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The Moment He Chose Her Over Me and Our Baby

Chapter 1

I thought I was living a perfect life—married to the man I loved, carrying our long-awaited child, and finally stepping into the future I had always envisioned.

But everything shattered in an instant. I woke in a sterile hospital room, my body battered, no life left inside me. The physical pain was unbearable—but nothing compared to the heartbreak of overhearing the man I trusted most.

“She must never find out. No one can ever tell Veronica that I let the baby die.”

That’s when the illusion crumbled. Elias never saw me as his partner—only as a placeholder, someone useful until he no longer needed me. Now that his old flame is back, he’s made sure I’ll never be a mother again.

He expects me to fall apart. To quietly mourn. To accept the role of the discarded wife.

But I refuse.

He stole everything from me—but he didn’t break me.

And now, it’s my turn.

I won’t just survive—

I’ll make him regret ever thinking I wouldn’t fight back.

--

The antiseptic stung my nostrils before I even opened my eyes. Somewhere nearby, a monitor beeped steadily, like a countdown I hadn’t agreed to. My limbs refused to cooperate—heavy, foreign, as if they belonged to someone else. Pain lingered, dull and distant, like an echo underwater.

Voices broke through the fog. Familiar ones.

“…resign right after the procedure,” one of them said, firm and sharp. “No one must find out. Especially Veronica.”

I didn’t breathe. I couldn’t. That was Elias—my husband. I forced my eyes to slit open. Across the room, his silhouette stood beside a man in a white coat. The doctor.

“She can’t ever know I let our baby die,” Elias added.

My heart split in two.

No… My child? Gone?

For five long years, I had tried to conceive, fought through heartbreak and frustration just to reach this moment. And in a blink, everything shattered.

The doctor hesitated. “Removing her uterus means she can never have children again. Are you absolutely sure—”

“I don’t care,” Elias snapped. “Sabrina and I have a daughter. She doesn’t want Veronica—or any competition—around.”

Sabrina. That name shot through my chest like shrapnel. His first love. The one who left him, the one he supposedly got over. And now they have a child?

Elias’s voice turned cold, detached. “Veronica was convenient. Nothing more. I pitied her. Now, I’ll make sure she’s no longer a threat. She won’t leave me anyway.”

A fresh wave of pain surged—more brutal than anything physical. I wanted to scream. To leap off the bed and end it all right there. But the anesthesia held me hostage, dragging me down into the dark once again.


---

Just before everything changed, I had been smiling. My hands cradled my swollen belly as I waited for my check-up. Then came the screech of metal, a blinding burst of headlights, and the sickening snap of impact.

Then—silence.


---

The next time I came to, the lights were glaring. I was on the operating table. Panic surged, but my body refused to obey.

I begged—silently, desperately—for someone to stop them. To save me.

No one came.


---

When I woke again, everything felt muted. Dull grayness coated the world. But the pain in my abdomen roared to life.

Then I saw him. Elias, sitting at my bedside with the expression of a man preparing to lie.

“There were… complications,” he said gently. “The baby didn’t survive.”

I clenched the sheets, already knowing.

He paused—just long enough to look appropriately devastated. “And… due to the damage, they had to remove your uterus.”

Tears fell freely, but not for the reasons he thought. I cried not just for my unborn child, but for the betrayal pulsing in every word he’d spoken earlier. And still, I said nothing.

I played the part. Grief-stricken. Broken. Obedient.

He reached for my hand, stroking it like a saint. “We can still have a family,” he murmured. “I’ve already found a child to adopt.”

Adopt?

Just like that?

No mourning. No hesitation.

But I stayed silent, let him keep believing I was powerless. That I was still the woman he thought he could manipulate.

He smiled—calculated and false. “Wouldn’t that be wonderful, Veronica? We can move on. Start fresh.”

I looked up, eyes rimmed with tears. And smiled back.

“Of course,” I whispered.

But behind that smile, something new stirred. Not sorrow.

Revenge. Cold and quiet. And coming for him.

Chapter 2

I stood still before the tiny plot of earth that now held what was once my future. A single white rose trembled between my fingers as I stared down at the freshly turned soil. My child—never named, never born—lay buried beneath it.

