Fiona woke to sunlight slicing through Lena’s living-room blinds like it had no right to be cheerful. Her neck ached from the couch, her eyes felt swollen from last night’s tears, and her body felt heavy with the kind of exhaustion that sleep couldn’t touch. The baby shifted inside her slow, rolling pressure, like a small body stretching awake. She placed a hand on her stomach, feeling the warmth beneath her palm, and for a mont she just breathed. In. Out. In. Out.
No one knew.
Not Lena. Not Elara. Not Riley. Not Maya. And definitely not Martin.
The secret sat in her chest like a stone cold, heavy, growing heavier every day. She hadn’t told a single soul about the pregnancy. Not yet. She wasn’t ready for the questions, the concern, the pity, the judgnt. She wasn’t ready for the world to know she was carrying Martin Mole’s child after one reckless night she couldn’t even regret.
She showered slowly in Lena’s tiny bathroom, borrowed a soft gray hoodie that slled like vanilla and safety, pulled on yesterday’s leggings, and tied her hair into a ssy bun. No makeup. No armor. She texted Maya.
*Not feeling well today. Taking a sick day. Sorry for the short notice.*
Maya’s reply ca fast.
*Take care of yourself. We’ve got it covered. Rest. Hydrate. Call if you need anything.*
Fiona stared at the ssage.
Rest.
She didn’t know how.
She needed air. Movent. Sothing to do with her hands so her mind wouldn’t keep replaying the lobby scene: Katherine Thorne’s laugh, her hand on Martin’s arm, the kiss on his cheek, the way he hadn’t pulled away.
She needed to feel like she still had so control.
So she went to the mall.
The place was already busy Saturday morning crowds, families, couples, teenagers laughing too loud. She wandered aimlessly at first, past bookstores and candle shops, letting the noise drown out her thoughts. Her stomach rumbled when she passed a pretzel stand; she bought one, salted and warm, and ate it slowly while sitting on a bench, watching people live lives that looked simpler than hers.
Eventually she drifted into one of the higher-end boutiques she usually avoided. Soft lighting, minimalist racks, sales associates who moved like they were on a runway.
A dress caught her eye imdiately.
Erald silk.
Sleeveless, deep V neckline, flowing skirt with a thigh-high slit. It shimred under the lights like liquid night. She lifted it from the rack, ran her fingers over the cool fabric.
She held it up to herself in the three-way mirror.
The color made her skin glow. The cut would skim her stomach perfectly hiding the small bump that was just starting to make itself known while still making her feel beautiful, powerful, desired.
She wanted it.
Not for Martin. Not for anyone else.
For herself.
For the woman she was becoming pregnant, heartbroken, but still here. Still fighting.
She checked the tag.
$1,850.
Her stomach twisted.
She could afford it barely. It would an skipping a few things, dipping into savings she’d been hoarding for the baby. But in that mont, she didn’t care. She needed sothing that felt like victory.
She was turning toward the sales associate when the curtain of the next dressing room slid open.
Clara stepped out.
Marcus’s Clara.
Blonde hair in perfect waves, designer coat draped over her arm, eyes narrowing the mont she saw Fiona holding the dress.
Clara’s gaze dropped to the erald silk.
Then lifted to Fiona’s face.
A slow, venomous smile curled her lips.
"Oh," she said sweetly. "That’s gorgeous."
Fiona’s grip tightened on the hanger.
Clara stepped closer heels clicking, perfu sharp and expensive.
"I love it," she purred. "The color. The cut. It’s perfect."
Fiona’s voice ca out flat.
"It’s mine. I’m buying it."
Clara laughed light, tinkling, cruel.
"Sweetheart," she said, reaching out to trail a finger along the silk at Fiona’s shoulder, "you can’t afford this."
She flicked the tag.
"$1,850? On a marketing assistant salary? Please."
Fiona’s blood roared in her ears.
"I can afford what I want."
Clara tilted her head, smile sharpening.
"Can you? Or is this just another fantasy you can’t quite reach? Like the engagent ring Marcus took back? Like the man you thought you could keep?"
Fiona’s hand twitched almost slapped her.
She stopped herself.
Barely.
Instead she stepped forward.
Nose to nose.
"You don’t get to take anything from ," she said, voice low, lethal. "Not the dress. Not the mont. Not my life. You already took enough when you spread your legs for my fiancé the night he was supposed to marry ."
Clara’s smile faltered just a flicker.
Then returned, colder.
"He chose ," she hissed. "He chose soone who fits.
Fiona’s heart stopped.
Clara’s eyes glead.
"Oh yes," she whispered. "Marcus told everything. How pathetic you looked trying to pretend to your mom that you were still together."
Fiona’s vision tunneled.
She leaned in closer.
"You want to know what’s pathetic?" she said, voice deadly calm. "A woman who has to steal another woman’s man to feel valuable. A woman who has to flaunt a dress she didn’t earn because her own life is empty. You can have Marcus. You can have the ring. You can even have the dress. But you will *never* have what I have."
Clara’s smile cracked just a hairline fracture.
She raised her hand.
The slap ca fast sharp, stinging, ringing across Fiona’s cheek.
Fiona’s head snapped to the side.
Pain blood hot and bright.
The boutique went silent.
Sales associates froze.
Custors stared.
Fiona slowly turned back.
Eyes blazing.
Hand to her cheek.
Clara’s face twisted triumph mixed with fear.
"How dare you slap her!"
A deep voice ca behind her .
She turned.
Martin stood at the entrance of the boutique dark coat, hair damp from the mist outside, eyes locked on her face.
On the red mark blooming across her cheek.
His gaze flicked to Clara who face was in shock in who just talked.
Then back to Fiona.
Sothing dangerous flashed in his eyes.
He stepped forward.
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