LOGINIvy’s POV
“It’s just you and me now, little one,” I whispered again, my palm pressed firmly against my belly. The baby gave no response, of course, it was too early, but the gesture grounded me. I had no savings worth mentioning, no friends, and a family that had chosen Sienna over me. Going back to the Rae Mansion was impossible. Dad won't even take me back, and Mom? She'd happily throw me back on the street. “Where to, miss?” the cab driver asked, glancing at me in the rearview mirror. I hesitated, my mind racing. Staying in this city meant constant reminders, possible run-ins with Rowan and Sienna, and the suffocating pity of people who knew our story. No. I needed distance. A fresh start where no one knew my shame. “Take me to the train station,” I said, my voice steadier than I felt. He nodded without questions, and I leaned my head against the cool glass, letting the city lights streak by like falling stars. By the time we arrived, the afternoon had faded into early evening. I paid with the last of my emergency money I had hidden for rainy days, and dragged my suitcase into the bustling terminal. The station was alive with noise. Announcements blaring, families hugging goodbye, lovers stealing kisses. I felt like an intruder in their worlds of possibility. I scanned the departure board, eyes landing on a midnight train to Oakridge, a mid-sized city about six hours away. I had visited once for a work seminar years ago. It wasn’t glamorous, but it had factories, small businesses, and, most importantly, no memories of Rowan. A one-way ticket cost nearly everything I had left. I bought it anyway. While waiting, I found a quiet bench and pulled out my phone. No messages. No calls from family. I scrolled through old photos, deleting them one by one until my gallery felt as empty as my heart. A notification from the hospital popped up, a reminder for a follow-up appointment I could no longer attend. Rowan’s warning echoed again. Wait until you find out the truth about that pregnancy. What did he know that I didn’t? The thought sent a shiver through me, but I pushed it down. When the train finally arrived, I boarded with the sparse crowd of night travelers. The carriage was dimly lit, seats worn but clean. I chose a window seat near the back, curling up as best I could. As the train pulled out, the city lights faded behind us. Tears came again, quieter this time, soaking the collar of my shirt. How had I been so blind? Oakridge greeted me with gray skies and the distant hum of industry. I stepped off the train, suitcase wheels rattling on the platform, and inhaled the unfamiliar air. I used my phone to search for cheap hostels or motels. A place called Riverside Inn appeared, with basic, weekly rates, near the industrial district. I walked the twenty minutes, legs aching, stomach uneasy from the pregnancy and lack of proper food. I booked a room and collapsed onto the bed, exhaustion pulling me under for hours. When I woke, hunger gnawed at me. I ventured out, finding a small diner nearby. The waitress, a bubbly woman named Maria in her forties, took my order of eggs and toast. The next few days blurred into a rhythm of survival. I landed a job at the supermarket stocking shelves, early mornings, low pay, but it came with basic health benefits that might cover prenatal visits. My body protested, morning sickness hit harder amid the stress, and dizziness returned during long shifts. I pushed through, smiling at customers, ignoring the ache in my feet and heart. Life in Oakridge slowly took shape. I found a second part-time job tutoring kids at a local center in the evenings, my old teaching aspirations resurfacing like faint sunlight. The children’s laughter healed pieces of me I thought were broken forever. I made a few friends. Maria from the diner became a friend, slipping me extra shifts and baby clothes from her sister. Mrs. Elena invited me to Sunday services, where I sat in the back row, finding unexpected comfort in the hymns. But nights were the hardest. Alone in the small room, I’d rub my growing belly and whisper stories to the baby about a future full of love, not betrayal. I dreamed of peace. One night, dizziness struck again while cooking. I woke up on the floor, phone in hand, having called emergency services in panic. At the hospital, they ran tests. “Mild anemia and high stress,” the doctor explained. “You need support, Ivy. You can’t do this entirely alone.” I cried in the sterile room, but this time, the tears felt cleansing. I wasn’t alone, not really. The baby kicked faintly for the first time that week, a tiny reminder of purpose. Weeks turned into a month. My belly rounded noticeably. Coworkers noticed and offered congratulations mixed with curiosity. I kept my past vague, focusing on the present. Savings slowly built, enough for better prenatal vitamins and a small crib from a thrift store. I painted one corner of my room soft yellow with cheap supplies, imagining rocking my child there. Tears pricked my eyes, but this time they were warm with wonder. “Hey there, little one,” I whispered, my voice thick with emotion. “You’re really in there, fighting with me.” Maria had dropped off some extra prenatal vitamins earlier, along with a bag of gently used maternity clothes. “You’re not alone anymore, honey,” she had said with a kind hug. Mrs. Elena’s church group had also offered to throw a small baby shower next month. I stood slowly, walking to the window to watch the sunset paint the river in golden hues. The dizziness from before had eased with rest and better food. For the first time since leaving, hope didn’t feel like a distant dream. It felt possible. This city, these strangers-turned-friends, and the growing life inside me, they were my fresh start. No more looking back. Only forward. I rubbed my belly again as another soft kick answered. “We’ve got this.”Ivy's POVZayn didn’t explode. Instead, he simply stood there by the window, the evening light casting long shadows across his exhausted face. His shoulders slumped slightly, but his voice remained quiet, almost gentle. “Where do you plan to stay then, Ivy?”I swallowed hard, my swollen eyes stinging with fresh tears I refused to let fall. “I don’t know,” I admitted, my voice barely above a whisper. The truth tasted bitter. “But I’ll figure something out. I always have. I refuse to be dependent on you anymore, Zayn. Not after everything.”He nodded slowly, not dismissing my words but clearly troubled by them. He pulled the chair closer to the bed and sat down, his wrinkled suit jacket creaking. For a long moment, he just looked at me, the same man who had once seen a desperate woman on the street and offered her shelter without hesitation. Now that shelter felt like a cage lined with painful memories.“I’m not trying to force you to forgive me,” he said calmly, though guilt still shad