At my side, Elias maintained the illusion of being the grieving husband. His palm was pressed gently against the small of my back, warm and steady, like a comfort. His expression was somber, the very image of loss and pain. To the onlookers, he seemed broken, devastated by tragedy.

But only I knew the unbearable truth.

He had caused this.

Murmured condolences drifted around us as friends and family trickled past, their sympathies blurring into the soft hum of wind threading through the cemetery. I barely heard them.

Then she appeared.

Sabrina.

Gliding through the mourners like she belonged, dressed in sleek black that hugged her frame and made her look more like she was attending a gala than a funeral. Her dark curls fell in glossy waves, and every step she took radiated confidence—and something colder. Cruelty wrapped in elegance.

She walked straight up to Elias, not a hint of hesitation.

And then she kissed him.

Just a whisper of contact—her lips brushing his—but enough to send a sick churn through my stomach.

She pulled back with a soft, almost playful laugh and let her hand trail across his chest.

“Oh, Veronica,” she said, turning to me with a small smile. “I do apologize. Muscle memory, I suppose. We were together for so long, I guess my body remembered before my mind did.”

Elias didn’t recoil. He didn’t even blink. A small smile played at the corner of his lips, as if the kiss meant something sweet. Familiar.

Sabrina addressed me next, her voice feigning softness. “I only just heard. I came by to offer my condolences... since I was in the area anyway.”

My jaw tightened, but I forced a polite response. “That’s… thoughtful of you. Thank you.”

The words burned like acid in my throat.

I turned to Elias, needing to escape. “Can we go now? I want to be home.”

He sighed, the sound barely concealed his annoyance.

“I actually thought today would be a good time to stop by the orphanage.”

I stared at him, dumbfounded. “What?”

“The process for adopting can take months,” he explained, with a lightness that made my skin crawl. “We should start early. Sabrina offered to come along—she’s familiar with the place.”

Sabrina’s arm slid through his, her smile stretching wider. “I’d be more than happy to guide you.”

I wanted to scream. To yell that I didn’t want her there. That I couldn’t stand the sight of either of them.

But instead, I nodded and said, “Of course.”

The ride to the orphanage was unbearable. I sat alone in the back, eyes fixed on my lap, while Elias and Sabrina took the front seats—whispering, chuckling softly, sharing glances they didn’t even try to hide.

They behaved as though I didn’t exist.

I clenched my fists, fingernails biting into my palms. Still, I stayed silent.

My thoughts wandered to a time long ago, when Elias was someone else.

The bar had been loud and humid, reeking of spilled drinks and cigarette smoke. I nursed a cocktail at the counter, trying to zone out the meaningless chatter around me.

Then came an unwelcome grip on my arm. I turned, startled, as two strangers loomed beside me, grinning in a way that sent a cold shiver down my spine.

“You really shouldn’t drink alone, sweetheart,” one of them slurred, tightening his hold when I tried to pull back.

Fear rooted me in place.

Then—his voice.

“Let her go.”

It was low, commanding, laced with quiet danger.

Elias.

He stepped in front of me, body taut, eyes sharp. The men took one look at him and backed off.

I could still remember how my heart fluttered when he turned to me, his voice gentle now. “You alright?”

That was the moment I fell. I thought he’d saved me.

I thought he’d always protect me.

But now he sat next to another woman—the woman who’d stolen him—and I realized I’d been wrong.

The car came to a stop in front of a bright building painted with cheerful colors. As we stepped out, children ran toward us, giggling, reaching out.

I swallowed the lump in my throat, trying to steady myself.

Then—one girl broke away from the rest.

She sprinted straight into Elias’s arms, shouting with glee, “Daddy!”

My breath caught. The world seemed to tilt sideways.

Elias coughed awkwardly and looked at me. “Oh—uh—she must’ve mistaken me. Veronica, don’t you think she’s just… perfect? She might be the one we’re meant to bring home.”

Before I could respond, he crouched and scooped the little girl into his arms. It was natural, fluid—like something he’d done a hundred times before.

