/1/110564/coverbig.jpg?v=20260317182631&imageMogr2/format/webp)
was pregnant. After endless nights of silent prayers and hidden tears, the universe had finally answered. Sh
ty path leading to the farmhouse. The faint smell of freshly tilled soil lingered in the air. For the firs
lled with eager anticipation. The house was strangely silent. The c
eir bedroom, her mind rehearsing the words she had longed to say. "You're going to
ts of their matrimonial bed, was James, her husband, and Linet, the governor's daughter.
ked, disbelief and betraya
h an air of defiance. "Oh, Rita," Linet sneered, "I didn't think you'd be ho
rs threatened to spill. She turned to James, desperate for an ex
e, his silence louder
top making a scene," she snapped. In her hands were divorce papers, thrust forward like a final blow. "Sign these. James does
spered, her voice barely audible. But when she tur
re without signing those
ing her to sit at the table. The physical aggression shocked her, but the humiliat
to James one final time, hoping for him to step in, to defend the love they
asp. Linet leaned against the bedpost, her arms crossed and a sly smirk plastered a
ally thought you could hold onto a man like James? A barren wife living
was deafening, cutting deeper than Linet's cruel words. The ultra
cracking under the weight of betrayal. "Tell her
y anything, darling," Linet said smugly. "We both know the truth. You've always been the unwanted guest in thi
apers and save us all the trouble. James has found a proper wife now, someone who kn
sed rage and heartbreak, yet she refused to crumble. "You don't know an
. You're a fool who gave up everything for a man who doesn't want y
e a ghost of the man he once was,
at, James? Telling the truth? She needs to hear this befo
he turned to James, her voice trembling but resolute. "James, do you really believe th
jected. "Enough of this nonsense! Sign the papers, Rita. There's no fut
eight of the room suffocating her. Her love for James, once a beacon of hope, had now bec
pering venomously, "Don't worry, Rita. Once you're g
the pen weighed more than she could bear. Her vision blurred with unshed
window with an expression void of emotion. "How did we get here, James? I gave up everything for y
ilence was a knife twisting in her chest, the confirmation she didn't want to
on needs a future, not a barren wife dragging him down.
"I can't sign them. I still love you, James.
is eyes dark with frustration. "Rita, stop making this h
e a lifeline. "This isn't you, James. This isn't the man I fell in love with. What h
Rita. Spare us the melodrama. James isn't some puppet you can control. He made
treaked face filled with desperation. "Look at me, James," she begged. "Look me in th
erhaps love. But before he could respond, his mother's sharp voice cut through the t
papers, Rita," he said coldly. But when she shook her head, his frustration boiled
"I can't," she whispered. "I can't
y. "Oh, for heaven's sake, just get it over
inding anger, raised his hand and struck her across the face. The sharp slap
rised by his outburst. Rita's mother-in-law, however, seemed unfazed. She s
had loved and trusted more than anything had just broken her in the most unforgivable way. Tea
ature across the papers. Each stroke felt like a knife carving into her soul. Whe
" she said, her tone lac
/1/110564/coverbig.jpg?v=20260317182631&imageMogr2/format/webp)