He had no idea his pregnant wife had just signed a $1.2 billion deal.
Fifteen minutes after Dr. Sierra Mitchell gave birth to twins, her body still trembling from emergency surgery, blood seeping through the bandages across her abdomen, her husband walked into the recovery room with another woman beside him and an envelope in his hand.
Donovan Mitchell, forty-one, real estate mogul and heir to one of Chicago’s most powerful Black dynasties, wore a suit that cost more than the nurses made in a month.
He did not smile when he saw his newborn children.
He did not ask if Sierra was okay.
He did not even look properly at the twins, a boy and a girl, still red-faced, crying softly, their tiny bodies wrapped against their mother’s chest.
He looked straight at Sierra, lying there with an IV in her arm and surgical staples holding her stomach together, and said in a voice so cold it made the room feel smaller:
“You are not my wife anymore.”
The nurse beside the monitor froze.
Sierra blinked, still foggy from medication, trying to understand what she had heard.
“Donovan… what?”
“I said you’re done,” he repeated. “This marriage is over. Sign the papers so we can both move on.”
He dropped the envelope onto the tray beside her hospital bed, right on top of the medical consent form she had signed an hour earlier, when doctors told her the twins were in distress and they needed to cut her open immediately or risk losing them both.
Sierra tried to sit up.
Pain tore through her abdomen so sharply that she gasped. The twins shifted against her chest, sensing her distress.
“Donovan, I don’t understand,” she whispered. “I just had our babies.”
“Don’t do that,” he snapped. “Don’t make this emotional. You’ve always been too emotional. That’s part of the problem.”
Behind him stood Celeste Harper.
Twenty-nine. Polished. Perfect. Dressed in ivory and gold, as if she had come to celebrate.
She stood exactly where a wife should have stood, close enough to Donovan to touch him, close enough to claim him.
Sierra felt her heart break in real time.
“Why is she here?” Sierra whispered.
Donovan did not answer.
Celeste did.
“Because this concerns me too,” she said gently, as if she were being kind. “Donovan and I are building something together. A real partnership. We need to move forward without complications.”
“Complications?” Sierra repeated.
She looked down at the twins in her arms.
The boy had Donovan’s nose.
The girl had Sierra’s eyes.
“These are your children,” Sierra said. “Our children.”
“Children I never agreed to,” Donovan said flatly.
The room went completely silent.
The nurse’s mouth opened slightly, shock breaking through her professional composure.
Sierra felt as if she had been struck.
“What are you talking about? We planned this. You said you wanted a family.”
“You planned it,” Donovan interrupted. “You stopped taking birth control without telling me. You trapped me, Sierra. My mother warned me you would do something like this when you realized I was outgrowing you.”
“That’s not true,” Sierra said, her voice rising. “You asked me to get pregnant. You said it was time.”
“I said a lot of things to keep the peace,” Donovan cut in. “But let’s be honest. You haven’t been a real wife in years. You gave up your career, that research job you loved so much. And for what? To hide in the house, playing around in the basement with test tubes like it was a hobby while I built an empire.”
Sierra’s whole body began to shake.