Like he knew exactly how to hold her.

And just like that, I knew.

This wasn’t a random child.

This was their child.

Sabrina placed a hand on his shoulder, her smile calm, content. She didn’t need to say anything. I could see it all in her eyes.

The life they had built together.

The family they created—at the cost of mine.

And everything inside me broke.

Chapter 3

Three years of deception. That’s how long Elias had been playing me for a fool.

All the late-night meetings. The surprise out-of-town trips. The half-hearted kisses and vague explanations. I had accepted every single excuse, convinced myself I was overthinking—until now.

He stood across the room, arms wrapped around a little girl, smiling like everything was fine.

“I think we should bring her home,” he said, his tone light. “She deserves a proper family.”

Just like that. No hesitation. No shame. As if she wasn’t living proof of the betrayal he had carefully hidden from me for years.

I gave a nod. “Sure.”

There was no point in fighting anymore.

So we brought the child—Patty—into our home.

I did everything I could to make it work. Smiled when I needed to. Spoke gently. Pretended to care like the picture-perfect mother Elias expected me to be. I read bedtime stories, tucked her under blankets, tried to hold her hand when we walked through crowds.

But Patty made it clear—I wasn’t wanted.

She flinched when I reached for her. Screamed when I tried to help. She hurled her toys at me, kicked the table legs, and slammed every door behind her like I was poison in her world. Her small fists balled up in rage, and her glare could have cut through steel.

“You’re not my real mom!” she screamed.

The words struck harder than I ever imagined.

“My mom is Sabrina!”

That name struck like a branding iron.

I fought the rising sting behind my eyes, tried to steady my tone. “Patty, I know this is new, but—”

She didn’t wait. Her eyes darted to a vase sitting on the table nearby. With surprising strength for someone so small, she grabbed it and launched it straight at me.

Glass exploded at my feet. My breath caught in my throat—just as Elias came rushing in.

His gaze went instantly to Patty. Panic laced his voice. “What happened?”

Patty ran to him without a second thought. Wrapped her arms around his leg like he was her anchor in a storm.

“She’s mean!” she sobbed. “I want my mommy. Not her!”

Elias's eyes snapped to me, icy and full of accusation.

“What did you say to her?”

I stared at him in disbelief, mouth dry. The guilt was already mine to carry—but the blame too?

“I didn’t do anything,” I replied flatly, smoothing the fabric of my skirt with trembling hands.

He crouched and gathered Patty close, stroking her hair while whispering reassurances. His voice was soft. Warm. Familiar. A version of him I hadn’t heard in years.

After a beat, he looked up at me and said, “She’s scared, that’s all. She’s used to Sabrina. She’s called her ‘mom’ her whole life. It’s completely understandable.”

Understandable.

That word echoed in my skull, threatening to crack it open. Nothing about this felt reasonable. Nothing about this arrangement felt real. It was all just some cruel performance, and I had somehow landed the role of the unwanted extra.

Then, he added casually, “I think it would help if Sabrina stayed with us for a while. At least until Patty feels more comfortable.”

My blood ran cold.

He wanted her here. In my space. Living under the same roof?

I should have said no. I should have screamed, torn the curtains down, and kicked them both out.

Instead, I nodded again. “Alright.”

Because what difference did it make? I had already lost the moment he chose her.

Later, when no one was watching, I stepped into the hallway, pulled out my phone, and pressed call.

“Hi,” I whispered into the receiver. “I need a divorce attorney.”

That evening, when I entered the dining room, everything was already laid out on the table. Dinner was served, plates neatly arranged.

Except mine.

I hadn’t even been called.

Patty giggled on Sabrina’s lap, scooping bites from her plate. Elias poured juice into her cup, his face gentle, domestic.

I cleared my throat.

Sabrina turned, smiling faintly as if amused by my presence. “Oh! Veronica. I didn’t think you’d be joining us.”

I took a seat and glanced at the meat-heavy platter. “I don’t eat pork.”

Elias sighed, rubbing his temples. “Come on, don’t be rude. Sabrina spent the whole afternoon cooking for us. Be grateful and have some.”

I kept my voice level. “I’m not eating it.”

