LOGINAMELIA
I lasted exactly four bites of the grilled sea bass before I gave up.
The chef had outdone himself: lemon butter, microgreens, the little purple edible flowers Victor loves to show off to guests. It tasted like cardboard. Every time I lifted my fork, my hand shook just enough to clink against the plate. Ethan sat across from me, long legs stretched out, one ankle crossed over the other, scrolling through his phone like the rest of the world had ceased to exist.
He hadn’t looked at me once since we sat down.
I kept waiting for it: some flicker of recognition, a smirk, anything that proved he knew I’d stood outside his door this afternoon like a pervert. Nothing. Just the soft glow of the screen on his sharp cheekbones and the occasional twitch of his thumb as he typed.
Probably texting her. The blonde. Telling her how round two was going to be even better once he got rid of his annoying stepmother.
I set my fork down too hard. The crystal rang.
Ethan’s eyes flicked up for half a second, then back to his phone.
That was it. I couldn’t sit here pretending to chew while my stomach twisted itself into knots.
“I’m full,” I said, pushing my chair back. My voice came out smaller than I wanted. “I’ll head up to my room.”
I was already turning when his voice cut through the quiet like a blade.
“Is that your hobby? Watching people fuck?”
The words hit me so hard I stopped mid-step, one hand still on the back of the chair. The air left my lungs in a rush.
Slowly, so slowly, I turned around.
He hadn’t moved, but he’d put the phone face-down on the table. Those ice-blue eyes were locked on me now, unblinking, a faint curve at the corner of his mouth that wasn’t quite a smile.
My mouth opened, closed, opened again. Nothing came out.
Ethan stood up. The chair rolled back silently on the polished floor. He was in a black T-shirt and gray sweatpants again, barefoot, and the way he moved toward me felt predatory, like a panther deciding whether the gazelle was worth chasing.
I backed up until my hips hit the edge of the table.
He stopped just close enough that I could smell the faint trace of chlorine still clinging to his skin from this morning’s swim, mixed with whatever stupidly expensive cologne he wore that made my knees weak.
“I asked you a question, Amelia.” His voice was low, almost gentle, which somehow made it worse. “Do you get off on spying, or was today special?”
Heat flooded my face. “I wasn’t… I didn’t mean to,”
“Bullshit.” He tilted his head. “Door was open three inches. You stood there long enough to watch me come inside her. Don’t lie to me.”
My heart was hammering so loud I was sure he could hear it. “I was just walking past,”
“Walking past,” he repeated, tasting the words. “Right.”
He took another step. Close enough now that the heat coming off his body warmed the thin silk of my blouse. I had to crane my neck to hold his gaze.
“Tell me something,” he murmured. “When you ran back to your room and locked the door, when you shoved those pretty fingers inside your panties and rubbed your clit until you came, did you picture my cock? Or were you just jealous she got it first?”
I couldn’t breathe. My lips parted, but no sound came out.
His eyes dropped to my mouth, lingered, then dragged slowly back up. “Be honest, Mommy. I’ll know if you lie.”
The word Mommy punched the air out of me. He’d never called me that before, not once. It was always Amelia, sharp and cold, like a slap. Hearing it now, soft and filthy, felt like a match struck against my spine.
I swallowed hard. “You’re disgusting.”
That half-smile grew. “And you’re soaked right now. I can smell it.”
I wanted to slap him. I wanted to scream. Instead my traitorous body leaned toward him half an inch before I caught myself.
He noticed. Of course he did.
Ethan leaned in until his lips almost brushed my ear. “Tell me, Amelia,” he whispered. “Is my father that good too? Does he make you shake like that? Does he fuck you until you forget your own name?”
I jerked back like he’d burned me. “Don’t talk about him like that.”
“Why not?” His voice dropped even lower. “He’s not here. And you still didn’t answer my question.”
I couldn’t. Because the truth would shatter me, and the lie would taste worse.
Ethan studied my face for another long second, then shrugged like I’d bored him. He stepped around me, the heat of his body gone so fast I swayed.
“Enjoy your bath,” he said over his shoulder, already walking away. “Try not to moan my name too loud. The staff gossips.”
He disappeared through the glass doors that led to the rooftop pool, the night swallowing him whole.
I stood there for what felt like forever, hands gripping the table so hard my knuckles went white.