Ivy's POVMorning light filtered softly through the half-drawn blinds, casting pale golden stripes across the white hospital ceiling. I woke slowly, my body heavy and my mind foggy from the sedatives they had given me. My eyes felt swollen and gritty from hours of crying myself to sleep. The room was quiet except for the steady beeping of the monitors and the distant hum of hospital activity in the hallway. For a brief, merciful second, I forgot. Then my hand moved instinctively to my stomach, fingers pressing against the now-empty swell.The realization crashed over me again, quieter this time, no screaming, no violent sobs. Just a deep, hollow numbness that settled in my chest like lead. My baby was gone. The tiny life that had represented hope amid the chaos of living under Zayn’s roof had slipped away in a pool of blood and pain. I closed my eyes tightly, willing the tears not to fall again, but they came anyway, silent and hot against my cheeks.I turned my head slightly and saw
Ivy's POVShock hit me like ice water. My heart stuttered, matching the sudden frantic beeping of the monitor. I pushed myself up slightly against the pillows, ignoring the sharp pull in my abdomen. Tears already welled in my eyes, blurring his face. “What did the doctor say?” I asked, my voice trembling. “Zayn, tell me. Please. What did he say about the baby?”He avoided my gaze at first, staring at the floor, then at the window, anywhere but at me. The silence stretched, suffocating. When he finally looked up, his eyes were filled with a pain that mirrored my own growing dread.“They... they weren’t able to save the child.”The words landed like a hammer to my chest. For a second, the world went completely silent. No beeping, no hum of machines, nothing. Just those devastating words echoing in my head.They weren’t able to save the child.A sob tore from my throat before I could stop it. “No...” Tears spilled down my cheeks, hot and relentless. “No, that can’t be right. You’re lyin
Ivy's POVThe drive to the hospital became a blur of flashing lights, frantic voices, and suffocating silence.Everything felt distant, as if I were floating outside my own body while pain anchored me firmly in place. The luxury sedan tore through the city streets with a speed that should have terrified me, but I barely registered the way we swerved between cars or the angry blare of horns fading behind us. Inside the vehicle, time stretched like taffy, every second an eternity of agony. My world had narrowed to the burning throb in my abdomen, the sticky warmth of blood still seeping, and the strong arms holding me together.Zayn refused to let go.He cradled me against his chest like I was something precious and breakable, one arm supporting my shoulders while his other hand gripped mine so tightly I could feel his pulse racing against my skin. His expensive black suit was ruined, blood stains spreading across the fabric, but he didn’t seem to notice. I could hear his heartbeat, fas
Ivy's POVI stood frozen, my breath catching in my throat as my eyes locked onto the crimson stains blooming across the stone like macabre flowers. The warm liquid trickled down my inner thighs, soaking through the fabric of my dress, and a wave of nausea mixed with terror rose in my chest.No… No… Not now. Not after everything we had endured.My hands flew to my stomach instinctively, wrapping around the slight swell that had only recently become noticeable. The tiny life inside me felt so fragile, so vulnerable. I pressed my palms tighter, as if sheer willpower alone could shield it from the cruel reality unfolding around us.Tears blurred my vision, hot and relentless, spilling down my cheeks and mingling with the sweat beading on my forehead."Please..." I whispered, my voice cracking into the still afternoon air. "Please don't leave me... Not you too."Another sharp pain ripped through my abdomen, twisting like a serrated blade. I gasped, doubling over as a cry tore from my lips
Ivy's POVThe room fell into a suffocating silence.Neither of us.Not because I expected him to apologize, but because a small part of me still believed he would stop this. He would sigh, rub his forehead, and tell me he hadn't meant a word of it.Instead, he simply stood there. His face remained unreadable. The distance between us had never felt so great.A bitter smile tugged at my lips. "So that's really how it ends?"He didn't answer.I let out a slow breath and lowered my gaze to my stomach, gently resting my palm against it."I've spent every day praying that I'd be strong enough to protect you," I whispered softly, though I wasn't sure whether I was speaking to my baby or myself."I'll leave."The words sounded strangely peaceful. As though the decision had already been made for me.I lifted my eyes one last time. "I won't ask you to change your mind. I won't beg. I won't make things difficult for you."Another silence settled between us. It hurt far more than shouting ever co
Ivy's POV“I’ll drop you home.”The words came so simply, so calmly, that for a moment, I thought I had imagined them.I blinked, looking up at him.“That’s not necessary,” I said quickly, almost immediately. “I can manage. It’s not far.”A lie.It wasn’t exactly close either, and my body still fel
Ivy's POV“You’re not eating.”His voice was calm, and low… yet it pulled me out of my thoughts instantly.I blinked and looked down at the plate in front of me. I hadn’t even realized I’d been staring at the food this whole time.The table was set neatly, everything arranged with quiet elegance. T
Ivy's POVBlood.It soaked through my clothes, warm and terrifying, spreading faster than my mind could process.“No… no…”My voice came out in broken whispers as my hands trembled violently, pressing against my stomach like I could somehow hold everything together.The pain hit again.It tore thro
Ivy's POV“I can’t go with you.”The words came out before I could rethink them, but it was firm enough that even I surprised myself.Zayn paused.For the first time since I met him, something subtle shifted in his expression. Not confusion exactly… but a slight narrowing of his gaze, like he was t







