in a way it hadn't been with me in years. He hadn't even acknowledged my presence since we'd arrived separately—he in his sleek sports car with Sevyn, me in a taxi.
I watched as more guests approached them, each addressing Sevyn as "Mrs. Crawford" while my husband stood proudly at her side. No one corrected the mistake. No one remembered the actual Mrs. Crawford standing alone across the room, the gardenia at her breast wilting in the heat.
I slipped away before the tears could fall.
* * *
It was past midnight when we returned home—to separate bedrooms, separate lives under one roof. I'd changed into my nightgown but sleep remained elusive, my mind circling around the life growing inside me and the man who'd helped create it but would likely reject us both.
A light shone from beneath Mateo's study door as I padded down the hallway toward the kitchen. Tea sometimes helped me sleep, and tonight I desperately needed rest. I selected my favorite bone china teacup—a wedding gift from Mateo's grandmother, who'd been kinder to me than her grandson had become.
As I waited for the kettle to boil, I heard Mateo's voice drift from his study, low and intense. A late business call, perhaps, though something in his tone made me pause.
"I don't care what the board thinks," he was saying. "This merger is happening."
I shouldn't eavesdrop. I knew better. But my feet carried me toward his door anyway, drawn by some masochistic need to understand the man who had once loved me.
"Of course I'm concerned about heirs," he continued after a pause. "But Esme is..." Another pause. "She's unworthy of bearing my child. I can't stomach the thought of her carrying anything of mine."
The teacup slipped from my numb fingers, shattering against the marble floor with a crash that echoed my breaking heart. Bone china fragments scattered like the pieces of my soul, irreparable and sharp-edged.
I didn't wait to see if Mateo had heard. I fled, one hand pressed to my mouth to stifle my sobs, the other instinctively shielding my stomach—protecting the child he'd already rejected without knowing it existed.
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