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Aurora
“From now on, she will be staying with us.”
The words didn’t feel real. Damien was holding the hands of a woman lovingly as they both stared at me like I was the stranger in the house.
She was decked in a breathtakingly sexy silk dress, its neckline daringly low and its back nearly nonexistent.
“What are you saying Damien?”
I muttered under my breath, suddenly losing the strength to speak.
He made his way inside, ignoring my question. She sauntered past me, holding his hands like she was declaring her ownership, in a way I never was able to.
“I expected a warmer welcome.”
She gestured to the sofa, her lips curving in a condescending smile when I shook my head in disbelief.
“Oh, of course, Damien hadn’t told you. I am his first love.”
I stared at her, stricken. I knew her. Genevieve. The woman he never stopped talking about.
Wiping my sweaty hands on my apron, I suddenly became self conscious. I probably smelled like dinner and looked as tired as I felt on the inside. Maybe this was all a joke.
But nothing prepared me for his next words. “I want a divorce.”
The words hung in the air, making breathing difficult. It was heavy and sharp, like something that could cut if I reached out to touch it. For a moment, I thought I was imagining it.
But when I looked up, Damien Cross was still standing there, calmly watching me with no emotion in his eyes.My husband of four years.
The man I had built my quiet, fragile world around. I walked away, heading back to the kitchen to continue cooking like nothing had happened.
I heard his footsteps seconds later and the sound of something dropping on the kitchen counter where I sliced the vegetables. My eyes followed its landing. It was a brown file.
Something warned me against opening it, but against my better judgement, I did.
My heart stopped beating at the sight of the words ‘Divorce.’
“I don’t want to put the both of us through another ten years of the same mundane life,” he continued, his voice calm, like he had rehearsed this.
“I’m in love with Genevieve.”
My grip on the knife tightened slightly.Genevieve. Of course. Her name had already carved its place into my life long before today.
“She struggles,” he added, almost thoughtfully, “seeing the both of us together at events.”
Something in my chest twisted painfully and I smiled wryly. She struggles, but I’m happy? I’m happy to have been a place holder for four years? I’m ecstatic that my husband moaned another woman’s name when he was in bed with me?
But the words never made it out. Because speaking had never changed anything.
“We’ve both been miserable,” he said. “This would be good for us.”
A quiet scoff slipped past my lips before I could stop it. He didn’t look guilty. If anything, he looked relieved. Like he had already walked away from this marriage long before today.
“Do you think I don’t struggle too?” I asked quietly.
“When you come home late… or don’t come home at all?”
Damien frowned slightly, like the question genuinely confused him.
“Genevieve is my first and only love,” he said simply.
“I thought she disappeared years ago. Now she’s back and I can’t let this marriage stand in the way of that.”
It was cold, but it was the truth. I had always known from the very beginning that he was never meant to be mine. I was a second choice. No. I was the only choice he had when she left him.
And now that she was back, there was no longer a reason to keep me.“Fine,” I said tonelessly. “I’ll sign it.”
The more time I spent in his company, the more I realized there was no point engaging in any verbal warfare against the other woman.
He knew what he wanted, and it wasn’t me. So there was no point in arguing, I thought numbly.I set the knife down carefully and turned off the stove, wiping my hands slowly with a towel.
Tears burned in my eyes, but I didn’t let them fall as I signed.I opened the file and pulled out the papers.
The words blurred at first, but I forced myself to read. When I came to the realization that I was leaving with nothing, a hollow laugh almost escaped me. Damien Cross never left loose ends.
“I’ll call Dorinda to finish dinner,” I said softly after signing.
He didn’t stop or look at me as I walked out.I packed quickly, stepping out of the house with my chest felt too tight, like I couldn’t breathe properly. I didn’t know where I was going. I just knew that I just needed to leave.
The road blurred as tears filled my eyes. I wiped them angrily, gripping the steering wheel tighter.My thoughts were incoherent and I could scarcely see where I was headed with the tears blurring my sight. My phone blared in the chaos and I picked without checking the caller.
