LOGINRoberta’s POV
One month ago, I had a healthy daughter who laughed too loudly and called me Mommy. She wrapped her little arms around my waist and looked up at me with those big bright eyes.
Until that night.
“You had a son,” I said, pacing the living room. My voice shook anyway. “With another woman. And you kept him a secret for five years. Is that what you’re saying, Jace?”
“Sit down, Roberta.”
He said it so casually that for a second I just stared at him. Then I sat.
“His name is Nolan,” he said. “And he’s sick. Very sick.”
My hands went numb.
“Who’s the mother?”
“That doesn’t matter right now.”
“Who is she, Jace?”
His jaw tightened.
“What matters is that Nolan needs a bone marrow transplant.” He paused. “Ziva is a match.”
I stared at him.
Then I understood.
“No.”
“Roberta”
“No. Don’t.” I stood so fast the room tilted. “Don’t tell me you have a son and then ask me to hand over my daughter.”
His expression hardened.
“She’s his sister.”
“How do you even know she’s a match?”
Silence.
Then, “I had her tested.”
Everything inside me went cold.
“When?”
“A week ago. During her physical.”
I remembered that appointment instantly. Jace insisting she needed a check-up. Ziva coming back with a tiny bandage on her arm. The nurse saying it was routine. Me buying her ice cream afterward because she’d been so brave.
All that time, I had no idea.
“You tested our daughter without my consent.”
“You would have said no.”
“Yes!” I shouted. “Because she’s seven years old, Jace. She’s not a donor bank.”
“She’s the only match.”
The words hung between us.
I looked at him like maybe, somehow, there was still a punchline hiding in all this.
“When did it start?” I asked. “Before we got married? After? Who is she?”
“That’s irrelevant.”
“No, it isn’t. She destroyed my marriage.”
“She took nothing,” he snapped. “I made my choices. This changes nothing between us.”
Nothing.
I laughed. The sound came out cracked.
“Where has he been all this time? Your son?”
“With his grandmother.”
“Which grandmother?”
A pause.
“My mother.”
The room spun.
His mother lived six hours away. For four years, Jace had always found a reason not to visit.
My mom likes her privacy.
She doesn’t like visitors.
All lies.
His mother had known from the beginning. She had helped him hide Nolan. Helped him raise another child while I played wife in this house, blind to all of it.
“Ziva is seven,” I whispered.
“The procedure is low-risk.”
“She is seven.”
For the first time, something flickered across his face.
Not guilt.
Impatience.
The look of a man irritated that his plan was taking longer than expected.
“She will donate to Nolan,” he said. “The date is already”
“I want a divorce.”
The words came out steady.
Jace laughed.
It was the kind of laugh that made my skin crawl.
“A divorce?” He leaned back, looking at me like I’d announced I was moving to the moon. “You?”
“I’m serious.”
His face changed.
“You want to leave me,” he said slowly. “And go where?”
I said nothing.
Because we both knew.
Nowhere.
“You have no job. No money. No life outside of me.” His voice dropped lower with every word. “Everything you have is because of me.”
My chest tightened.
“You think you can walk away?” He stepped closer. “After everything I’ve done for you?”
“I’m not asking you for anything,” I said. My voice trembled, but I forced the words out. “I just want out.”
“And Ziva?”
My heart lurched.
“What about her?”
His eyes locked on mine.
“You think you’re taking her with you?”
“She’s my daughter.”
“She’s my daughter too. And unlike you, I can actually give her a life.”
“Don’t do that.”
“Do what? Tell the truth?”
My pulse pounded in my ears.
“You wouldn’t survive a week without me,” he said. “And you think a court would give a child to a woman with nothing?”
Fear wrapped around my throat.
Because Jace Riggs did not make empty threats.
“I’ll take her from you,” he said softly. “And there will be nothing you can do about it.”
I knew he could.
I knew I couldn’t fight his money, his influence, his name.
But somehow, God help me, I still said it.
“I still want the divorce.”
Something snapped in him.
One second he was standing across the room.
The next he was coming at me.
I stumbled back. My heel caught on the rug and I hit the floor hard.
But I barely felt it.
Because his hand was already raised.
I saw it coming.