The sea bass had gone cold.
My wine sat untouched.
And between my legs I was so wet the lace of my thong clung to me like a second skin.
I didn’t go to my room.
I don’t know what possessed me. Maybe it was the way he said Mommy like a threat. Maybe it was the image of him moving over that girl, burned into my brain. Maybe I just wanted to prove I wasn’t the coward he thought I was.
I found myself at the glass doors, barefoot, heart racing like I was sixteen and sneaking out.
The pool lights were on, underwater LEDs shifting from indigo to violet. Ethan stood at the edge, back to me, pulling his T-shirt over his head in one smooth motion. The muscles in his back flexed and released, moonlight painting every ridge silver.
He didn’t look surprised when he turned and saw me standing there.
Just raised one eyebrow, like he’d been waiting.
“Changed your mind?” he asked.
I lifted my chin. “I came to tell you that you don’t get to talk to me like that in my own house.”
His laugh was soft, dangerous. “Your house?” He stepped closer, water beading on his chest from an earlier swim. “Tell me, Amelia. Who pays the mortgage? Who paid for that diamond on your finger? Who bought the marble you’re standing on?”
I hated how every word landed like a slap.
He stopped a foot away. “You want to set rules? Fine. Rule one: don’t watch me fuck someone unless you’re ready to take her place.”
My breath caught.
He leaned in, voice barely above a whisper. “Because next time the door’s open, I won’t be gentle. And you won’t be walking away to play with yourself in Daddy’s bathroom. You’ll be on your knees, begging me to let you come.”
I should have slapped him. Should have stormed off. Instead I stood there trembling, nipples tight against silk, every nerve ending screaming for something I refused to name.
Ethan’s eyes flicked down my body and back up, slow and deliberate. “Twenty-nine days left,” he said. “Tick-tock.”
Then he dove into the pool without another word, cutting through the water like a blade, leaving me standing on the edge shaking with rage and something a lot darker.
I didn’t go inside until the city lights blurred from the tears I refused to let fall.
And when I finally made it to my bed, alone under the twelve-thousand-thread-count sheets, I didn’t even pretend to reach for Victor’s side.
I reached for myself instead, biting the pillow so the staff wouldn’t hear whose name I was moaning when I came a second time that night.
Twenty-nine days.
God, I was already losing count.
The hotel room felt too small after Victor’s last text.I sat on the edge of the bed, staring at my phone like it might bite me. Ethan paced back and forth in front of me, his bare feet making soft sounds on the carpet. His hands kept running through his hair, messing it up more each time.“He can’t actually do that, can he?” I asked, my voice coming out smaller than I wanted. “Sue for full custody? Take our baby away from us?”Ethan stopped pacing and dropped to his knees in front of me. He took both my hands in his, holding them tight.“I don’t know,” he said honestly. His voice was rough, full of worry. “He has money. He has lawyers who work for him every day. They probably know every trick in the book. But I’m not letting him take our child. No matter what.”I looked down at our joined hands. My fingers looked so small compared to his. “What if he really can prove the relationship started before the divorce? What if the court believes him?”Ethan’s eyes filled with tears. “Then we
The silence in Victor’s office felt heavier than any scream could have been.I stood there with my hand still resting on my stomach, feeling the weight of his words settle over me like cold water. Ethan was beside me, breathing fast, his fists clenched at his sides.Victor looked exhausted, but his eyes were clear and determined. The two lawyers beside him didn’t say a word. They just waited.“You’re really going to do this?” I asked, my voice coming out quieter than I wanted. “You’re going to take us to court over our own baby?”Victor leaned back in his chair. “I don’t want a court battle, Amelia. I want what’s fair. I want a say in how this child is raised. I want to make sure my grandchild has stability. Security. A future that isn’t built on chaos.”Ethan stepped forward, his voice tight with anger and hurt. “Chaos? You think loving each other is chaos? We’re not asking you for money. We’re not asking you to play happy family. We just want to raise our baby in peace.”Victor’s ey
