Ethan's silence was a heavy, suffocating blanket that pressed down on the entire car. His eyes, still fixed on me in the rearview mirror, were wide with a disbelief so profound it bordered on horror. Jenna's whimpers, which had been loud and self-pitying just moments before, gradually subsided into muffled sniffles. She sensed the shift in the atmosphere, the raw, dangerous tension that had nothing to do with her scraped arm.
I watched her in the peripheral, my heart oddly detached. She was me, five years ago. Scrambling for attention, desperate for validation, her pain a performative show for Ethan. The bitter irony was not lost on me. I had been that girl, clutching at shreds of his affection, believing his lies. But I was not that girl anymore.
"Married?" Ethan finally choked out, his voice hoarse, disbelieving. "To whom? Who would marry you, Alize? After everything? What kind of man would take on your baggage?" The anger returned, hot and possessive, pushing through his shock.
My mouth curved into a sardonic smile. "That, Ethan," I said, my voice calm, "is none of your business. You forfeited your right to know anything about my life the day you threw me out on the street."
A furious honk from a car behind us startled him. We were still blocking the narrow lane, the light drizzle turning into a steady downpour. Ethan cursed under his breath, jamming the car into gear. The tires squealed as he accelerated, speeding past the accident site, leaving the mangled guardrail behind.
The Townsend Estate gates loomed ahead, massive wrought iron structures flanked by tall stone pillars. Ethan drove through, his face a mask of furious confusion. He pulled up to the grand entrance of the mansion, the headlights cutting through the gloom, illuminating the elegant facade.
"Jenna, stay in the car," he commanded, his voice sharp and unyielding. She looked up at him, startled, but didn't argue.
He killed the engine. Before I could move, he was out of the car, yanking my door open. His hand clamped around my arm, his grip bruising. He practically dragged me out onto the wet gravel driveway.
"You're going to quit your job," he announced, his eyes narrowed, his voice low and dangerous. "Whatever pathetic little thing you're doing to support yourself, you're done. You're coming back with me. You belong with me, Alize."
I stared at him, bewildered. "My 'job'?" I scoffed, a bitter laugh escaping my lips. "What exactly do you think I'm doing, Ethan? Are you going to go back to telling me I'm worthless without you again? That no one else would ever want me?" His words, so casually cruel, stung, even now. The memories of those dark days, when I genuinely believed his poisonous narrative, flooded my mind.
"I don't care," he snarled. "Whatever it is, it's beneath you. You were meant for more. For us. You were my executive assistant, my right hand. You belong in a boardroom, not... not doing whatever it is you do now." He gestured vaguely at my modest dress, then at the impressive mansion behind me. "Clearly, you're still struggling. Living in someone else's shadow."
"Struggling?" I repeated, my voice rising, the indignity of his words fueling a fresh surge of anger. "You know what I did, Ethan? After you took everything? I cleaned toilets. I waited tables. I babysat demanding brats for minimum wage. I worked myself to the bone, every single day, to put food on my table and a roof over my head. I learned to run a small business, to manage accounts, to negotiate contracts. I learned to survive. Do you want the full list? Because I could go on."
His face contorted in a mixture of anger and disgust. "Stop it!" he roared, his hands clenching into fists. "You're just trying to make me feel guilty! It's all in the past! I'm here now, Alize. I'm here to fix things. To make amends." His voice softened, losing its edge, replaced by a strangely desperate plea. "I know I messed up. I never should have let you go."
Flashback
The polite hum of the reunion ballroom, the clinking of glasses. Ethan had been basking in the spotlight, accepting congratulations, when a small group of his former classmates had cornered him.
"Ethan, old friend! You remember Alize, don't you?" one of them had slurred, a little too much champagne loosening his tongue. "Poor girl. Haven't seen her in ages. Changed her number, you know. Disappeared off the face of the earth."
Another chimed in, "Yeah, I saw her once, early on, at the farmers' market. Looked like she'd seen better days, bless her heart. Pushing a cart, looking at the cheapest produce."
A third, more malicious, chuckled. "Probably just got what she deserved. Ethan was always too good for her. Probably got dumped, left with nothing."
Then, a quiet voice, a woman who always kept to herself, spoke up. "Actually, I saw her at the prenatal clinic, about five years ago. She looked... gaunt. Tired. Like she was carrying the weight of the world."
Ethan froze. Prenatal clinic? His mind raced. Five years ago. That was... right after the divorce.
"Which clinic?" he demanded, his voice suddenly sharp, cutting through the casual chatter like a knife. The group fell silent, startled by his intensity.
"Uh... I don't remember, Ethan," the woman stammered, shrinking back. "Just... a local one. In the winter. Around... December, maybe? Five years ago, definitely."
December. Five years ago. The pieces clicked into place with a sickening thud. The divorce. Her sudden disappearance. The stretch marks. It all made sense. A child. His child. Hidden from him.
He had felt a primal surge of something he couldn't name. Not love, not exactly. More like a fierce, possessive anger. His property. His legacy. He had been denied.
He had ignored Jenna's insistent tugs on his arm, her pleas to return to their celebratory circle. He had pushed through the crowd, hell-bent on finding Alize, on confronting her. My child. The thought reverberated in his mind like a war drum.
End Flashback
"Alize," he said again, his voice softer, reaching out to touch my face. "My Alize. I know. I know everything. I saw your medical reports. I know you were pregnant. I know you went through with it. Why? Why did you keep my child from me?"
My breath hitched. My entire body went rigid. He knew. He had always known. The casual cruelty of that phone call from the hospital, the dismissive "there is no baby"—it wasn't ignorance. It was a deliberate, calculated denial. He had seen the reports, known I was fighting for our child's life, and he had still chosen to ignore it. He had still chosen Jenna. He had still chosen his career.
"You saw my reports?" I whispered, my voice trembling now, not with anger, but with a bone-deep chill. "And you still let me... you still let me lose that baby alone? You still chose to be with her? You still chose to discard me like trash?" The realization hit me like a physical blow. He wasn't surprised I had a baby. He was surprised I had kept it. And now, he wanted to claim it as his own.
"I didn't think you would go through with it!" he protested, his voice rising in desperation. "I thought you'd... handle it. Like before. And then, when you disappeared... I thought you just wanted to start fresh. I never imagined you'd keep it. Our child, Alize! My blood! My legacy!" His eyes, wild and possessive, swept over my abdomen once more. "Where is he? Or she? We need to go get them. Bring them home. My child!" He lunged for me, trying to pull me into his arms, to claim me, to claim this phantom child.
"No!" I shrieked, backing away, my hands instinctively going up in defense. "There is no child, Ethan! There is nothing left for you to claim! You left me with nothing but scars, and a broken womb!"
"Mommy!" A small voice, clear and sweet, cut through the night.
Both our heads whipped around. A little girl, perhaps five or six years old, with a cascade of dark, curly hair and wide, innocent brown eyes, stood on the porch, rubbing the sleep from her eyes. She wore a pink nightgown and clutched a worn teddy bear. Her face lit up when she saw me.
"Mommy!" she cried again, dropping her teddy bear and running, her little arms outstretched, straight towards me.





