Valentine’s Day rolled around again. Just like the past five years, my husband, Simon, wasn't home to celebrate with me. He always claimed this day was the anniversary of his parents' death and that he needed to be alone to mourn them. I had always been completely understanding of his devotion. Every year on this day, I would quietly stay home, too afraid to even send him a text in case it interrupted his grief. My best friend, Regan, always told me I was suffering in silence for nothing. She said I deserved better. But I would always jump to his defense, telling her how deeply he valued family and loyalty. The day after Valentine’s, I was tidying up the house and decided to take the black trench coat he wore yesterday to the dry cleaners. As I emptied the pockets, a crumpled receipt fell out. It was from a high-end French bistro. I picked it up. The date printed at the top was glaringly obvious. February 14th. It was a receipt for their Valentine’s Exclusive Tasting Menu for Two. It even included a complimentary bouquet of roses and signature cocktails. Seeing that piece of paper, my brain simply short-circuited. I don't even know what possessed me, but my hands were shaking as I unlocked my phone and tapped on Regan's Instagram story from last night. She had posted a picture of a candlelit dinner. The caption read, "Our special spot. Another year with you." The location tagged at the top of the photo was that exact same French bistro. … The world blurred out of focus right in front of my eyes. I have no idea how I managed to walk back into the living room. The house felt just as suffocatingly cold as it had been yesterday. Memories of every past Valentine’s Day flashed through my mind like a twisted movie reel. The first year we were married, I had booked a romantic dinner weeks in advance. He had looked at me with such sorrow and said, "I'm so sorry, babe. Today is the anniversary of my parents' passing. I just need to go for a drive alone." I had canceled the reservation immediately, drowning in guilt for being so insensitive. From then on, every February 14th, he went out alone. I never asked questions. I never complained. It turned out he wasn't avoiding Valentine’s Day because of his parents. He just didn't want to spend it with me. My phone vibrated in my palm. It was a text from Regan. "Audrey, did you spend last night all by yourself again? Sending you the biggest hug!" "Ugh, you spend it alone every single year. If you ask me, you shouldn't let a man walk all over you like this." "But then again, you always say Simon is just being a good son. You have a big heart." I stared at the screen. Taking a shaky breath, I forced my trembling fingers to type a reply. "It's fine, I'm used to it. I understand him. How was your night?" "Oh my god, my boyfriend took me to that French place! The one we walked past while shopping last time. Crazy coincidence, right?" "He's been so sweet lately. He's actually sitting right next to me while I get my nails done. After this, we're going to a penthouse suite he booked downtown. It has these gorgeous floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking the bay. So romantic." I read her messages line by line, my fingers shaking so violently I could barely hold the phone. Shortly after Simon and I got married, Regan told me she had started dating someone. But for five years, she kept him completely hidden. She never posted his face. She never brought him around. I used to wonder if her boyfriend was somehow unpresentable. It turned out I saw him every single day. I grabbed my coat, hailed a cab, and headed straight to the luxury nail salon at the Plaza, the one Regan frequented every week. The moment the elevator doors slid open on the third floor, my eyes locked onto the window seats. Regan was sitting in a plush velvet chair, extending her hand to the nail technician. My husband, Simon, was sitting right beside her. He was holding a cup of iced coffee, pushing the straw right up to her lips. Regan took a sip, frowned, and muttered something. Simon chuckled, picking up a cherry from a nearby fruit platter and gently feeding it to her instead. She smiled brightly, leaning over to press a kiss to his cheek. The way Simon looked down at her was filled with a tender, raw affection I hadn't seen directed at me in years. I stood frozen by the elevators, rooted to the spot like a stone statue. My heart felt like it had been plunged into an ice bath, the pain so intense it morphed into total numbness. I pulled out my phone. Standing behind the frosted glass partition, I snapped over a dozen crystal-clear photos. Then, I turned around and stepped back into the elevator. As the metal doors slid shut, I leaned heavily against the wall. Fragments of the past rushed back to me. Back in college, he would run across the basketball court, flashing a huge, goofy grin in my direction every time he scored. After graduation, he got down on one knee, swearing he would make me the happiest woman alive. My father had always admired his ambition. Before my dad passed away, he slowly handed the reins of his entire company over to Simon. At my father's funeral, Simon had held me tight, whispering into my hair, "Audrey, I've got you. I'll take care of you, and I'll take care of the business." Right now, my father's life's work was entirely in his hands. And the golden son-in-law my father had trusted so deeply was out feeding cherries to my best friend. I unlocked my phone and uploaded every single photo to a secure cloud drive. For the next week, I played the part of the blissfully ignorant wife perfectly. Simon must have sensed something was slightly off. He started acting far more attentive than usual, bringing home pastries from my favorite bakery after work. "Audrey, have I been neglecting you lately?" he asked one evening, wrapping his arms around my waist from behind, his tone dripping with fake guilt. "Work has been crazy. And with the anniversary of my parents