Mag-log inI spent years being the perfect wife—patient, loyal, invisible. I built a home, raised a child, and loved a man who slowly stopped choosing me. When betrayal became routine and silence was expected, I realized my sacrifice meant nothing to them. Walking away wasn’t an act of revenge. It was survival. This is the story of a woman who gave everything to her family—until she finally chose herself
view moreAlice’s POV
“I don’t want my mommy anymore. I wish Aunt Lily could be my new mommy.”
That was my daughter’s five older birthday wish.
I overheard those devastating words the moment I pushed the front door open. I froze in the shadow of the entryway, still wet from the rain. With a ragged gasp, my breath caught in my throat. I couldn’t believe what I was hearing.
Inside the paper bag I carried was the ballet dress Camilla had been talking about for weeks — the limited ‘Swan Lake’ edition. I’d driven to three different boutiques before finally finding it, in the display window of a small shop on the west side of town.
From my other arm hung a strawberry shortcake from a bakery that required a three‑week preorder. I had tried so hard to make her birthday special, she meant so much to me.
I quietly moved to the entrance to the dining room.
Camilla sat at the table, wearing the cute little princess dress I’d sewn for her myself. Three late nights, needle pricks on my fingers, tiny pearls stitched one by one, onto pale pink tulle. She was clinging to Lily’s arm, pressing her cheek against it, smiling up at her aunt like she adored her.
“I want Aunt Lily,” Camilla said, her little face scrunched up. “Mommy’s bossy. She tells me off and makes me tidy up. She’s not nice. I hate it when she washes my hair and the shampoo gets in my eyes.”
Lily is my half‑sister, and my husband David’s first love. She had lost her husband recently.
I understand that the life of a woman living alone can be fraught with difficulties, so in the beginning, David began inviting her to our home on special holiday occasions.
Then it became every weekend. Soon she started appearing at our house and in our lives frequently. Too frequently.
Since then, David had been… attentive. Considerate. Present for her, in ways he hadn’t been for me in years. I had noticed. But I said nothing.
“I like you, too,” Lily told Camilla gently, choosing every word with care. “But you’ve already got a mom. I can’t be your mom, sweetie.
She covered her mouth as she laughed, eyes soft, voice even softer. Perfect.
Graceful. Reluctant. Kind. But quietly triumphant. See? Camilla chooses me.
“But you’re better,” Camilla insisted. “You’re nice and you always play with me!”
Then she turned to David. “Daddy, you like Aunt Lily, too, right?”
David smiled. Not at Camilla.
At Lily.
His expression softened in a way that was once reserved for me. My heart felt leaden in my chest, and my eyes grew misty.
Seeing his smile, Camilla clapped little hands. “Yeah! Daddy, can Aunt Lily stay with us? Can I have a new little brother?”
Little kids don’t know cruelty. They just tell the truth in a gush of childish emotions.
They all sat there; David, Lily, and Camilla, framed by warm lights, with leftover party confetti on the table. Looking like a cozy family.
And I stood in the doorway with a melting cake and a carefully wrapped gift, feeling like someone who’d walked into the wrong house.
“Mom!” Camilla finally noticed me. Her bright smile fell instantly. “It’s my birthday party. You’re late! Why haven’t you dressed up nice and pretty, like me and Aunt Lily?”
Lily wore a cream‑colored cashmere dress, simple and expensive in that way that pretends not to be. A diamond brooch rested at her neckline, and gold jewelry dangled from her wrists. Her chestnut curls fell loosely over her shoulders.
I felt dowdy. In a faded gray sweater, old jeans washed too many times; my hair pulled into a low ponytail, loose strands sticking to my damp forehead. The uniform of someone who doesn’t get time to change.
I took a breath, my nails digging into my palm. “Camilla, don’t talk to me like that. I’m your mother!”
The baby who used to curl into my chest and mumble Mama, kicked the table leg instead, annoyed.
I walked over and set my gifts down in front of her.
A square box wrapped in pale blue paper; silver ribbon tied neatly on top. And the small chestnut cake, in a plain white box, a hint of cream showing at the seam.
“Happy birthday, my darling,” I said.
Our housekeeper appeared, carrying something enormous. A gift box almost as tall as Camilla. Rainbow holographic wrapping. A fluffy pink bow.
“Camilla,” Lily said brightly. “I have a present for you, too.”
Camilla’s eyes lit up. She tore into the wrapping.
Inside was a three‑story princess castle, as tall as my child. Pink towers, working gates, glowing windows. Each level decorated with frosting‑like roses and tiny figurines. At the top stood a crystal princess in a jeweled gown, throwing rainbow light across the room.
“Whoa!” Camilla gasped, eyes wide with disbelief.
My little blue box suddenly felt microscopic. Camilla didn’t open it; she merely tossed it aside.
Then the cake box tipped over. One side collapsed. I didn’t bother to check inside.
“Aunt Lily!” Camilla threw herself into Lily’s arms, burying her face in Lily’s soft cashmere chest. “I love you so much! You’re the best! Thank you for the big pink castle!”
Lily hugged Camilla back, casting a weary, fragile glance at David. "I'm so sorry, sweetie," she murmured, her voice laced with exhaustion. "I wanted to stay and play with you all night, but I think I’ve hit a wall. I really need to get on the road and back home."
Camilla’s face fell instantly. Her grip on Lily’s waist tightened, and she looked up at David with tearful, pleading eyes. "No! Daddy, don't let her go! It’s raining and dark, and Lily's tired! She can stay with us!"
"You're not going anywhere tonight, Lily," David said firmly, his eyes softening as he looked at her. "Camilla's right. I'm not having you drive ten miles in this downpour."
