LOGIN(Sabrina’s POV)
I didn’t remember climbing the stairs.
I remembered the ultrasound in my fist. I remembered my own heartbeat in my ears. I remembered thinking: he already did it. He already did it. He already did it, as I opened the door.
Nate looked up from the desk. His hand was on a fresh glass of whisky.
He saw the ultrasound in my fist. He did not even flinch.
“So you found it,” he said.
That was all.
So you found it.
Three years of marriage, and that was all he had to say.
“Six weeks,” I whispered. “Six weeks, Nate! You sat across from me at breakfast. You ate the food I cooked. You let me iron your shirts. You let me call your grandmother on Sundays and lie to her about how happy we were. And the whole time—”
“It’s done, Sabrina.” He closed his laptop. “So sit down.”
“I will not sit down!” He shot up an eyebrow. “You were never going to ask me. You came home tonight and pretended to ask me, and the whole time—”
“It’s already done.” He stood up. He looked tired, not sorry. “Asking you was a formality. Grandma wanted me to ask, so I did. You said no. It doesn’t change anything.”
My knees buckled. I caught the edge of his desk.
“But nothing has to change, Sabrina. Not really. We can work this out.”
“Work this out,” I repeated. I could not believe the words coming out of his mouth.
“I’ll increase your allowance. Double it. We’ll draw up a new agreement. Better terms. You’ll have your own account. Your own money. Things you should have had from the start.” He waved his hand like he was offering a corner office. “All I need from you is a little understanding.”
“Understanding.”
“Alexis is dying. This is her last wish. You don’t have to like it. You just have to accept it. You don’t even have to see her. I’ll keep things separate. Nothing in your life has to change.”
“Nothing in my life has to change?” I stared at him. “Your mistress is pregnant with your child. Everything has changed!”
“It doesn’t have to.” He leaned forward. “Sabrina. Think. I like coming home to this house. I like our arrangement. I’m not asking you to leave. I’m asking you to stay.”
Had he lost his mind?
“You want to keep me here,” I said slowly, “while she carries your baby somewhere else. You want both of us. You just want us in separate rooms.”
His jaw twitched. He didn’t deny it.
I gave a high-pitched laugh. “You had this planned—”
“Yes.”
“You had this planned when you sat down at that table an hour ago and asked me to be kind.”
“Yes.” His jaw twitched. “Don’t make this longer than it has to be.”
“I want a divorce.”
Nate’s glass stopped halfway to his mouth.
“Don’t be dramatic, Sabrina.”
“You heard me, Nate.”
“And then what?” His voice hardened. Just a degree. Just enough. “Your uncle is still at St. Catherine’s. Those bills don’t pay themselves. Your aunt’s apartment doesn’t have room for a housefly, let alone—”
He stopped himself, but not soon enough.
“Are you threatening me?”
“I’m reminding you.” He looked at me evenly. “Of the arrangement. Of what you signed up for. I have taken care of you and your family for three years. All I am asking is that you let me take care of someone else, too. You can hate me for it. That’s fine. But don’t blow up your own life out of spite.”
The doorbell rang.
Nate’s head snapped toward the sound. His jaw went tight.
“Who the hell—”
He knew. I could see it in the way his hand closed around the glass. He knew before the heels hit the marble.
Alexis.
She walked into the study like she already owned it. Cream coat. Diamond earrings I’d helped him pick out last Christmas, thinking they were for his mother. And under the coat, when she opened it slowly, theatrically, with one hand spread flat over her belly—a small, perfect bump.
“Oh,” she said, looking at me. “Sabrina. You’re still here!”
She didn’t sound surprised. She sounded annoyed. My eyes narrowed.
“Nate, baby, you said she’d be gone by tonight.”
Baby. She called him baby, in my study, in front of me! My blood roared.
I looked at Nate. He wouldn’t meet my eyes.
“Alexis, I told you I would handle this.”
She waved one hand like she was brushing away a fly. “You were taking too long, darling. I got bored in the car.”
I looked at Nate. His jaw was clenched. Alexis had walked into the one conversation he wanted to control and blown it wide open.
She glided closer. She smelled like the perfume I had found on his collar a hundred times.
“You’re being so brave about this, Sabrina,” she said softly. “Truly. Some women would make a scene. Some women would beg. But you’re going to be reasonable, aren’t you? Because you know what you are.”
“What am I?”