passing, my head has just been in a dark place. I'm sorry I haven't been there for you." Using his dead parents as a shield again. A wave of pure nausea hit me. "It's fine," I replied softly. "You value family. You're a good son. I understand." The weather was beautiful the day Regan invited me out shopping. She linked her arm through mine, acting as chummy and sweet as if she hadn't stolen a thing in the world. "Audrey, look at this dress! Isn't it stunning?" She spun around in front of the boutique's full-length mirror. The neckline was plunged low, perfectly framing the faint, reddish bruises scattered across her collarbone. "My boyfriend was way too passionate last night. I kept telling him to take it easy, but he just wouldn't listen." She smiled at her reflection, her voice laced with deliberate bragging. I looked at her through the mirror, suddenly remembering exactly how we met. When Regan first moved to this city, she was scammed out of her life savings. I was the one who took her in and let her crash in my guest room. Five years ago, her abusive ex put her in the hospital. I was the one who sat with her in the ER, helped her file the police report, and paid the deposit on her new apartment so she could hide. On the day Simon and I got married, she stood beside me as my maid of honor, crying so hard her mascara ran. She told me that having a friend like me was the greatest blessing of her life. And this was how she repaid me. "Audrey? What are you thinking about?" "Nothing." She dragged me over to the jewelry counters, pointing at a pair of diamond wedding bands. "Say, if I just randomly announced I was getting married, would it completely shock you?" I heard my own voice reply, dead flat and eerily calm. "Marriage is a happy occasion. Why would that shock me?" She seemed a little disappointed by my lack of reaction. She awkwardly put the ring down and clung to my arm again. That night, when I got home, Simon was in the shower. His phone was sitting on the nightstand, plugged into the charger. Driven by a dark, magnetic pull, I picked it up. His text threads were scrubbed entirely clean. But he couldn't erase his bank statements. For the past five years, there was a fixed monthly wire transfer. The memo read "Living Expenses." The recipient was Regan. But it didn't stop there. I dug deeper and found several massive, untraceable offshore transfers. Furthermore, I pulled up some of the company's tax filing drafts from the last few quarters. The numbers were drastically different from the financial reports he had shown me at home. He was siphoning assets. Worse, he was committing corporate tax fraud. My fingers turned to ice, but my heart felt like it was roasting over an open flame. I thought his betrayal was limited to his heart and his body. I never imagined he was actively hollowing out the legacy my father built, brick by brick. A week later, a text from Regan popped up on my screen. "Audrey, I'm pregnant!" "My boyfriend is out of town on a business trip and I feel awful. You've been through this before, could you come keep me company?" I stared at those words, my stomach churning violently. During our third year of marriage, I had gotten pregnant. I was five months along. I could already feel the baby kicking against my ribs. Simon took me to my anatomy scan. On the ride home, the car was suffocatingly silent. When we walked through the front door, he handed me a lab report, his eyes red and brimming with tears. He held me tightly and choked out, "Audrey, the doctor said the baby's development is severely compromised. Even if he survives the birth, he'll be in agonizing pain his whole life. We're still young. We can try again." I had cried until my throat bled. I didn't want to believe it. But he acted even more devastated than I was. He blamed himself, weeping into his hands, saying he had failed to protect me and our child. Eventually, under his relentless, tearful persuasion, I lay down on the operating table. Right before the anesthesia pulled me under, I felt one last, gentle flutter in my stomach. When I woke up, I was left with an empty womb and an endless, crushing void of grief. Regan was right by my side through all of it. She held my hand, crying with me, cursing the universe for being so cruel, promising me that I would be a mother someday. Now, staring at the word "pregnant" on my screen, a horrifying, sickening realization struck me. If they had been sleeping together for five years, there was absolutely no way they would have allowed me to give birth to the heir of my father's company. I bolted upright, grabbed my car keys, and rushed out the door. I dug up my old hospital patient ID and drove straight to the maternity ward I visited three years ago. I waited for three agonizing hours until a nurse finally emerged from the medical records basement with a yellowing file. "Audrey Caldwell, right? Found it." I flipped it open. The ink was perfectly clear. Fetus developing normally. No anomalies detected. I stared at those words, my hands shaking so violently the paper rattled. "Nurse... is this the exact same report that was given to me back then?" I heard my own voice ask. It sounded shredded, alien. The nurse glanced at it. "This is the original medical file. What you received back then would have been a photocopy. Is something wrong?" I shook my head, silently taking crystal-clear photos of every single page. By the time I walked out of the hospital, the sun had set. I crouched by the curb and dry-heaved until my ribs ached, but nothing came up. My baby. My baby who had already started kicking me. The baby I let them kill. I sat in my car, zipped all the photos, bank statements, and hospital records into a single encrypted folder, and emailed it straight to my corporate lawyer. Then, I put the car in drive and headed straight for the company headquarters. Simon. Regan. I hope you're ready to pay the price.

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