David glanced at the two of them—Lily looking small and drained, Camilla clinging to her like a lifeline. Finally, his eyes found me.
“Alice,” he said, “Let Lily take the master suite.”
“What? master suite?!” My voice little more than a hoarse whisper,I searched his face for the hint of a joke.
He noticed my hesitation. “It’s just for one night,” he added, with a little shrug. “Alice, this is our guest we’re talking about. Don’t be petty.”
Petty?
“Can’t you see? Lily’s exhausted,” David explained. “She needs to wind down and a warm bath will help her relax. But only the master suite has a tub.” His tone left no room for negotiation.
The master bedroom. King-size bed. Private balcony. Ensuite bathroom.
I inhaled slowly, my thoughts in a whirl. I frowned,"David, you are not serious, are you? It's our room."
Camilla tilted her head back, her eyes full of disdain and reproach as she mimicked her father's phrasing.“Petty Mommy, Petty Mommy. Aunt Lily is tired, and you are kicking her out! You are so mean. ”
[David’s POV]When the wedding was disrupted, Lily cried all the way back to the manor.She leaned on me as I guided her inside. She sounded like she was heart-broken.Her lovely gown was looking crumpled from being scrunched into the passenger seat of my car. Her makeup was running and her tiara was no longer sitting straight in her hairstyle.In the drawing room, I said, “Do you want to go upstairs and get changed?”She retorted, “Why bother? Everything is ruined!” She threw herself down on a lounge chair and shucked off her shoes. She tore off the tiara and veil.What was she upset about the most? The public humiliation? The gossip and scandal that will follow? Or, missing out on marrying me, which seems to have been her goal for quite some time now.“Why? Why would that bitch say such a thing, David?” She beat her fist against the arm of the chair. More tears flowed.I fetched her some tissues then sat on the couch opposite her chair, waiting for the sobs to subside. I felt powerl
[Alice’s POV]Everything around me looked blurry, and sound seemed to be coming at me from a long way away.I shook my head, tried to sit up and fell back down against the pillows. My vision quickly cleared. I was in a recovery room, with a nurse in attendance.“Good afternoon, Alice,” she said cheerfully. “Would you care for some hot tea or sparkling mineral water?”“Ah, yes, a cup of tea would be nice, thanks.”I looked down at my body, under the white linen covers. The big baby bump was gone. Under the covers, I felt down my abdomen and my fingertips encountered bandaging.“My… where’s my baby?” I cried.“It’s okay, don’t worry. The baby has been taken to the NICU.”Adam walked into the room and crossed to my bedside. He leaned over and gently kissed my forehead.“You’re awake,” he exclaimed.I tried a smile. “Adam, the baby…?”“He’s doing well,” he said with a grin.“He? I’ve got a little boy?”“A very little boy. Sure, he’s underweight but we knew that. But Alice, he’s perfect!”
[Alice’s POV]After Adam instructed the director of the board of the Prières clinic, to address all ongoing charges to my account now, things started moving.Before dinner, there was a knock on my door and my oncology specialist, Doctor Ibanez, joined me.“Hello, Alice,” she said, sounding a little contrite. “I’m sorry I didn’t make our morning appointment. I er…”“It’s okay,” I interrupted. “There was a mix-up, that’s all. So, I missed this afternoon’s scheduled operation. How soon can you reschedule it?”She smiled. “I’ve already got you into theater at 11.30 am tomorrow morning.”“That’s marvelous,” I said, even though I had my reservations.While I wasn’t looking forward to facing the surgeon’s scalpel, I was eager to have the whole thing done, so I could move forward.And also, I wanted to meet my baby.“Mr Müller has scheduled a meeting for Doctor Baxter and I, as soon as she arrives from Munich, in the morning. Then we can get you prepped.”“What can I expect, doctor?” I asked.
[Alice’s POV]When I woke up this morning, I was feeling a little apprehensive about this afternoon’s operation.A caesarian delivery and a hysterectomy. Followed by a full-scale program of radiation and chemotherapy.It was going to be a challenging time. And top of that, there would be a newborn to care for.I had breast-fed Camilla but Professor Baxter warned me that I wouldn’t be able to do that, this time, it would drain too much of my strength and the baby would need supplementing, anyway, to bring it up to a healthy birthweight.A nurse bustled in with a loaded tray, for my breakfast.“Thank-you,” I said, as she left.I considered all the implications of the challenges ahead of me. With any luck, my ovaries would be cancer free and they wouldn’t remove them. So, I won’t be plunged into instant menopause. Yet, I will never have another child. While I felt that two children were enough for any working woman to cope with, in the back of my mind I wondered if Adam would want a biol
[Alice’s POV]The air inside the Swiss Institute for Advanced Oncology didn't smell like death. It smelled like electricity, ozone, and the sharp, clean scent of possibility.Endall Andorra pushed my wheelchair through the pressurized glass doors of the main research wing, and for the first time in
[Adam’s POV]I was born with a platinum spoon in my mouth, but it tasted like ash.From birth my trajectory was plotted by men in suits who cared more about stock margins than humanity. I was the sole heir to the Ballard dynasty. The crown prince. The golden calf. And like any prized animal, I was
[Adam’s POV]The adrenaline from throwing the punch was fading, replaced by the cold, sterile focus of the operating room. My knuckles throbbed — a dull, rhythmic reminder of David’s face beneath my fist — but I didn’t have the luxury of nursing a sore hand.Under the harsh glare of the surgical li
[Alice's POV]“I won’t sign this.” I firmly pushed the document back.David frowned. “What did you say?” It was clearly not the reaction he expected.“You heard me. I won’t admit to something I haven’t done.” I looked at him and stated each word clearly. “I won’t sign this confession. Even if it’s












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