
After My Husband Forced Me to Lose Our Baby
Chapter 3
The Los Angeles sun was a physical weight, pressing down on the back of my neck like a hot iron. I stood on the edge of the soundstage roof, the fake city sprawling below me in a haze of smog and heat shimmer. My tactical vest was tight against my ribs, the leather chafing skin that still felt tender from Clayton’s grip weeks ago.
“Again!” The director’s voice boomed through the megaphone, distorted and angry. “Faster this time. Make it look like you actually want to survive.”
I wiped sweat from my forehead, careful not to smudge the black greasepaint masking the scars on my left cheek. Down in the luxury trailer park, the door to the largest unit swung open. Sabrina Ward stepped out, holding an iced latte, looking cool and pristine in a silk robe. She shielded her eyes, looking up at me—her stunt double, her secret, her punching bag.
Clayton had been clear. *“The nursing home fees for your mother are due, Parker. Sabrina needs this shot. You owe me.”* Always a debt. Always a ledger balanced in my blood.
I reset my position. My muscles screamed. We’d done the fight sequence fourteen times. My knuckles were raw inside the gloves. The stunt coordinator, James Morrison, a grizzled man with eyes that had seen too many accidents, adjusted my harness. He frowned, tugging on the carabiner.
“This feels loose,” he muttered, his voice low. “The webbing has too much give.”
“Fix it, then,” I said, my breath coming in short, sharp bursts.
Before he could answer, Sabrina’s assistant, a frantic young man with a headset, sprinted over. “We’re losing light! Sabrina has a dinner reservation at Nobu in an hour. We go now.”
James hesitated. “The rig needs a safety check. The tension is off.”
“Mr. Cole was very specific,” the assistant hissed, leaning in. “No delays. Unless you want to explain to him why his production is over budget?”
James looked at me, apology written in the deep lines of his face. He stepped back. “Be careful on the landing, Parker. Roll through it.”
“Action!”
I ran. The roof was gritty under my boots. I hit the mark, planted my foot, and launched myself into the void. For a second, there was only the rush of wind and the illusion of flight. I was weightless, free from Clayton, free from the cage.
Then the snap.
It wasn’t a loud noise—just a dull pop, like a dry branch breaking. The tension in the wire vanished. Gravity, cruel and immediate, snatched me out of the air.
The ground rushed up to meet me. I didn’t have time to scream. I hit the safety mat, but I hit it wrong, bouncing off the edge onto the concrete floor. The impact shattered the world into white light. A sickening crunch echoed in my ears—bone snapping, loud as a gunshot.
Pain didn’t come immediately. It was a cold shock first, a sudden inability to breathe. Then the fire started in my leg, a roaring inferno that tore a scream from my throat.
“Cut! Cut!”
Through the haze of agony, I turned my head. The crew was frozen. James was running toward me, his face pale. But beyond him, near the monitors, Sabrina stood still. She wasn’t looking at the director. She was looking at me. And she was smiling—a small, satisfied curve of her lips before she raised a hand to cover her mouth in mock horror.
***
Three weeks later, the cane was heavy in my hand. It was mahogany, tipped with brass—another gift from Clayton, another accessory for his broken doll. My leg was in a cast, the fracture complex, the doctors grim about my gait returning to normal.
I limped into the elevator of Cole Tower, clutching a manila envelope. Inside were the photos James had slipped me before the NDAs were signed—grainy shots of the harness strap, clearly sliced halfway through with a blade. Proof.
Clayton’s office was a fortress of glass and steel overlooking Manhattan. He was on a call, staring out at the skyline, when I hobbled in. He didn't turn until I slammed the envelope onto his desk.
“She tried to kill me,” I said. My voice was raspy, unused to speaking above a whisper.
Clayton hung up the phone. He looked at the envelope, then at my leg, his expression one of mild distaste. “You’re being dramatic again, Parker.”
“Look at them.” I pushed the envelope toward him. “James found the cut marks. The webbing was sabotaged. Sabrina was there that morning. She—”
Clayton opened the envelope. He slid the photos out, glanced at them for a single second, and then walked to the shredder in the corner. The machine whirred, hungry and loud. He fed the photos in, one by one. The evidence of my pain turned into confetti.
“What are you doing?” I lunged forward, but my bad leg buckled. I caught myself on the edge of his desk, gasping.
“Cleaning up a mess,” Clayton said smoothly. He walked back to me, looming over my hunched form. The scent of his cologne—sandalwood and cold ambition—filled my nose. “James Morrison has been compensated for his silence. He’s retired to Florida. And you?”
He gripped my chin, forcing me to look up. His eyes were devoid of light. “You are going to stop this. Sabrina is the face of this company’s media arm. Her reputation is worth billions. Your life?” He scoffed, a short, ugly sound. “Your life is a rounding error.”
“I’ll go to the police,” I whispered, though the threat felt hollow even to me.
Clayton laughed. It wasn't a happy sound. He leaned in close, his lips brushing my ear. “Do that, Parker, and I promise you—the leg will be the least of your problems. I will bury you so deep the world will forget you ever existed. You will never walk without pain again. You will never speak without my permission.”
He released me, wiping his hand on his suit jacket as if I had soiled him. “Now get out. You’re dripping on the carpet.”
I limped to the door, the sound of the shredder still buzzing in my ears. I didn't look back. I couldn't. Because I knew if I did, I would see the truth I had been denying for six years: the man who pulled me from the wreck hadn't saved me. He had simply been waiting to finish the job.
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