Eight minutes after our divorce was finalized, Nicholas smiled like I had lost everything. He tossed the pen onto the mediator’s desk and said, “There’s nothing to divide.” His family was already at a private clinic, waiting to celebrate the ultrasound of the woman he chose over us. So I placed the penthouse keys beside the paperwork, pulled two passports from my purse, and said, “You’re right. I won’t interfere with your new life.” But the folder waiting in the car told a very different story.

The heavy silver fountain pen felt alien in my grip as the ink finally lifted from the crisp white parchment of the divorce decree, and the antique grandfather clock in the lawyer’s office chimed exactly 9:00 AM.

It was an incredibly surreal moment because there were no hysterical tears, no screaming matches, and no agonizing pain that I had spent months dreading, but instead, there was only a ringing, hollow emptiness echoing in the cavern of my chest.

My name is Giselle, I am thirty four years old, and I am the mother to two beautiful, innocent children.

Exactly eight minutes ago, I officially dissolved my decade long marriage to Nicholas, the man who once looked me in the eyes and swore to protect me until his last breath.

Barely had the ink dried on my signature when Nicholas’s phone shattered the silence with a custom, obnoxious ringtone that made me wince.

I knew instantly who was on the other end, but Nicholas didn’t even have the decency to step out of the room, choosing instead to answer it right there while sprawling in the expensive leather chair across from me and the legal representative.

His voice, usually sharp and impatient, instantly melted into a sickeningly sweet purr as he spoke to the woman on the line.

“Yes, darling, I am just wrapping up here,” he said, and I watched his face light up in a way he had never looked at me in years.

“Don’t stress, I will be right there,” he continued, and I could hear the excitement in his tone as he added, “The ultrasound is today, I have not forgotten.”

Every syllable felt like a physical weight in the room, so I kept my face an impenetrable mask as he continued his conversation without a care for the woman he had just divorced.

“Don’t worry,” he said loudly, “my mother and the whole family are meeting us there, and your child is the heir to the family legacy, after all.”

I exhaled a breath I did not realize I was holding, thinking about how in ten years of marriage, through two difficult pregnancies and countless sleepless nights, I had never once heard him use that tender, protective tone with me.

The legal representative, looking visibly uncomfortable, slid the thick stack of documents across the mahogany table toward Nicholas.

“Sir, you need to review the asset division terms before signing,” the representative said, but Nicholas didn’t even bother to read the fine print.

He scribbled his signature with a flourish of pure arrogance and shoved the papers back with a sneer of utter contempt toward me.

“Nothing to look at,” he declared, “there is nothing to divide anyway.”

He pointed a manicured finger at me, his eyes cold and mocking, and added, “The downtown penthouse is my premarital property and the SUV is mine as well.”

“The two kids? If she wants to drag them along, let her,” he said with a shrug, “it is less hassle for me that way.”

His older sister, Josephine, who had insisted on being present like a vulture circling a dying animal, immediately chimed in to support him.

“Exactly,” she said, “he is getting married to a real woman soon anyway, a woman who is actually carrying his son.”

Another aunt, sitting by the window, scoffed loudly and stared at me with pure disdain.

“Who would want a washed up woman dragging two kids in tow anyway?” she asked, before predicting that I would be back begging in a month.

The toxic words hung in the sterile air of the office, but strangely, the barbs did not pierce my skin anymore.

Perhaps when a heart is bruised for too long, it calcifies into stone, so I stood up and smoothed the wrinkles from my tailored skirt.

I opened my leather purse and placed a heavy ring of keys directly onto the center of the table.

“These are the keys to the penthouse,” I said, and my voice was eerily calm despite the chaos unfolding in the room.

Nicholas blinked, a flicker of surprise crossing his arrogant features, although we had just moved out the previous afternoon.

He recovered quickly, a condescending smirk playing on his lips as he looked at the keys.

“Commendable,” he remarked, “you are finally catching on to your place in this world.”

Josephine leaned forward, her eyes gleaming with malice as she addressed me.

“What isn’t yours, you eventually have to return,” she said, adding that it was a good riddance for everyone involved.

I did not offer them the satisfaction of a reaction, but instead, I reached deeper into my bag and withdrew two navy blue passports.

I flipped them open, holding them up so the gold foil of the visas caught the morning light filtering through the window.