“You’re the placeholder.”
She tilted her head and looked at me like she was admiring a painting in a museum she was about to buy.
“Don’t look so sad, sweetie. You did your job. You kept the seat warm. You walked his grandmother to the bathroom. You were a perfectly nice little stand-in, and now the real wife is home. You should thank me, honestly. If my brothers had known Nate had a wife on the side, you’d have been out years ago!”
“Alexis,” Nate said from behind his desk. She ignored him.
A folded sheaf of paper in her coat pocket crinkled as she moved. She drew it out and set it on the desk.
“Oh, and these. You’re the legal wife, sweetie, so we needed your name on the consent form. Such an annoying little hoop, isn’t it? Nate did such a good job of your signature, I almost thought it was yours.”
The room went small.
There, on the bottom line of a Crestwood Fertility consent form dated nine weeks ago: Sabrina Cooper. The little loop on the S exactly mine.
He had forged my hand. He had practiced. For weeks, probably, on scrap paper in his study with the door closed, while I sat downstairs heating his dinner.
“Sweetie,” Alexis said softly, “breathe.”
She reached out and touched a strand of my hair, almost tenderly. I jerked back so fast my shoulder hit the bookcase. Her smile widened.
“Oh,” she breathed. “You still loved him. Even after all of this. You poor little thing.”
My hand drifted, just for a second, to my own stomach. To the secret growing there.
Her eyes followed.
For one breath, I thought she saw it.
Then she just smiled.
She reached into her coat pocket again and produced a fresh form.
Crestwood Fertility Clinic, it said. Spousal Consent for Donor Procedure. Alexis’s name was already printed in the patient field. Mine was blank on the signature line, waiting.
“Now. Since the forgery was a teensy bit illegal—” she laughed like this was the funniest thing “—we need your real signature. Proper and legal. Just sign, sweetie, and we can all move on with our lives. Nate keeps his wife. You keep your allowance. I keep my baby. Everybody wins.”
She set a pen on top of the form and pushed them both toward me.
“Sign the form, Sabrina. Be a good girl. We’ve done so much for you. Pay us back. You owe us!” She leaned in a little, lowering her lashes. “Nobody says no to an Atwood. You’ll learn that soon enough.”
(Nate’s POV)I didn’t have brothers. I didn’t have a Luca. I didn’t have five men who’d cross oceans and crash parties and loom by swimming pools to make sure nobody touched me wrong.I had Alexis. So I used her.Evening cocktails on the castle lawn, the sky going pink over the valley, fairy lights strung through the plane trees overhead. I put my arm around Alexis and I performed.She was in a red dress that clung to her belly and fell to her ankles, her blonde hair blown out in soft waves, gold earrings catching every eye.She looked incredible. She always looked incredible. That was never the problem.I whispered in her ear—nothing, small nothings, you look good tonight—but from across the lawn it would look intimate.When the waiter came around with rosé I waved him off.“She’s pregnant,” I said. “Just water.”Alexis’s lips parted. She looked up at me and her whole face softened, and she pressed closer against my side and kissed the underside of my jaw.“You’re being so sweet toni
(Sabrina’s POV)Pool day, and my brothers were running a military operation disguised as leisure.I was stretched out on a lounger in a black one-piece, the bump just visible enough under the fabric that you’d only notice if you already knew.Luna was curled against my hip, smuggled poolside in Felix’s beach bag, purring so loudly the woman on the next lounger kept looking around for the source.Luca was beside me, reading an architecture journal with one hand while the other rested on the arm of his chair, his swim trunks sitting low, his chest still damp from an earlier lap. A bead of water was tracking slowly down the line of his jaw, and I followed it all the way to his collarbone before I caught myself and looked at the pool instead.“You’re staring,” he said without glancing up.“I am absolutely not,” I lied.“You are.” He turned a page and the corner of his mouth pulled up. “I don’t mind.”I took a long sip of my virgin mojito to hide whatever my face was doing.Felix had been