His jaw tightened. “What’s wrong with you?”

What was wrong with me?

I wanted to scream that everything was wrong. That this meal, this whole scenario, was absurd.

But I didn’t. I reached for my glass of water, lifted it slowly, and sipped with deliberate calm.

“Nothing,” I murmured.

I had lost this round. But I wasn't done yet.

That night, I lay in bed, eyes fixed on the ceiling, ears trained on the faint laughter floating up from downstairs. Their laughter. Their hushed voices, muffled by walls but still sharp enough to pierce through. They weren’t even pretending anymore.

A familiar ache spread across my chest, but I kept the tears at bay. I was done crying for people who never truly saw me.

Then, a sound—soft footsteps just beyond my bedroom door.

I pushed off the covers and crept into the hallway.

Patty.

She was still awake, spinning slowly at the top of the staircase, humming a tune only she knew.

I stepped closer. “Patty, sweetheart, it’s really late. You should be asleep.”

She turned, eyes squinting in irritation.

And then she bolted.

“Wait—Patty!”

Her little feet thundered down the hallway—but too fast, too wild. She stumbled.

And then fell.

My stomach dropped.

Thud. Thud. Thud.

Her tiny frame tumbled down the staircase in a blur of limbs and curls.

I rushed forward, heart pounding, barely able to think.

Then I heard it.

A scream.

“Oh my God!”

Sabrina came running, panic flooding her voice.

She didn’t even look at Patty. She looked straight at me.

“You pushed her!” she shrieked. “I saw it! Veronica pushed Patty down the stairs! Somebody help!”

The words struck me like bullets.

Frozen in place, I looked down at the child crumpled at the foot of the stairs—my body shaking, my throat dry, my world spinning out of control.

Chapter 4

Patty’s screams echoed violently through the house. She lay crumpled at the foot of the stairs, arms wrapped tightly around her leg, whimpering in pain. The staircase wasn’t particularly high, but she was still so small—too fragile for even a minor tumble.

Bruises were already blooming on her limbs, blotches of purple against pale skin. Elias rushed down beside her, sweeping her into his arms like a lifeline. His face twisted—not just with fear, but with anger.

“What the heck is wrong with you?” He barked at me, his voice sharp as glass.

I stumbled back, raising both hands. “I didn’t touch her!”

Sabrina appeared almost instantly, a hand dramatically covering her mouth like she’d stepped out of a soap opera. “I saw it,” she exclaimed. “She pushed Patty. I watched it happen.”

“No, I didn’t—” My voice cracked.

Elias turned away from me, his fury momentarily set aside as he looked down at Patty in his arms.

“Sweetheart,” he said, gently brushing hair from her face. “Tell me what happened, okay?”

Patty sniffled, tears streaking down her cheeks as she gripped the collar of his shirt. Her tiny voice broke through the silence.

“She pushed me,” she whimpered. “Mommy, she shoved me.”

Those words pierced me like a blade. I could barely breathe. Elias’s expression darkened, thunderclouds forming in his eyes.

“You’re sick,” he muttered.

I took another step back, heart pounding. “You know me, Elias. You know I would never lay a hand on her.”

But he didn’t respond. Instead, he lunged toward me, gripping my arm with a bruising force and shoving me away from Patty. I stumbled, catching myself before I fell.

“If anything happens to my daughter,” he hissed, his voice low and venomous, “I will make sure you pay for it.”

I didn’t argue.

I didn’t scream.

I simply watched them go. Elias carrying Patty out the door like a protective father. Sabrina trailing behind, pausing only to glance back at me—her mouth curled into a satisfied little smile before she followed him out.

And just like that, they were gone.

The hallway felt empty, devoid of all warmth. The silence felt like it could swallow me whole.

But I wasn’t sad. Not anymore. Not angry, either.

I was done.

The very next morning, my phone buzzed with a message that nearly made me fall to my knees:

"Divorce papers finalized. Only Elias’s signature needed."

I stared at the screen, my grip tightening around the device. My throat was dry, my chest heavy.

This was it. The end I’d been waiting for.