Nicholas frowned, his posture stiffening as he looked at the official documents in my hand.

“What are those?” he demanded, and I watched the confusion set in as he realized something was happening that he did not control.

“The visas have been finalized since last week,” I replied, meeting his gaze head on with a newfound confidence.

“I am taking the children to study in London,” I informed them, and a stunned silence smothered the room as Nicholas froze.

His mind was clearly struggling to process the shift in power, and Josephine was the first to break the quiet with her shrill voice.

“Are you out of your mind?” she shouted, “Do you have any idea how much international schooling costs when you do not have a dime to your name?”

I looked at them, my expression completely unreadable as I prepared to leave their world behind forever.

“Money is no longer your concern,” I said simply, and at that exact moment, the heavy oak doors of the office opened.

A man in a crisp chauffeur’s uniform stepped in, and beyond the glass walls of the lobby, a sleek, black Mercedes GLS was idling at the curb.

The driver bowed his head respectfully to me, ignoring the stunned family members staring at him.

“Miss Giselle, the car is prepped and ready,” he said, and I saw Nicholas’s face drain of color as he shot out of his chair.

“What kind of theatrical circus are you putting on?” he yelled, “Who is paying for that ridiculous display?”

I turned away from him, kneeling down to look at my daughter, Bella, and my son, Samuel, who were clutching my hands with nervous energy.

I stood back up, looking at the man I once loved for the very last time before I made my exit.

“Rest assured, Nicholas,” I said softly, but with a blade of ice in my tone that caused him to flinch.

“From this exact second forward, the kids and I will never interfere with your new life,” I promised him.

I turned on my heel and walked out, the rhythmic click of my heels echoing off the marble floors until I reached the car.

As I settled into the plush leather of the backseat, the driver handed me a thick, sealed manila envelope.

“I was instructed to pass this to you, ma’am,” he murmured, and I broke the seal to find a devastatingly precise dossier inside.

There were financial documents, wire transfer receipts, and high definition photographs of Nicholas and his mistress, Melanie, signing a real estate purchase agreement at a luxury brokerage.

It was for a multi million dollar condo, the exact condo my own parents had put the down payment on when Nicholas and I were first married.

The driver caught my eye in the rearview mirror and spoke in a calm, professional voice.

“All evidence of Mr. Nicholas’s illicit asset transfers has been secured by the legal team,” he informed me.

I nodded, feeling the cool satisfaction wash over my bruised soul as the car merged onto the highway.

Just then, my phone vibrated in my palm with a single text message from my attorney, Maxwell.

“The trap is set,” it read, “and they are walking into the clinic right now.”

I stared out the tinted window, a quiet smile finally touching my lips as I realized Nicholas was expecting the happiest day of his life.

He was completely unaware that his entire empire was seconds away from a catastrophic implosion that would ruin him forever.

The June sun beat down on the chaotic traffic near the private suite of the Wellness Reproductive Center, but inside, the air was cold.

Nicholas’s mother, Carol, paced the VIP waiting area like a proud peacock, adjusting her diamond necklace with trembling hands.

Melanie lounged on the plush velvet sofa, wearing an absurdly expensive maternity dress that clung to her barely there bump.

Her face radiated an unbearable smugness, and she looked at Carol with a simpering expression that made me feel sick from afar.

“Are you comfortable, my sweet girl?” Carol cooed, patting Melanie’s hand as if she were royalty.

“I am wonderful, Carol,” Melanie replied, batting her eyelashes as if she were in a fairytale.

“Your grandson is already a strong little kicker,” she added, and Josephine practically shoved a ribbon tied gift box into her lap.

“Premium, cold pressed organic juices,” Josephine said proudly, “they are imported from the finest sources.”

“We need our family’s heir to be absolutely perfect,” she insisted, while Nicholas stood by the window with his chest puffed out in pride.

“Of course he will be perfect,” Nicholas said, “he is my son and he will have everything he could ever want.”

“I have already pulled strings to reserve his spot at the elite prep school,” he bragged, showing off his arrogance to his family.

The family chuckled in a chorus of elitist validation, and not a single thought was spared for me as I flew away to a better life.

“Melanie, we are ready for you,” a nurse in pale blue scrubs said, holding a clipboard and looking at the couple with a flat expression.

Nicholas immediately stepped forward, taking Melanie’s arm as if he were protecting a fragile treasure.

