The Architect Who Rose Anew

Elouise Herring POV:

A week later, a package arrived. A small, velvet box. I opened it, my fingers trembling slightly. Inside lay a diamond necklace, intricate and glittering. It was beautiful, undeniably expensive. It was also completely impersonal, utterly unlike anything Axel had ever chosen for me. He knew I preferred unique, handcrafted pieces, something with a story. This felt like a standard gift from a department store, bought with an assistant's help. A peace offering, perhaps, but one without soul. It mocked our past, his previous grand gestures of deep, knowing affection.

Just as I closed the box, Bryn burst into my study, her eyes wide and innocent. "Oh, Elouise! I just saw the most beautiful necklace! Axel said it was for you! Isn't he just the sweetest?" She then walked over to my bookshelf, pulled out one of my rare first editions, and began idly flipping through it. My stomach churned. This was a violation.

"Bryn," I said, my voice strained. "Get out. And put that book back."

She pouted, her lower lip sticking out. "Axel said this was our home now. We should share everything, right?" She glanced at the necklace box, then back at me, a taunting glint in her eyes. "He said if I was good, he'd get me one just like it. Or maybe even better."

My hand tightened around the velvet box. "Get out, Bryn. Now."

Before she could respond, Axel walked in, his face a mask of annoyance. "What is all this shouting, Elouise? Can't you two just get along?" He didn't wait for my answer. He turned to Bryn, his expression softening. "Bryn, darling, is she bothering you?"

"She's just being mean about the necklace, Axel," Bryn sniffled, batting her eyelashes. "I was just admiring it, and she told me to get out."

Axel' s eyes, cold and sharp, fixed on me. "Elouise, what is wrong with you? Bryn is part of this family now. You will treat her with respect. Or you will regret it, profoundly." His voice was a low warning, a promise of consequences far worse than professional ruin. The air around him felt heavy with unspoken threats.

A chill ran down my spine. The fear, a constant companion these days, tightened its grip. He wasn't just dismissing me; he was twisting the narrative, making me the villain.

Bryn, witnessing my momentary fear, stepped closer to Axel, putting her hand on his arm, her eyes full of false concern. "It's alright, Axel. Maybe Elouise is just having a bad day. She's probably just stressed about... well, everything." Her words were a veiled jab at my crumbling career.

Axel pulled her closer, his gaze still fixed on me. "Apologize to Bryn, Elouise. Now."

My jaw clenched. Apologize? For being in my own home, for wanting my own possessions respected? The humiliation was a bitter taste in my mouth. But the fear, deep and primal, won. I knew what he was capable of. I had felt his subtle cruelty, witnessed his cold indifference. I would not risk more.

"I'm sorry, Bryn," I mumbled, the words tasting like ash. "For yelling."

Bryn smiled, a small, triumphant curve of her lips. "Apology accepted, Elouise. Now, let's go, Axel. We have that charity gala tonight." She tugged on his arm, leading him out of the study.

He didn't look back. They left, their laughter echoing through the silent penthouse, leaving me alone with the glittering, soulless necklace and the bitter taste of my own surrender.

I closed my eyes, a flood of memories washing over me. Axel, on one knee, proposing with a ring he had personally designed, each detail reflecting a piece of our shared story. "This isn't just a jewel, Elouise," he had said, his eyes filled with genuine love. "It's a promise. A promise to cherish you, to honor you, to build a life with you, side by side, always."

The promise felt like a cruel joke now. He had shattered it, piece by painful piece. In that moment, I knew, with absolute certainty, that my heart was a barren wasteland. There was nothing left for him there. Only the gnawing emptiness of betrayal.

Later that evening, I was forced to attend the charity gala. Axel insisted. He wanted a public display of our "united front," to counter the whispers. But it was all a lie. I was a prop, an accessory to his carefully crafted image.

My entrance was met with a flurry of subdued whispers. I felt their eyes on me, judging, pitying. Then, I saw them. Axel and Bryn, on the main stage, accepting an award for the museum project. My museum project. Bryn, clad in a stunning gown, sparkled under the spotlights, her hand resting intimately on Axel's chest. He beamed, a proud, possessive look on his face.

The air felt thin, suffocating. I couldn't breathe. I tried to slip away, to find a quiet corner, to disappear. But just as I turned, a sudden commotion erupted. A massive chandelier, hanging precariously above the main dining area, shuddered. A faint creak, then a groan. Panic spread like wildfire. People screamed, scrambling for cover.

Axel, his eyes wide with fear, looked around frantically. His gaze landed on Bryn, standing frozen beneath the shimmering, swaying chandelier. Then, his eyes met mine. I was further away, near an exit. For a split second, I saw it-a flicker of indecision, a moment where he hesitated, weighing his options.

Then, he moved. Not towards me, but towards Bryn. He lunged, pushing her out of the way, shielding her with his body as the massive fixture groaned one last time, then crashed to the ground, missing them by mere inches.

A collective gasp filled the room. Bryn, shaken but unharmed, clung to Axel. He held her tight, whispering reassurances, his face pale with relief. He didn't even glance at me. He had chosen. Again. And it wasn't me.

A shard of glass, sent flying from the impact, sliced across my arm. A sharp, burning pain. I stumbled, the room spinning, the noise fading into a dull roar. My vision blurred, the faces around me morphing into indistinct blurs. I felt a sudden, crushing weight in my stomach. A wave of nausea, unlike anything I'd ever experienced, engulfed me. Then, the world went black.

I woke up to the sterile smell of a hospital room, the fluorescent lights humming above me. A nurse, a kind-faced woman with tired eyes, smiled softly. "You're awake. How are you feeling, dear?"

My head throbbed. My arm ached. But there was another pain, a deeper, more unsettling ache in my lower abdomen. "What happened?" I whispered, my voice hoarse.

The nurse's smile faltered slightly. She squeezed my hand. "You had a nasty fall. And... there's something else, Elouise." She paused, her gaze filled with a gentle pity. "You're pregnant. Or, you were."

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