The lies, the humiliation, the betrayal—I’d survived it all. And I was still standing.

I went straight to the hospital, a manila envelope tucked beneath my arm, determined to end this chapter of my life for good.

He was outside Patty’s hospital room when I found him, arms folded, deep in conversation with Sabrina. The moment he saw me, his entire body tensed.

“What are you doing here?” he snapped, his eyes colder than ice.

I took out the envelope, extended it toward him. “I came to hand you something important.”

He barely looked at it. “What is it?”

A bitter chuckle escaped me. “You know well what it is. Divorce papers.”

He stared at them for a beat, unmoving. Then, suddenly, he shoved them right back at me, the force making me stagger.

“I’m not signing anything,” he said.

I blinked, stunned. “What?”

“I said no,” he replied, enunciating each word like a dagger. “I’m not giving you a divorce.”

My stomach churned. “Why not?”

His smirk was slow and chilling. “Because I want you to suffer.”

It felt like the air had been punched from my lungs.

He stepped forward, closing the distance, his voice low and cruel. “You don’t get to walk away clean. You don’t get to just disappear, Veronica.”

His eyes gleamed with venom. “You’ll stay, and you’ll live with the guilt. With what happened to Patty. No divorce.”

I clenched my fists, trembling. “You already have everything you want! You have her, you have Patty, you’ve built your perfect life—why are you still holding on to me?”

His lips curled. “Because you deserve this. Because someone needs to pay.”

A bitter laugh bubbled out of me. “You’re twisted.”

He shrugged, unbothered. “No more than you.”

That was the final crack.

I didn’t say another word. I turned on my heel and stormed down the corridor, rage bubbling beneath my skin.

I pulled out my phone and hit the number I’d memorized days ago. The call connected quickly.

A voice answered on the other end. Calm. Professional.

“It’s time,” I said.

There was no hesitation. “Understood.”

That night, as Elias and Sabrina stepped out—probably to celebrate the chaos they’d unleashed—someone else would step in.

Patty would vanish.

Not kidnapped. No ransom. No threats.

Just gone.

I had paid generously. Secured the best people. There would be no trail, no prints, no footage. Just a cold bed and a gaping hole in their perfect life.

Exactly like what they’d left in mine.

Let them search. Let them scream and cry and beg for answers. Let them feel helpless.

Let them break this time.

Chapter 5

I returned to the house like it was any ordinary day—as if I hadn’t just set in motion something irreversible. As if I hadn’t given the order to make Patty vanish without a trace. At that very moment, Elias and Sabrina were likely tearing their hair out, losing their minds in panic and confusion.

But I moved through the kitchen calmly.

I tied my hair into a loose knot, scrubbed my hands under warm water, and began cooking. The sharp aroma of garlic and chili filled the room as I stirred the pot, putting on my best impression of a dutiful housewife.

But inside? I was aflame. Boiling.

Elias wanted to ruin me? Sabrina thought she could take everything and still stand tall?

Fine. I would show them what ruin really looked like.

Then the phone on the counter vibrated.

A single message lit up the screen.

It’s done.

A grin tugged at my lips. I set the spoon down, wiped my hands on a towel, and kept cooking like nothing had changed.

And right on cue—

The front door flew open with a violent sound.

Sabrina burst inside, disheveled and furious, her eyes bloodshot and wild with rage. Elias followed her, fists clenched, his chest heaving with fury.

I barely turned my head. I simply stirred the pot with slow, deliberate movements.

Then—a sharp jolt.

Sabrina’s hand yanked at my hair with vicious force, my neck snapping back from the pull. A hiss escaped me as her nails scraped against my scalp.

“Where is she?!” she bellowed, her voice raspy.

I didn’t even flinch.

Instead, I sighed. “What are you screaming about?”

“You took her!” Sabrina shrieked, shaking me again. “Where is Patty?! What did you do with my daughter?!”

I chuckled, low and dry. “If I had really done that, do you think I’d be standing here sautéing onions?” I gestured lazily toward the stove. “If I had your precious girl, I’d be on a plane, halfway across the world.”

Sabrina’s grip only tightened. “Liar! I know it was you!”