“Hello…?”
“Aurora, it’s your gynecologist,” the voice came through clearly.
“You came in earlier today for your routine tests, remember?”
I frowned slightly, trying to focus amidst the tears and heartache.
“Yes… I remember.”
There was a pause before she continued.“I have your results. You’re pregnant.”
Everything stopped moving at that moment. My tears halted instantly.“What…?” I whispered.
“You’re pregnant, Aurora. It’s still early, but the results are clear.”
Pregnant.
The word echoed in my head over and over again, my heart beating harder and harder against my chest, and fear choking the hell out of me.
A strange calm washed over me as if I had stepped out of my own body.
Damien’ child was growing inside me. My grip on the wheel loosened slightly as my mind drifted.Our baby.
Would he have stayed if he knew? Would things have been different?The sound of a loud horn cut through my chaos and my head snapped up.Bright lights flashed directly in front of me.
“Shit!”
I tried to turn the wheel but it was too late. The impact came hard, the glass of my vehicle shattering on my face as my body jerked forward violently as the car spun.Everything went silent.
But pain existed in the silence. Then came the voices.
“Someone call an ambulance!”
“She’s still inside!”My eyes fluttered weakly.
I couldn’t see clearly as everything was hazy. Just then the car door was forced open and cold air rushed in.Strong hands reached for me.
“It’s okay… I’ve got you,” a deep voice said.It sounded so familiar that my heart trembled.
“Damien…” I whispered weakly.Of course he came.He wouldn’t just leave me like that… right?
The man pulled me gently from the wreckage, holding me close.“You’re safe,” he said again.
I clung to him, my fingers weakly gripping his shirt.
“I knew… you’d come…” I murmured, my voice breaking.
The darkness crept in as I laid in his arms. The last thought I had was that even if I died right now. I would die happy knowing he came after me
AuroraAfter identifying that my sister could be one of the potential threats I need to look out for as I watched my back, Patrice promised to look into it, and Sarah Fay thought she should keep a peeled eye on my socials. I agreed.I returned to work on Monday, expecting the usual Monday morning workflow that I’d gotten used to. Shots of coffee, attending endless meetings, reviewing proposals, approving and rejecting projects, and heading to Theo’s school during closing time, just in case Damien’s fatherhood had died off.I wasn’t thinking about him too much this period, but that doesn’t make us straight. I decided to give him that break to address what I really want, and then give him a chance to wrap up everything he needs to wrap up, in case I feel the need to give him a chance again.I was halfway through the agenda of the third meeting of the day, planning my questions when my office phone rang. I glanced at it, having a strong urge to ignore it, but answered at the last minute
DamienI gaped in a rude shock at the documents and the fact that Marcus had presented before me, realizing that I’d been living in a fantasy.And no matter how many times I realized it, my brain wasn’t just getting used to it. In fact, it made everything feel so much worse.And to crown it all, Marcus was not done with the troubles he was prepared to give me. If anything, he was just getting started. I felt tempted to believe that he was enjoying this, but his face said otherwise. So, it’s either he was a very good actor or he was genuinely concerned.“There’s something else,” he’d said.I looked up at him. “Bad news?”He was thoughtful for a moment. “Depends on context.”“Hit me.”He pulled the envelope to him, his hands pulling out a stack from the envelope as it visibly shrank. He sorted through the documents in his hands before handing me one. “I dug into the hospital libraries,” He continued, shrugging. “It’s easy to know where to look when you have a nurse to show you exactly
AuroraThis weekend, Damien didn’t show up as he would. Theo practically flew down the stairs to tell me that Damien wouldn’t be joining us.He’d wined and cried and begged me to call him. I explained to him that I can’t help it if Damien is busy, but Theo insisted.Right now, he slept off on the couch, leaving me really considering calling Damien.Painfully considering it.Patrice's visit to the house killed that idea. And apparently, she didn’t show up alone. I’d abandoned my laptop on the space in the couch to answer the doorbell when I saw two ladies grinning at me on the other side.Patrice, and a pretty brunette whose job had literally become busier than mine, had to show up during the weekendSarah Fay.“Sarah,” I wrapped her in a hug as soon as I saw her. She held on tight. “It’s been a while,” she chuckled.I pulled back. “How has it been these days?”She grinned. “Black coffee, while trying to wipe off messes that have no business being in the media.”Patrice was smiling
