
After My Husband Made Me Infertile, I Faked My Death
Chapter 2
The crystal chandeliers of Augustus Foster's mansion cast a golden glow over Manhattan's elite as they mingled below. I stood beside Everett, my hand resting protectively over my three-month bump, trying to ignore the whispers that followed us.
"Violet." Everett's voice was low, his fingers tightening around my waist. "Father's watching."
I straightened my spine, forcing a smile as Augustus approached with Brooke Hawkins gliding at his side. Her red dress clung to her curves, her eyes never leaving Everett's face.
"Violet, darling." Brooke's voice dripped with false sweetness. "You're positively glowing. Though perhaps a bit pale around the edges?"
Before I could respond, a sharp pain lanced through my abdomen. I gasped, doubling over.
"Violet?" Everett's voice seemed distant as the pain intensified.
"I'm fine," I managed, but another wave of agony tore through me, stealing my breath.
Brooke was suddenly at my side, her arm around my shoulders. "She needs medical attention. Now."
The room spun around me as Everett's face contorted with something I couldn't decipher. Fear? Guilt?
"Call an ambulance," someone shouted.
"No," Brooke's voice cut through the chaos. "I know a private clinic. Discrete. Better equipped for... delicate situations."
She helped me toward the exit, her grip surprisingly strong. Through a haze of pain, I caught Everett's expression—he wasn't moving to stop her.
"Trust me," Brooke whispered as we reached the door. "I'm a medical consultant for the family."
The ambulance ride was a blur of sirens and Brooke's voice giving directions to the driver. Not to any hospital I recognized, but to a sleek building on the Upper East Side with no visible signage.
"This is a clinic?" I gasped as they wheeled me through sterile corridors.
"The best," Brooke replied, her eyes cold despite her smile. "Specializing in high-risk pregnancies."
The last thing I remembered before the anesthesia mask descended was Brooke leaning over me, whispering, "Don't worry, Violet. I'll take care of everything."
---
I woke to silence.
Not the comforting beep of hospital monitors or the murmur of nurses, but a heavy, oppressive silence that pressed against my ears.
My hand moved instinctively to my stomach.
Flat.
"Oh God." The words escaped as a sob as I struggled to sit up.
A doctor entered—not in scrubs but an immaculate suit. His eyes were cold as he checked my vitals.
"Mrs. Foster." His voice matched his expression. "You've had a serious complication."
"Where's my baby?" My voice broke.
He removed his glasses, polishing them with a monogrammed handkerchief. "I'm afraid there was nothing we could do. The hemorrhaging was severe."
The room tilted sideways. "No. No, that can't be right."
"The procedure saved your life, but..." He paused, his eyes flickering to something behind me. "There was extensive damage. We had to perform a complete hysterectomy."
The words didn't make sense. Hysterectomy. The medical term echoed in my mind, but the meaning—the reality—was too vast to comprehend.
"My baby," I whispered, curling inward, arms wrapping around my empty abdomen.
"Mrs. Foster, you need to be strong."
Strong. As if strength could bring back what they'd taken from me. As if anything could fill the hollow space inside me now.
---
Two weeks later, I sat in my apartment, staring at the files spread across my coffee table. The private investigator had been thorough—too thorough.
"Financial irregularities," he'd said when he delivered the dossier. "Medical logs that don't match standard protocols."
I traced my finger over the bank statements showing payments from Brooke to the clinic's director. The altered medical notes. The suspicious timing of everything.
Brooke hadn't saved me. She'd orchestrated this.
My hands trembled as I gathered the evidence into a neat pile. Everett needed to see this. He needed to know what Brooke had done.
I dressed carefully—a black dress that hung loose where it should have accommodated my growing belly. The drive to Everett's office passed in a blur of determination and dread.
His secretary tried to stop me, but I pushed past her into his office.
"Everett." My voice was steady despite the storm inside me. "We need to talk."
He looked up from his desk, his expression unreadable. "Violet. You should be resting."
"They took everything from me." I placed the files on his desk. "And I have proof."
His eyes flickered to the documents, then back to me. Something shifted in his gaze—recognition? Guilt?
"Brooke," I continued, my voice breaking. "She did this to me. To our baby."
I expected shock, anger, protection. Instead, Everett's face hardened into a mask I didn't recognize.
"Violet," he said slowly, rising from his chair. "You've been through a lot. But making accusations like this..."
The files lay between us like a chasm, growing wider with each passing second.
"Look at them," I pleaded.
But as I watched, something in Everett's eyes told me he already knew.
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