Elias stepped forward now, his eyes locked on mine, full of accusation. “Cut the act, Veronica. We’re not idiots. Just tell us what you did.”

I tilted my head with mock confusion. “Then prove it.”

Sabrina’s face contorted with fury. “I don’t need evidence! I know it in my bones—it was you!”

She lunged.

We collided with the kitchen counter, arms flailing, nails clawing skin. It wasn’t a fight—it was a culmination of everything: years of deception, all the betrayals, and every word unsaid. It poured out in one violent burst.

Then—disaster.

The pot tipped.

The boiling water spilled, cascading down our bodies.

A shriek tore through the room—hers louder than mine—as the liquid scorched our skin. My body moved back in shock, pain flooding through every nerve, blinding and instant.

Sabrina collapsed, howling in agony.

And Elias?

He ran—not to me, but to her.

“Sabrina!” His voice cracked as he knelt, frantically inspecting her burns. His hands hovered protectively over her skin, his face twisted in pure concern. “Talk to me, baby. Where does it hurt? I’ve got you.”

I lay sprawled on the cold tiles, skin burning, tears in my eyes.

But he didn’t even glance my way.

Not once.

As if I were invisible.

As if I didn’t exist.

And somehow, that hurt more than the searing pain on my arms and legs.

A dry, bitter laugh escaped me.

“I hope both of you rot,” I rasped.

Neither of them noticed.

Neither of them cared.

Later, I dragged my broken body to the hospital. Step by agonizing step, each one more painful than the last. The sting from the burns was unbearable, but the ache in my chest weighed even heavier.

No one came with me. No one offered an arm. No one helped me inside.

The sliding glass doors opened and closed behind me with a hiss. I stumbled to the front desk, clutching the edge for balance.

The nurse glanced up briefly, brow furrowed with mild concern. Just mild.

“Please fill these out,” she said, sliding papers toward me.

Paperwork. While my skin screamed and peeled.

I wanted to laugh in her face. But instead, I took the pen, my hands trembling so badly the letters blurred on the page.

I returned the clipboard and took a seat, the cold plastic chair digging into my back. Minutes passed—maybe hours. I couldn’t tell anymore. The pain dulled everything.

Eventually, a doctor called my name.

I followed him, slow and wordless, into an antiseptic room. He examined the burns without small talk. They treated my injuries in silence while I stared at the ceiling.

I didn’t cry.

I didn’t speak.

I endured.

They later wheeled me into a recovery room. I lay there, IV attached, the white sheets scratchy against my skin, my mind dull and quiet.

That’s when I saw him.

Elias.

But he wasn’t looking for me.

He wasn’t checking on me.

He stood down the corridor, inside another room. Sabrina’s room.

I watched through the half-open door as he sat beside her bed. He cradled her hand in both of his, gently stroking her skin. His forehead rested near hers, their heads close, whispering.

His entire posture leaned toward her.

His world revolved around her.

And me?

I was a ghost.

Not the wife he refused to divorce.

Not the woman who bore burns just like the one he doted on.

I was nothing.

A hollow kind of sadness filled me then—not sadness for what I lost, but for how long I had stayed hoping things would be different.

I clenched my fists beneath the blanket, feeling my nails dig deep into my palms.

So he didn’t want to let me go?

Fine.

I’d disappear on my own terms.

That night, Elias returned home. He expected to find me waiting like always—bruised maybe, bitter perhaps, but present.

But the house was empty.

His staff tried calling. My phone rang. No answer.

Security checked every room. They searched the bedroom, the living room, even the backyard.

They found my clothes still hanging in the closet. My makeup still arranged neatly. My books untouched on the shelf. A cup on the counter half-full, like I’d only just stepped away.

But I wasn’t there.

I was gone.

No notes. No explanation. No forwarding address. Not a clue.

Elias grew agitated. He shouted for updates, demanded I be found. He sent his men to dig through security footage, to check my social media, my bank transactions.

Nothing.

It was as if I had never existed.

I had vanished—no trail, no warning, no goodbye.

And finally, he would know what it felt like to lose control.

Just as I once had.

Welcome!