(Sabrina’s POV)The south terrace took my breath away and then Nate Cooper sat down six chairs from me and took whatever was left.The valley fell away below us into vineyards that went purple at the edges where the sun was setting, and the whole thing looked like something out of a film.I should have been enjoying the view.I was counting chairs instead.Luca pulled mine out for me, his blazer sleeve brushing my bare shoulder as he leaned past.“You look beautiful tonight,” he murmured as he sat down beside me.“You’ve said that three times,” I told him.“I’ll say it a fourth.” His knee pressed against mine under the tablecloth and he left it there. “You look beautiful tonight.”“You’re ridiculous,” I said, but I leaned into the warm pressure of his thumb when it found my shoulder blade through the silk of my dress.Felix dropped into the seat beside Nate with so much enthusiasm he knocked a bread roll onto the floor. He scooped it up, dusted it off, and extended his hand across the
(Nate’s POV)I was late. On purpose and also not on purpose.My navy suit was still creased at the elbow. Shoes scuffed. Shirt collar wrinkled. I’d shaved in the airport bathroom with a disposable razor that left a nick under my jaw.“Baby, come on,” Alexis called from the passenger side, already out, already posing.She had on a white linen jumpsuit, oversized sunglasses pushed into her blonde hair, and gold hoops hung through her ears. She was four months pregnant and glowing.Her phone was up before both feet hit the gravel. “Oh my God, look at this place. Hold on—I need the turret.”“We’re late, Alexis.”“Two seconds.” She angled the phone higher. “Got it. Baby, come stand with me, I want one—”The castle hit me square in the chest. Honey-colored stone, ivy crawling up walls older than money, a courtyard that said you don’t belong here.This was Atwood territory. Not the building—the world. The kind of wealth that didn’t shout. The kind that sat in the landscape and made every dol
(Sabrina’s POV)The castle was absurd. It rose into the blue sky like something from a picture book a child would refuse to put down.Felix had his window down in the car ahead and was narrating the approach like a nature documentary.“And here we observe the Atwood family entering their natural habitat,” his voice drifted back to us.“He’s been doing this since Lyon,” Luca said beside me, amused.I leaned forward between the seats. “He’ll do it until someone stops him.”Luca laughed. He was in a linen shirt with the sleeves rolled to his elbows, his forearms tan from outdoor site visits, his dark hair pushed back from his forehead.My hand was on my belly. I could feel my bump now under the loose pale blue dress Adrian had picked out. The baby shifted, a tiny push, and my breath caught.The cars stopped. Felix was out first.The event coordinator, a small woman in a black apron, met us at the door, and Felix had already launched into a negotiation about the pet policy before the rest
(Sabrina’s POV)The tennis ball bounced twice before I reached it, and Felix whooped from the other side of the net.“That’s FOUR!” he shouted gleefully, pointing his racket at me. “Four to two. I’m a god. An athletic god. Say it.”“You’re cheating,” I called back, wiping my forehead with my wrist.“I’m WINNING. There’s a difference. Sabrina, there’s a difference and she refuses to acknowledge—”“You moved the line with your foot, Felix.”“SLANDER.” He pressed his free hand to his chest. “I would never. Luna saw the whole thing. Didn’t you, Luna?”Luna was asleep in her carrier by the net post. She hadn’t moved in forty minutes.“Brina. Serve. I want five before Eric comes out and ruins my fun by being productive.”I tossed the ball up and hit it cleanly. Felix lunged sideways with a dramatic grunt that was completely unnecessary, and I was laughing when I saw Eric crossing the garden from the main house.He was in his usual dark suit, coffee in hand, jacket slung over one arm, but so
(Sabrina’s POV)“Congratulations, Mrs. Cooper. You’re one month pregnant.”My fingertips landed on my stomach before I told them to. The doctor kept talking, but I was already three streets ahead. Already pricing the crib. Already picking the name.Pregnant.For three years I had been Nate Cooper’s
(Felix’s POV)Sabrina went still beside me and I knew before I turned my head.I didn’t need to see. I felt it in the way her arm locked against mine—every muscle going tight at once, her whole body bracing like a woman who’d just heard a sound in a dark house.I turned anyway.Alexis. Fifteen feet
(Sabrina’s POV)Adrian drove me to the hospital himself.He would not let Eric send a car, would not let Charlie come along in the front seat with a packed lunch and a blood pressure cuff he’d stolen from Adrian’s bag. He said it was a medical appointment, not a field trip, and he said it with the
(Sabrina’s POV)His name was Luca Ferrante, and my brothers greeted him like he had never left.Charlie came out of the kitchen wiping his hands and bellowed “FERRANTE!” across the porch so loudly that Luna bolted off my lap and disappeared under a chair.Felix vaulted the porch railing and tackled