“I am coming with her,” he announced, and they walked into the examination room without looking back at his mother or sister.

The room was dimly lit, dominated by the hum of the high tech ultrasound machine that would soon reveal the truth.

Melanie hoisted herself onto the table, shivering slightly as the doctor squeezed the cold blue gel onto her stomach.

Nicholas gripped her hand tightly, leaning in to stare at the blank monitor with a look of intense anticipation.

“Don’t be nervous, darling,” Nicholas whispered, kissing her forehead as if they were in a romantic movie.

“It is definitely a boy,” he said with confidence, “I can feel him moving in there.”

The doctor, an older man with sharp eyes, pressed the transducer against Melanie’s skin and stared intently at the black and white static.

He did not smile, and he did not offer any congratulations to the couple who were waiting for their moment of glory.

Instead, his brow furrowed into a deep, troubled crease as he clicked his mouse to take a series of rapid measurements.

Nicholas, oblivious to the shift in the room’s energy, chuckled and looked at the screen with confusion.

“Looks like a strong heartbeat, doctor,” he said, “is he developing well?”

The doctor ignored him and adjusted the angle, his face tightening into a grim mask that made Melanie shift uncomfortably.

“Doctor, is something wrong with the baby?” she asked, and I could hear the smugness faltering in her voice.

The suffocating silence stretched until it was almost unbearable, and Nicholas lost his patience with the doctor.

“Hey, I asked you a question,” Nicholas barked, “speak up and tell me what you are looking at right now.”

The doctor slowly removed his hand from the transducer, grabbed a towel, and wiped the gel from Melanie’s stomach with clinical precision.

He did not look at them, but instead, he reached over to the wall mounted intercom and pressed the red button.

“Security to Ultrasound Suite 3,” he said calmly, “and send the head of the legal department as well.”

Nicholas’s jaw dropped in disbelief as he realized the situation was spiraling out of his control.

“Security? What the hell is going on?” he roared, “Did something happen to my son?”

The doctor turned his stool to face them, his expression stony and clinical as he looked at the man.

“We need to clarify a few extremely serious discrepancies, Mr. Nicholas,” the doctor said, and two burly guards entered the room.

The doctor pointed a pen at the frozen image on the screen, his voice cold as ice.

“Are you absolutely certain you are the father of this child?” the doctor asked, staring directly into Nicholas’s eyes.

“Of course I am!” Nicholas roared, his face flushing crimson, “What kind of sick joke is this?”

The doctor turned to Melanie, who was now trembling violently on the table and refusing to meet his gaze.

“Miss Melanie, are you certain about the dates of your conception that you provided on our legal intake forms?” he asked.

“I am sure,” she stammered, and her voice was barely a whisper that sounded like a lie.

The doctor took a steadying breath before dropping the truth like a live grenade.

“Based on the crown rump length, the bone development, and the overall gestational age, conception occurred five weeks earlier than you indicated,” he said.

The air in the room instantly evaporated as the weight of his words settled on the people who had tried to play the system.

Josephine and Carol, who had been eavesdropping at the door, pushed their way inside to see what was happening.

“What does that mean?” Josephine demanded, “Explain it properly right this second!”

The doctor’s voice was devoid of pity as he looked at the gathered group of conspirators.

“It means the timeline of this pregnancy contradicts the period when Miss Melanie claims she began her relationship with Mr. Nicholas,” he said.

“To put it bluntly, the math does not align,” he added, and Nicholas slowly turned his head to look at Melanie.

“Explain,” he hissed, the word slipping through his clenched teeth like a dangerous threat.

“Baby, maybe he made a mistake,” Melanie sobbed, reaching for his hand, but Nicholas yanked it away as if she had burned him.

“Machines of this caliber do not make five week errors,” the doctor said, and Nicholas felt his world fracturing.

His mind raced back to five weeks ago when he was still sleeping in the same bed as me.

“You told me it was mine!” Nicholas roared, and his voice shook the medical instruments on the tray.

“Whose child is in your stomach?” he demanded, but before she could answer, his phone began to vibrate violently.

He ignored it at first, but it kept buzzing with a relentless, panicked rhythm that made his family look at him with fear.

He finally pulled it out, and it was his Chief Financial Officer calling with urgent news that he did not want to hear.

Continue to Part 2 Part 1 of 3

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