I had seen it before.
The first time had shocked me.
The second had broken something inside me.
This time, I thought:
This is it.
Then the door opened.
Jace froze, his hand still hanging in the air.
The click of heels echoed through the room.
Slow. Precise.
I didn’t have to look to know who it was.
A woman like Irene Riggs never rushed.
She stepped into the room like she owned it.
Perfect blouse. Tailored trousers. Diamonds glittering at her throat.
Her eyes swept over the room, passed over me on the floor, and moved on.
Like I was a stain on the carpet.
Her fingers rested lightly on Jace’s arm.
That was all it took.
His hand dropped.
“You shouldn’t waste your strength on something like this,” Irene said.
Then she looked at me.
“Pathetic creature.”
The words hit harder than a slap.
“The transplant will happen,” she said. “Ziva is a Riggs. This is her duty to the family.”
“What if something goes wrong?” My voice cracked. “She’s only seven.”
“And?” Irene tilted her head. “Children survive these procedures every day.”
“I won’t let you use my daughter.”
She smiled.
“And what exactly have you contributed to this family?” she asked softly. “Besides one child?”
I stared at her.
“You couldn’t even give this family a son. Eight years of marriage, and still nothing.”
My throat closed.
“You call yourself a wife, yet your womb has been disappointingly silent.”
“I tried”
“Clearly not hard enough.”
The room went silent.
“The Riggs family needs an heir,” Irene said. “A son. Something you have failed to provide.”
Her gaze settled on me again.
“If we are going to lose any child, it will be the girl.”
Something inside me shattered.
“No.”
“Ziva will do the transplant,” Irene said. “And for once in your life, Roberta, be useful and stay out of the way.”
I looked at Jace.
He said nothing.
Just stood there as if this decision had been made long before tonight.
Then I heard it.
A tiny sound behind us.
I turned.
Ziva stood at the bottom of the stairs in her yellow pyjamas.
Her eyes were red.
Her lip trembled, pressed tight the way she always did when she was trying not to cry.
Jace's POVMillie’s words hung in the air between us, soft and hopeful.“Jace… let’s get married.”I was still inside her, breathing hard against her neck. Married. The word felt heavy. I wasn’t sure if I wanted it. Not really. Not with everything spinning in my head. But she was looking at me with those wet eyes, and I couldn’t say no. Not after I just yelled at her. Marry her. She wants to marry me. She's been waiting for this. She gave me a son. She gave me everything. I should want this.But the words wouldn't come. Not the ones she wanted to hear. Not the ones that felt true.“Yeah,” I said anyway, my voice rough. “Let’s do it. Make it official.”Her face lit up. I pulled out slowly and turned her around to face me. I kissed her deep, trying to feel something solid. She kissed me back like I was her whole world. When we broke apart, she pressed her forehead to mine.“I love you so much, Jace. We’re going to focus on our family now. You, me, and Nolan. That’s what matters.”I nod
Roberta's POVThe kiss consumed me—his lips warm and insistent, his hand cradling the back of my neck like I was something precious. For a heartbeat, I melted into it, kissing him back with every fractured piece of myself. Then reality crashed over me like ice water.I pulled away abruptly, stumbling to my feet. My lips tingled. My chest heaved.Brett’s eyes widened, filled with immediate regret. “Roberta… I’m sorry. That shouldn’t have happened. It won’t happen again. I crossed a line.”I nodded quickly, unable to meet his gaze. “I… I should put the first aid kit away.”I gathered the supplies with shaking hands, clearing the table in mechanical motions. I could feel his eyes on my back the entire time—heavy, worried, longing. It made my skin burn. When I finished, I paused at the doorway.“I’ll be in my room,” I said softly, without turning around.***I closed the door behind me.I leaned against it. My chest was heaving. My heart was pounding.I pressed my fingers to my lips. I co
Roberta's POVJace stared at him. His nose was broken. Blood dripped down his chin."You're going to regret this," Jace said. His voice was nasal. Gurgling. "Do you know who I am? Do you know what I can do to you?""I don't care who you are." Brett stepped closer. "I don't care what you can do. If you ever come near her again—if you ever lay a hand on her again—I will end you. I don't care what it costs me."Jace laughed. It was wet and ugly."She's not worth it," he said. "She's nothing. She's garbage. She's—"Brett hit him again. Harder this time. The sound of flesh against flesh echoed through the quiet cemetery. Jace's head snapped back. He stumbled. Jace swung back wildly. His fist landed on Brett's jaw. A glancing blow, but enough to split the skin. Brett's head turned with the impact, but he didn't stagger. He didn't even blink.Then he moved.He grabbed Jace by the collar. Slammed him against the ground with so much force that Jace's head bounced off the dirt. Brett's knees
