
After My Husband Forced Me to Lose Our Baby
Chapter 4
I called Louis from the penthouse bathroom at two in the morning, my voice barely above a whisper. The marble was cold against my back, the cane propped beside me like a crutch for a life I could no longer stand.
"Parker?" His voice was thick with sleep, confused. "What's wrong?"
"Everything." The word cracked open, spilling six years of silence. "Louis, I need help. I need to disappear."
I told him everything. The drugs. The miscarriage. The sabotaged harness. Clayton's threats. My brother's breathing changed on the other end—shallow, rapid, the sound of someone waking up to a nightmare.
"I'm going to kill him," Louis said finally. His voice had lost its usual careless edge. "I swear to God, Parker, I'll—"
"No." I pressed my forehead against my knees. "I need something better than that. I need to be dead."
The silence stretched. Then: "Tell me what you need."
We planned it over three weeks. Louis, the college dropout who'd spent four years gaming and coding in his apartment, suddenly became someone else—focused, methodical, dangerous. He mapped Clayton's security systems, found the blind spots in the yacht's camera feeds, timed the fireworks display down to the second.
"The summer solstice party," he said during our last call. "That's when we do it. I'll be waiting at the coordinates I sent you. Don't miss the window, Parker. You get one shot."
"I know."
"And sis?" His voice softened. "I'm sorry I didn't see it sooner. I should have—"
"Just be there," I said, and hung up before he could hear me cry.
The yacht was a floating palace, all white leather and teak decks, anchored off the Hamptons coast. Clayton's annual summer solstice party drew two hundred guests—celebrities, politicians, people whose names moved markets. I watched them arrive from the lower deck, where I'd been ordered to stay.
"You're not to be seen," Clayton had said that morning, adjusting his watch. "Sabrina's bringing photographers. Stay below until it's over."
I wore the white dress I'd chosen carefully—simple, memorable, the kind of thing that would photograph well in security footage. My leg still ached, but I'd left the cane behind. I needed to move fast when the time came.
Above me, music pulsed. Laughter cascaded down the stairs like champagne bubbles. I sat on the edge of a leather sofa, watching the clock on my phone. 10:47 PM. Thirteen minutes until the fireworks.
My hands were steady. That surprised me. I'd expected to shake, to second-guess, to lose my nerve at the last moment. But sitting there in the belly of Clayton's yacht, I felt nothing but clarity. Cold. Sharp. Final.
At 10:58, I climbed the stairs.
The deck was chaos—beautiful, glittering chaos. Guests clustered around the bar, their faces flushed with expensive wine. Sabrina held court near the bow, her dress a slash of emerald against the night. Clayton stood beside her, one hand on the small of her back, laughing at something a senator said.
None of them saw me slip past.
The stern was empty. I'd counted on that—Louis had confirmed the security rotation, the two-minute gap when this section would be unwatched. I pulled the note from my clutch, unfolded it carefully, and placed it on the railing. The paper fluttered in the salt breeze.
*I can't do this anymore. I'm sorry. —P*
Simple. Devastating. True.
The first firework exploded overhead, painting the sky gold. I climbed onto the railing, my dress billowing around my legs. For a moment, I looked back. Through the crowd, I saw Clayton turn. Our eyes met across the deck.
His face changed. Recognition. Confusion. Then rage.
He started moving toward me, shoving guests aside.
I jumped.
The water was a fist of ice, punching the air from my lungs. I went under, the white dress dragging me down like an anchor. Salt burned my eyes, my throat. Above me, the surface was a sheet of fractured light, fireworks blooming and dying in rapid succession.
I kicked. Hard. My leg screamed, but I forced myself through the pain, swimming away from the yacht's lights. Fifty yards. Louis had said fifty yards to the buoy.
My lungs were fire. My vision tunneled. The dress tangled around my legs, and for one terrible second, I thought I'd miscalculated, that I'd drown for real.
Then my hand hit something solid.
The buoy. Louis materialized beside me, his wetsuit black against the dark water. He pressed the regulator into my mouth, and I sucked in air that tasted like rubber and salvation. He gestured down, and we sank together into the cold Atlantic.
Above us, muffled by water and distance, I heard screaming. Chaos. Clayton's voice, distorted but unmistakable, roaring my name.
But I was already gone. Already dead. Already free.
We swam for twenty minutes before surfacing near Louis's boat, a small fishing vessel anchored in a cove. He hauled me aboard, wrapped me in a thermal blanket, and started the engine without a word.
As we pulled away, I looked back one last time. The yacht was ablaze with light, tiny figures running along the deck. Searchlights swept the water, looking for a body they'd never find.
I turned away and didn't look back again.
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