DamienThe visit to Theo’s school, with Aurora beside me, watching a boy way too confident for his age, reminded me of a memory stuck to me like my own skin.No matter how many years passed, and life changed, it was always with me and wouldn’t let go.The rain, the smell of antiseptic, a hospital corridor that appeared incredibly long, and a little me sitting in the hospital garden, holding a girl with a neck collar.I could still remember every second. How I’d walked into the hospital gardens that day.How I sat on an empty bench, barely noticing when a girl joined me, and without trying to comfort me, she simply stayed.It’s been nineteen years since that.It was the weekend, and I’d called Leila earlier, noting that I wouldn’t be at the office. She had rambled and snapped, and that was it.The good thing about Leila was that she’d still do the work she had to do after all her complaining and ramblings. It’s why she’d been at the company for the longest of time.A knock later, a s
DamienWith Aurora looking like she could use more space than normal, I decided I should invest my time into being a dad instead.I automatically planned my life like that of the other fathers, rearranging my meetings and active hours in the office around school events.I did it so well that I remembered more classroom schedules than actual work meetings,I obsessed over being on time to Theo’s school more than I obsessed over meeting deadlines.Leila thought it was embarrassing. I thought so too, but the grin on Theo’s face whenever I showed up at his school made me continue either way.Today was one of those days. I was already concluding a report so I could leave for Theo’s school when a figure stormed towards my office in all hell and rage.Leila tossed the folder on my table, visibly fuming. “This is the third time you’re doing this.”I looked up from my laptop. “Doing what?”“Cancelling a board meeting you rescheduled,” she cried.I glanced at the folder. “I didn’t cancel the m
AuroraA day later, I was staring at my screen angrily, thinking of the many ways I could ruin the life of the hoodlum sending these threats to my email.Apparently, whoever this person was had sent three messages in the space of 48 hours, all of them anonymous.Completely untraceable.The first one entered three hours after my confrontation with Damien in the conference room, frustrating me.The second one came in later that evening while I was preparing dinner. Leon told me to reach out to the cops. I’d ignored him, not seeing the need to involve the cops yet.This morning, I was staring at another one, minutes away from an outrage. At this rate, if I met the sender, I might strangle them.They were not just intruding into my life. They were ruining my peace.Damien had revealed the other day that Genevieve had threatened him about me, and she was responsible for the first scandal.But with the rate at which these messages rushed in, I was beginning to suspect that Genevieve wasn’t
AuroraThe way today started so perfectly scared me. My mistake was to shrug it off when I shouldn’t have.Nothing good ever came from days that began with such perfection.The weather was nice, Theo woke up early, and was in his best mood. My coffee tasted right, and I hadn’t gotten any calls with
DamienI had developed a dangerous, self-destructive habit. Too dangerous.Apparently, everytime I saw Aurora’s face on a tabloid, I bought it. So, I stopped buying tabloids.Because each time I bought one, I’d instantly regretted it. But somehow, I kept buying. And buying. At this point, the am
DamienThe next morning was worse than the night. I was surprised I had not lost it yet.Or maybe I had, but the opportunity to explode had not presented itself.I got to the office looking like death. Leila took one look at me and disappeared. When she reappeared, it was to drop a cup of coffee o
AuroraI’d be a liar if I didn’t acknowledge that the media was part of my problems.They were exhausting.One day, they’d be obsessed over celebrity gossip. The next day, they’d be meddling in billionaire feuds.This week, however, they thought that making my life their favourite hobby was a geniu