Ethan’s hand was still gripping mine when Victor’s words sank in.Custody.The word hung in the air like smoke, thick and choking.I stared at the phone, my heart hammering so hard I could feel it in my throat. Ethan’s face had gone pale, his jaw locked tight.“Victor,” I said, my voice shaking, “you can’t be serious. You would really fight for custody of a baby that isn’t even yours?”Victor let out a long, tired breath on the other end of the line. “I don’t want to. God knows I don’t. But if Ethan refuses to sign that document, I have to protect what’s left of this family. The lawyers say I have grounds. The prenup is clear. Any child conceived while we were still legally married…”His voice cracked. “It could be considered mine under the law.”Ethan snatched the phone from my hand, his fingers trembling with anger.“You’re threatening to take our baby away?” he said, voice low and dangerous. “After everything? After you admitted you weren’t there for her? After you left her alone f
Ethan stared at the document on Victor’s desk like it was a loaded gun pointed at our unborn child.His hands were shaking when he picked it up. The paper trembled between his fingers.“You want me to sign this?” he asked, voice low and dangerous. “You want me to say in writing that my baby with Amelia doesn’t deserve the same future as any other kid I might have someday?”Victor didn’t flinch. “It’s protection. For the family legacy. For the money that’s been in our bloodline for generations.”“Bloodline?” Ethan’s voice cracked with hurt and anger. “This baby is your blood too. My blood. Your grandchild. And you’re treating it like it’s dirty.”I stepped closer to Ethan, my hand finding his. His fingers were ice cold. “Victor, please. Don’t do this. We’re not asking for millions. We just want enough to raise this baby safely. That’s all.”Victor looked at me with tired, red-rimmed eyes. “You think I’m doing this to be cruel? I’m trying to save what’s left of this family before it com
I woke up in a hotel bed that smelled like fresh linen and fear.Ethan was already awake, sitting on the edge of the mattress with his head in his hands. The morning light cut across his bare back, showing every tight muscle. When he heard me move, he turned around. His eyes looked exhausted.“He’s going to be there in less than an hour,” he said quietly.I sat up slowly, pulling the sheet around me. My hand went to my stomach without thinking. “I keep imagining all the things he might say. None of them feel good.”Ethan reached over and took my hand. His fingers were cold. “Whatever he says, we listen. We don’t fight back today. We just… hear him out.”I nodded, but my stomach was twisting so hard I felt sick. “What if he tells us he never wants to see us again? What if he says the baby changes nothing?”Ethan’s jaw tightened. “Then we deal with it. But I don’t think that’s what this meeting is about. His voice yesterday… it sounded like he was carrying something heavy.”We got dress
Ethan stared at me like I had just slapped him across the face.His mouth opened, then closed. No sound came out.I stood there in the lobby of the building, still shaking from the conversation with Victor, my hand pressed to my stomach without thinking.“Say something,” I whispered. My voice sounded small and scared even to my own ears.“You’re… pregnant?” he finally managed. His eyes dropped to my belly, then back up to my face. “With my baby?”I nodded slowly. Tears were already slipping down my cheeks again. “I think so. The test was positive. And the timing… it has to be yours.”Ethan took one step back, then another. His hand came up to cover his mouth. For a second I thought he might actually fall over.“Oh my God,” he breathed. “Amelia… we’re having a baby?”The way he said it — half shocked, half amazed — made something warm bloom in my chest even through all the fear.“Yeah,” I said softly. “We are.”He moved fast then, closing the distance between us and pulling me into his
I stood in the living room, staring at Victor's note on the counter like it might change if I glared hard enough. The words blurred through tears—lawyers, hotel, space. It felt like a punch every time I read it.Ethan came up behind me, his hands sliding onto my shoulders, thumbs pressing gentle ci
AMELIA The apartment felt too big the next morning. Echoes in places that used to feel full. Victor’s cologne still lingered in the hallway like a ghost refusing to leave. I stood in the kitchen barefoot, staring at the coffee machine, not sure how to make one cup instead of three.Ethan came
AMELIA Victor left for the office at eight sharp, same as always. Kissed my cheek, told me he loved me, promised dinner at that new place downtown. The door closed behind him and the apartment felt like it exhaled.I stood in the kitchen for a full minute, staring at the coffee mug he left beh
AMELIA I woke up tangled in sheets that smelled like regret and something sweeter I refused to name. Sunlight poured through the blinds I'd forgotten to close, turning the room gold and warm, like nothing had happened. But my lips still tingled from Ethan's kiss, and every time I shifted, the a







