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After My Husband Forced Me to Lose Our Baby Novel Cover

After My Husband Forced Me to Lose Our Baby

The gown Clayton chose was the color of champagne—expensive, shimmering, designed to catch light. I stood in front of the penthouse mirror, watching my reflection blur at the edges. The silk clung to my ribs, my collarbones, all the places where I'd grown too thin over six years of living in his gilded cage. My fingers traced the scars along my left cheek, the ones that twisted from temple to jaw. The makeup artist he'd hired had done her best, but under the bathroom's harsh lighting, the ridges still showed through the foundation like fault lines in porcelain. "You're not riding with me." Clayton's voice cut through the silence. He stood in the doorway, adjusting his cufflinks—platinum, monogrammed. His tuxedo fit like it had been painted on, every line sharp enough to draw blood. When he looked at me, his gaze skipped over my face entirely, landing somewhere near my shoulder. "The car will take you to the kitchen entrance," he continued.
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Chapter 2

The cramps started two days later.

I was in the bathroom, staring at the marble tiles, when the first wave hit. Sharp. Twisting. Like something inside me was tearing loose. I gripped the edge of the sink, my knuckles going white, and watched my reflection fracture in the mirror.

The second wave brought blood.

I called Clayton. My fingers shook so badly I could barely hold the phone. It rang once. Twice. Three times.

"What is it?" His voice was clipped, impatient.

"Something's wrong." The words came out broken. "I'm bleeding. Clayton, I think—"

"I'm in a meeting."

"Please. I need—"

"Handle it yourself, Parker. I don't have time for this."

The line went dead.

I slid to the floor, the cold tiles pressing against my cheek. The pain came in waves now, relentless, dragging me under. I fumbled for my phone again, dialed 911 with trembling fingers, and heard my own voice from very far away, giving them the address.

The paramedics were kind. One of them held my hand in the ambulance, her grip steady while the city blurred past the windows. I wanted to tell her about the baby, about Clayton, about how I'd thought maybe this time he'd choose me. But the words wouldn't come.

When I woke, the room was too white. Sterile. The fluorescent lights hummed overhead like insects. An IV dripped clear liquid into my arm, and standing beside the bed was Dr. Aris—Clayton's concierge doctor, the one who made house calls at three in the morning and never asked questions.

"Where's Clayton?" My voice came out hoarse.

Dr. Aris adjusted the IV without meeting my eyes. "Mr. Cole is handling a PR situation. He asked me to ensure you're comfortable."

"The baby—"

"I'm sorry, Miss Evans." His tone was practiced, clinical. "There was nothing we could do."

The room tilted. I tried to sit up, but my limbs felt heavy, disconnected. "What are you giving me?"

"Something to help you rest." He increased the drip rate. "You've been through a trauma. Sleep is the best medicine."

But I didn't want to sleep. I wanted to scream, to break something, to make Clayton feel even a fraction of this hollowness. Instead, the drugs pulled me under, and the white room dissolved into nothing.

When I returned to the penthouse three days later, Dr. Aris was waiting with a bottle of vitamins.

"Mr. Cole wants you to take these." He set them on the nightstand, his expression unreadable. "Twice daily. They'll help with your recovery."

I stared at the amber bottle. "What are they?"

"Supplements. Iron, B-12, folic acid. Standard post-miscarriage protocol."

He left before I could ask anything else.

For a week, I took them. The pills were small, white, innocuous. But they made me feel strange—distant, like I was watching my life through frosted glass. My thoughts moved slowly, syrup-thick. When I tried to cry, nothing came.

On the eighth day, I held the pill under my tongue until Dr. Aris left. Then I spit it into my palm and stared at it.

The pharmacy was three blocks away. I wore sunglasses and a scarf, kept my head down. The pharmacist was young, with kind eyes that reminded me of the paramedic.

"Can you tell me what this is?" I slid the pill across the counter.

She examined it, then looked up at me. Something shifted in her expression. "Where did you get this?"

"Does it matter?"

She hesitated. "It's a sedative. A strong one. Mixed with mood stabilizers." Her voice dropped. "This isn't something you take for recovery. This is something you take to keep someone quiet."

The walk back to the penthouse felt endless. My hands shook. My chest burned. When I pushed through the door, Clayton was there, pouring scotch at the bar.

"You're drugging me." I held up the bottle. "These aren't vitamins."

He didn't even turn around. "Dr. Aris said you needed them."

"I needed you." My voice cracked. "I lost our baby, and you weren't there. You were with her."

"Don't be dramatic."

"Dramatic?" The bottle slipped from my fingers, pills scattering across the marble. "You're poisoning me to keep me compliant. To make me easier to ignore."

Finally, he turned. His eyes were cold, flat. He crossed the room in three strides and gripped my chin, his fingers digging into the scarred tissue. Pain shot through my jaw.

"You forced my hand." His breath was hot against my face. "Your emotional outbursts were becoming inconvenient. Sabrina was asking questions. The staff was talking. I needed you manageable."

"Manageable."

"You're mine, Parker. I saved you. I own you." His grip tightened. "And if keeping you means keeping you sedated, then that's what I'll do."

He released me and walked away, leaving me standing among the scattered pills.

I touched my jaw where his fingers had been. The skin felt hot, bruised. In the window's reflection, I saw what I'd become—a ghost in an expensive cage, medicated into silence, bleeding out in bathrooms while he chose someone else.

Something inside me, something that had been bending for six years, finally snapped.

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