Chapter1: The Night It All Broke

1002 Words
The storm made the glass walls shake, but the silence inside the apartment was louder. I stood barefoot on the marble, Manhattan stretched before me in bolts of lightning. The city is always pumped, alive, but tonight it felt like it mocked me. A queen caught in a golden cage, silk sticking to my skin, hair falling over naked shoulders. The sound came from the keys at the door. Too late for him to be civil. Too early for me to be asleep. I didn’t move, but folded my arms tighter, for Daniel’s step had a way of breaking even quietly. “Celeste,” his voice. Rough, unreadable. I turned slowly. The thunder behind him split the sky, putting his tall body into darkness. Armani suit, collar relaxed, jaw tight. And then I saw what stood behind him. A woman. Ice-blonde hair falling like a net. And in her arms, a boy. For a time, I believed it was a dream caused by loneliness. Until her smile cut through the room. “Hello, Mrs. Kingston,” Isabella Vaughn whispered, walking forward as if she belonged here. My breath stilled. The name clanged like a ghost revived. Years ago, I’d seen it in his texts. His “first love.” A ghost I forgave him for. A ghost I thought was buried. The child’s fingers clasped her pearl necklace. His eyes grey. Daniel’s grey. My chest sank in on itself, but I didn’t let my face move. I’d been trained wellten years of swallowing every humiliation under his house, every stinging word from his mother, every absence covered as business. I questioned softly, “What is this?” Daniel shut the door behind him, his presence filling the space, pulling out the air. He glanced at Isabella, then at me. His quiet was worse than a punch. “Say it,” I whispered, my voice sharper than the wind. “Say it, Daniel.” He looked at me finally. Those steely, dominant eyes that once made me feel chosen. They were dead now. “This,” he added, putting a hand on Isabella’s back, “is my son.” The world didn’t tilt, it broke. I almost laughed. A wild, broken chuckle that tried to break out of my throat. Instead, I stepped forward, silk touching stone, my heels clicking like gunshots. “Your son,” I repeated, tasting the words like poison. “With her.” Isabella’s lips curled. “He’s everything Daniel deserves. Everything you couldn’t give.” Her nastiness stung, but what cut harder was Daniel’s quiet. Not denial. Not even shame. Just… nothing. “After everything,” I muttered, my voice trembling now. “Ten years, Daniel. Ten years of giving you my name, my money, my soul. I made you. I bled for you. And you bring her here” I gestured, angry, at the boy“and claim this?” “Celeste,” he started. “Don’t,” I cut in. “Don’t you dare speak to me like I’m an inconvenience you’re explaining away at a press conference.” Isabella lifted the boy higher in her arms, faking innocence. “He deserves to know his real family.” My head snapped toward her. “This is not your home.” But Daniel’s jaw flexed. His voice, when it came, was cold steel. “It is now.” My heart stopped. “You can’t be serious,” I grumbled. “You can’t just… replace me.” He stepped closer, his smell, his might pressing down on me, stifling. “I need you to leave quietly, Celeste. The lawyers will organise everything. This doesn’t have to be ugly.” My chest burning, my throat shutting. “Ugly? Daniel, I gave up everything. My fortune, my company, my life for you. I let your mother spit hate into my face. I slept alone in this tomb of a marriage while you chased power. And now” My hand shook as I pointed at Isabella. “You want me erased?” His eyes moved away, and for a brief second, I saw regret. Buried under pride. But he didn’t let it live. He hardened again, lips pushing into that rough line. “You’ve always been stronger than this,” he answered plainly. “Don’t make it harder.” I almost broke. My knees wanted to fall. But something inside me snapped instead. The material across my shoulders suddenly felt like armor. I straightened, lifted my chin. “Harder? Daniel, you haven’t even started to imagine what hard feels like.” For the first time, his mask cracked. A spark of worry. I turned toward Isabella, trying a smile that tasted of blood. “Congratulations. You’ve drifted into a cage you think you own.” Her sneer faltered. Then I glanced back at him, the man I once would have killed for. “You want me gone? Fine. But when I leave, I won’t just walk out, Daniel. I’ll tear this kingdom down brick by brick. And when the dust clears, you’ll remember the woman you underestimated.” Silence. Even the storm looked to hold its breath. He took one step forward, his voice a knife. “Careful, Celeste. Don’t turn this into a fight you can’t win.” I grinned coldly. “You just made it one.” The baby awakened, yawning, unaware of the battlefield around him. Isabella shuffled uncomfortably. I stared at the kid one more time, then back at Daniel. The man I married. The man who had once promised under flickering train lights, “I’ll make you proud, Celeste.” “You already lost me,” I mumbled. “You just haven’t realized what that means yet.” Daniel’s eyes darkened, yet his words fell like thunder itself, closing the night: “This is my son. Isabella and I… we’re going to be a family now.” The roar rushed through me, final, cruel. And for the first time in years, I didn’t cry. I burnt.
Free reading for new users
Scan code to download app
Facebookexpand_more
  • author-avatar
    Writer
  • chap_listContents
  • likeADD