Roberta's POVMy heart was racing.Why are you lying to me, Roberta?His question hung in the air between us. His face was still close. His eyes were still searching mine.He knows. He knows I'm keeping something. "I really need to sit down," I said. I couldn't manage to tell him that I wasn't lying to him. that would be a double lie.Brett nodded slowly. He guided me to the edge of the bed. His hand was on my lower back. His eyes never left my face.He helped me sit. Then he crouched in front of me. His hands rested on my knees."I'm going to give you some space," he said. "But I'm right downstairs. If you need anything—anything at all—you call for me."I nodded.He stood up. Walked toward the door. He paused at the threshold and looked back at me."I'll be here," he said. "Whenever you're ready."Then he was gone.The door clicked shut.My hand flew to my mouth. The tears came before I could stop them.What is wrong with me?Why do I want him to kiss me? Why do I want him?I presse
Roberta's POV "What's mine?" Brett said again.He was still in the doorway. The phone in his hand had gone dark in his grip, forgotten. His eyes were on my face, and whatever he saw there had stopped him from coming any closer too fast.I looked at my own phone. The screen had dimmed, but I knew what was still on it.*99.97%.*"Nothing," I said."Roberta.""It's nothing, Brett." My voice didn't sound like my own. "I just — I said something out loud. To myself. It wasn't—""You said my name. I heard you say something was mine." He stepped into the room slowly, the way you approach something fragile. "You were holding your chest. You looked like the floor had opened under you." He crouched slightly, his eyes level with mine. "Please. Whatever this is — I'm not going to make it worse. I just want to understand."I looked at him.At the genuine, unhurried concern in his face. The same patience he had carried through every hard moment since the hospital. He had never once demanded anythin
Roberta's POV He hesitated. I watched him weigh protocol against the look on my face — whatever that look was, it must have carried something because his posture softened slightly."This isn't standard procedure," he said. "Normally, we'd need consent from both parties for a paternity comparison.""Please. I have to bury my daughter, and I can't do it without knowing the truth."He looked at the glass cup. Then at me. Then he picked up his clipboard."I can run it as a private comparison," he said quietly. "Off the books, technically. It'll take two days. I may need you to come back for the results in person — we don't send paternity results electronically.""Two days," I repeated."Two days."I nodded. Signed where he indicated. I watched him bag the glass and labelled it and disappeared through a door I didn't follow him through.The drive back to Brett's house took longer than it should have.I sat at a red light with my hands on the wheel and my eyes on nothing. What have I done
Roberta's POV The cab was still there when I pulled into the driveway.The driver leaning against the door, arms crossed, watching my house like he wanted to leave.I barely parked. The engine was still running when I ran.“Ziva!”The back door opened.She stepped out slowly—one hand gripping the d
Connor was almost smiling, holding Ziva's iPad when he pushed open the door."I found it," he called out. "Ziva, I found your."Her bed was empty."A nurse was tucking the corner of the sheet.Connor stood in the doorway."Where is she?"The nurse glanced up. "Dr. Sammy discharged her about ten min
Ziva's POV My eyes were so heavy. Like someone had tied weights to them. The ceiling blurred."BP dropping. Forty-four over twenty-eight.""Push another fluid bolus. Wide open.""Her heart rate is fifty and falling.""Atropine. 0.2 milligrams. Slow push."Something cold went into my IV. I felt it
Roberta's POV The concrete scraped my knees.I sat there, staring at the corner where the cars had vanished. The morning sun was too bright. Birds were singing somewhere. The world continued like my daughter hadn't just been stolen.Why?Millie's voice echoed: He's brainwashed you.She was right.







