His cat allergy, a five-year lie, dissolved as I saw him stroking a cat in her living room. While I recovered from the miscarriage, Easton publicly smiled with Catarina at a gala. This profound betrayal, the loss of our child, and his utter indifference extinguished all love, leaving only chilling clarity.
At my hospital bedside, as he begged for forgiveness, I pulled out my IV. "It was my child, Easton," I told him. "You were never there." I walked out of his life forever, determined to uncover his deception and rebuild my world.
Chapter 1
Heidi POV
"It's perfect, isn't it?"
My voice was a whisper, lost under the frantic drumming in my ears.
The cushion-cut diamond on my finger caught the light, shattering it into a thousand tiny pieces. It felt heavy. Solid.
Easton Fields stood beside me, his reflection a dark shape in the polished table. He leaned in, and the scent of sandalwood and clean linen wrapped around me.
"On you, everything is perfect," he murmured. His thumb stroked the back of my hand. "My future Mrs. Fields."
The words were a physical thing, a tremor that ran straight through me. Five years. I had imagined this moment for five years. I saw our home-not his sterile penthouse, but a real house, filled with warmth and the furniture I would design.
A low buzz vibrated on the velvet tray. Easton's phone. Face up. The screen glowed.
My gaze drifted to it. An idle glance. But the words were stark against the black screen. A push notification.
Wire transfer of $50,000,000 to 'Hawthorne Manor Acquisition' confirmed.
The air in my lungs turned to glass. I couldn't draw a breath.
Hawthorne Manor.
The name was a ghost. A place I'd only heard in bitter, hushed tones. The ancestral home of the Kane family.
Catarina Kane's family.
Fifty million dollars.
The smile on my face felt brittle, like it might crack and fall off. I forced my eyes from the screen, back to the diamond. All I could see were the zeroes. The weight on my hand was no longer a promise. It was a shackle.
"Something wrong?"
Easton's voice was soft. He tilted my chin up, his sharp grey eyes searching mine.
"You don't like it? We can look at others."
"No, it's... it's beautiful." The words tasted like ash. I pulled my hand back, faking a shiver. "I think I'm just a little tired. Maybe my blood sugar is low."
Concern flooded his face. "Of course. I'll have my assistant run down to The Gilded Paw Café. Get you that almond croissant you love."
The Gilded Paw. The coffee shop with the rescue cats. Easton claimed he had a severe cat allergy. He'd wait in the car, sometimes for half an hour, telling me not to rush. I'd always thought it was devotion. A man that powerful, that impatient, inconvenienced for me.
Now, looking at his handsome, worried face, a cold pit opened in my stomach.
A man who couldn't risk a single cat hair but would secretly wire fifty million dollars to his ex-girlfriend's family?
The two facts could not exist in the same reality.
I swallowed the questions burning my throat. Not here. He would just build a smooth, plausible lie.
Easton, satisfied, turned to the consultant. "We'll take it."
He handled the transaction with effortless grace, as if he hadn't just moved a fortune for a ghost.
Outside, the Fifth Avenue air felt thin. Cold. Easton kissed my forehead. His lips were warm against my clammy skin.
"Next stop, Vera Wang. I can't wait to see you in white."
The words should have made my heart lift. Instead, my stomach clenched. I nodded, a silent machine, and let him lead me to the car. I would play along. I had to see how deep this went.
The ride was short. Easton's phone rang again. He answered.
His entire body changed. The tender fiancé dissolved, replaced by the CEO.
"I'll be right there," he said, his voice low and urgent. "Make sure she's stable."
A pause.
"I don't care what it takes."
He hung up.
He turned to me, his face a mask of regret. "Sweetheart, I am so sorry. The main server just crashed. It's a catastrophe. I have to go." He squeezed my hand. "I promise, I'll be there in an hour. Max. Just start without me."
I looked into his eyes. I searched for a flicker of truth, a hint of guilt.
I found nothing.
"Of course," I said. My voice was unnervingly steady. "Work is important."
The car pulled up to the grand entrance of Vera Wang. The driver opened my door. Easton didn't move. He gave me a quick, distracted kiss, and the car sped away, leaving me alone on the curb.
I stood there for a moment, a woman in a Chanel suit, watching his car disappear into the stream of traffic.
A sharp cramp twisted in my lower abdomen. I pressed a hand against it, blaming the stress.
"Ms. Lynn? Welcome!" The salon manager greeted me with a dazzling smile. "We're so excited. Where is the lucky Mr. Fields?"
"He was called away," I said. The lie tasted bitter. "An emergency at work. He'll be here shortly."
Humiliation crawled up my neck like a hot flush.
I was led into a plush suite, surrounded by ghosts of silk and lace. I changed into the first dress-a magnificent ball gown-and stared at my reflection.
A bride. Waiting for a groom who wasn't coming.
An hour passed.
Then another.
My phone remained dark on the velvet settee. No calls. No texts.
The cramping in my abdomen returned, sharper this time. It made me gasp. It was the physical feeling of a truth I could no longer ignore.
The server crash.
The fifty million dollars.
The urgent phone call.
I sat alone, drowning in a sea of white tulle. The world had tilted, and I was the only one who felt the fall.