I was eight months pregnant, suffocating inside a gilded cage for ten long years. My marriage to Ethan Vanderbilt was nothing but a cold, calculated transaction. His family paid for my little brother Leo's experimental, life-saving medicine, and in return, I endured Ethan's endless parade of mistresses and his cruel, dismissive taunts. My only flicker of hope, a fragile, dangerous thing in that house, was the life growing inside me. Then, a blinding flash of red on the road. A blaring horn too late. Tiffany Hayes, Ethan' s latest social media darling, caused the crash. I fumbled for my phone, fingers slick with something warm, gasping his name: "Ethan, accident! The baby..." His voice was cold, impatient, as Tiffany's giggle echoed in the background: "Don't be such an attention-seeker." He hung up. In the sterile hospital room, amidst the quiet hum of machines, the doctor' s words were a death knell: "I'm so sorry, Mrs. Vanderbilt. The baby... he didn't make it. Stillborn." My world shattered into a million pieces. Then, my phone rang again, pulling me deeper into the abyss. It was Dr. Ramirez. Due to Ethan's malicious disruption of payments, Leo' s condition had deteriorated rapidly. "He passed away an hour ago, Sarah." My brother. My son. Both gone. Numbness, a heavy blanket, descended. But then, a video message buzzed on my phone: Ethan and Tiffany, hours after the accident, laughing, kissing. "Sarah? She's probably just milking it for sympathy," Ethan slurred from the screen. The casual cruelty of it, the utter, monstrous indifference, curdled my grief into bitter resolve. How could any man be so devoid of a soul? How could a lifetime of sacrifice end in such devastating, calculated malice? That night, something inside me broke free. My baby would be buried in the Vanderbilt plot as was his right. But Leo? His ashes would come home with me. I wasn't just escaping a marriage. I was reclaiming my very soul, leaving the ashes of a destroyed life behind.
I was eight months pregnant, suffocating inside a gilded cage for ten long years.
My marriage to Ethan Vanderbilt was nothing but a cold, calculated transaction.
His family paid for my little brother Leo's experimental, life-saving medicine, and in return, I endured Ethan's endless parade of mistresses and his cruel, dismissive taunts.
My only flicker of hope, a fragile, dangerous thing in that house, was the life growing inside me.
Then, a blinding flash of red on the road.
A blaring horn too late.
Tiffany Hayes, Ethan' s latest social media darling, caused the crash.
I fumbled for my phone, fingers slick with something warm, gasping his name: "Ethan, accident! The baby..."
His voice was cold, impatient, as Tiffany's giggle echoed in the background: "Don't be such an attention-seeker."
He hung up.
In the sterile hospital room, amidst the quiet hum of machines, the doctor' s words were a death knell: "I'm so sorry, Mrs. Vanderbilt. The baby... he didn't make it. Stillborn."
My world shattered into a million pieces.
Then, my phone rang again, pulling me deeper into the abyss.
It was Dr. Ramirez.
Due to Ethan's malicious disruption of payments, Leo' s condition had deteriorated rapidly.
"He passed away an hour ago, Sarah."
My brother. My son. Both gone.
Numbness, a heavy blanket, descended.
But then, a video message buzzed on my phone: Ethan and Tiffany, hours after the accident, laughing, kissing.
"Sarah? She's probably just milking it for sympathy," Ethan slurred from the screen.
The casual cruelty of it, the utter, monstrous indifference, curdled my grief into bitter resolve.
How could any man be so devoid of a soul?
How could a lifetime of sacrifice end in such devastating, calculated malice?
That night, something inside me broke free.
My baby would be buried in the Vanderbilt plot as was his right.
But Leo?
His ashes would come home with me.
I wasn't just escaping a marriage.
I was reclaiming my very soul, leaving the ashes of a destroyed life behind.
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