Chapter 1: The Ten-O-Three Decree
When the nib of my pen finally met the fiber of the divorce decree, the wall clock in the mediator’s office clicked to exactly 10:03 a.m. It was a sterile, strangely profound moment. There were no cinematic tears, no grand dramatic outbursts, and none of the visceral agony I had spent months imagining. Instead, there was only a vast, ringing silence in my soul—the kind of quiet that follows a long, exhausting siege.
My name is Catherine. I am thirty-two years old, a mother to two beautiful, confused children, and as of five minutes ago, the former wife of David. He was the man who once whispered promises of lifelong sanctuary against my skin, only to trade that sanctuary for the cheap thrill of a secret life.
I had barely lifted the pen when David’s phone erupted. The ringtone was distinctive, a melody I had grown to loathe. He didn’t bother with the grace of discretion. Right there, in front of me and the stone-faced mediator, his voice shifted into a register of sickening sweetness I hadn’t heard in years.
“Yes, it’s finished. I’m coming to you now,” he murmured, his eyes avoiding mine. “The checkup is today, isn’t it? Don’t worry, Allison. My entire family is meeting us there. Your child is the heir to our legacy, after all. We’re coming to see our boy.”
The mediator pushed the final copies toward him. David didn’t read them. He scribbled his name with a jagged flourish and tossed the pen onto the desk with practiced contempt.
“There’s nothing to divide,” he said, directing his words at the mediator as if I were a piece of discarded furniture. “The condo was my premarital asset. The car is mine. As for the children—Aiden and Chloe—if she wants to drag them along, let her. It’s less hassle for my new life.”
His older sister, Megan, stood by the door like a sentinel of spite. “Exactly,” she chimed in, her voice sharp enough to draw blood. “David is getting married to a woman who is actually giving this family a son. Who would want a used-up housewife with two kids in tow anyway?”
The words hung in the air, meant to sting, but they fell flat. I had been submerged in their cruelty for so long that I had developed gills. I simply reached into my purse, pulled out a heavy brass ring, and slid it across the mahogany table.
“The keys to the condo,” I said calmly. “We moved the last of our things yesterday.”
David smirked, a look of triumph crossing his face. “Commendable. You’re finally catching on to your station, Catherine.”
“What isn’t yours, you eventually have to return,” Megan added, fueling the fire of her brother’s arrogance.
I didn’t offer a rebuttal. Instead, I reached back into my bag and produced two navy blue passports. I fanned them out like a winning hand at a high-stakes table. “David, the visas were finalized last week. I’m taking Aiden and Chloe to London. Permanently.”
The smugness on his face froze into a mask of confusion. Megan was the one who found her voice first, shrieking, “Are you insane? Do you have any idea what that costs? Where would you get that kind of money?”
I looked at them both—truly looked at them—and felt a wave of pity. “Money is no longer your concern.”
As if on cue, a black Mercedes GLS glided to the curb outside the glass doors. A driver in a crisp suit stepped out, opening the rear door and bowing toward the window. “Miss Catherine, the transport is ready.”
David’s face turned a mottled purple. “What kind of circus is this?”
I didn’t answer. I knelt to pick up Chloe, while Aiden gripped my hand with a strength that broke my heart. I looked at my ex-husband one last time. “Rest assured, from this second forward, we will never interfere with your ‘new life’ again.”
As I walked down the steps, the driver handed me a thick manila envelope. “From Steven, ma’am. All the evidence of the asset transfers has been compiled.”
I climbed into the car, the scent of expensive leather a stark contrast to the stagnant air of the office. Looking out the window, I saw David and Megan arguing on the sidewalk, oblivious to the fact that their world was about to be hit by a tactical strike they never saw coming.
Chapter 2: The Heir to Nothing
The black Mercedes merged into the morning sprawl of Manhattan, the June sun reflecting off the skyscrapers with a blinding, indifferent brilliance. Inside the car, the silence was heavy. Aiden stared out the window, his small face etched with a gravity no seven-year-old should possess.
“Mom,” he whispered, not looking away from the passing blur of the city. “Is Dad ever coming to visit us in the new house?”
I stroked his hair, my heart a lead weight. “We’re going to start a new adventure, Aiden. Just you, me, and Chloe.”
My phone buzzed. A text from Steven, my attorney: The vultures have landed at the clinic. Security is in place. The trap is set.
While we headed toward JFK Airport, David and the entire Coleman clan were descending upon the Hope Private Reproductive Center. To them, this was a coronation. Allison, the mistress-turned-queen, sat in the VIP lounge in a maternity dress that cost more than my first car.
Linda, my former mother-in-law, was practically vibrating with excitement. She took Allison’s hand with a warmth she had never shown me in eight years. “My dear, are you holding up? My grandson needs his mother to be rested.”
“I’m fine, Mom,” Allison purred, casting a smug glance at David.
Megan handed over a gift box wrapped in silver. “Premium organic supplements. Only the best for the Coleman heir. We’ve already reserved his spot at the international prep school.”
The family laughed, sharing a vision of a future built on the wreckage of my marriage. No one mentioned my name. I had been erased, a footnote in the ledger of their lives.
“Allison,” a nurse called. “The doctor is ready for the ultrasound.”
David jumped up, his face glowing with pride. “I’m coming in. This is my son we’re talking about.”
The ultrasound room was cool, lit by the clinical blue glow of monitors. Allison lay on the table, her hand clutched in David’s. The doctor, a man named Dr. Aris, began moving the transducer over her abdomen. The grainy image of a fetus appeared on the screen, flickering like a ghost.
But as the seconds ticked by, the doctor’s expression shifted. His brow furrowed. He moved the transducer again, his eyes darting between the screen and the intake forms.
“Doctor?” David asked, his voice tensed with a sudden, unformed fear. “Is my boy healthy? Look at those shoulders—he’s a fighter, isn’t he?”
Dr. Aris didn’t answer. He clicked a button on the console, zooming in on the crown-rump length. He looked at Allison, then at David, his face becoming a mask of professional neutrality.
“We have a discrepancy,” the doctor said quietly.
“A discrepancy? What does that mean?” David barked.
