
After My Husband's Lies, His Captain Won My Heart
Chapter 3
I drifted in and out of consciousness as pain radiated through my lower abdomen. The concrete stairs were cold against my cheek, my vision blurring as I tried to focus on anything but the warm wetness spreading beneath me. My baby. I needed to protect my baby.
"Help," I whispered again, my voice barely audible even to my own ears. The stairwell remained silent except for the distant hum of the building's ventilation system. Lily was gone, leaving me broken at the bottom of the stairs.
Footsteps echoed suddenly, growing louder. I tried to call out again but could only manage a whimper.
"Hello? Is someone—" The voice cut off abruptly. "Oh my God! Mia?"
I couldn't see clearly who it was, but strong arms carefully turned me onto my back. A face came into focus—intense eyes filled with concern, a strong jawline now tense with worry. Lucas, the team captain.
"You're bleeding," he said, his voice tight with urgency. His fingers pressed against my wrist, checking my pulse. "Don't move. I'm calling an ambulance."
As he pulled out his phone, I grabbed his arm. "My baby," I managed to say. "Please... help my baby."
His eyes widened momentarily before his expression hardened with determination. While speaking rapidly to emergency services, he removed his jacket and pressed it gently against my lower body.
"Stay with me," he urged, his free hand finding mine and squeezing reassuringly. "Help is coming. Just keep your eyes open."
I tried to focus on his face, on the steady pressure of his hand in mine, anything to stay conscious. The pain was becoming unbearable, each heartbeat sending fresh waves of agony through my body.
"What happened?" he asked, his voice gentle but firm.
I wanted to tell him everything—about Ethan, about Lily, about the betrayal that had culminated in this moment. But darkness was closing in again, and all I could whisper was, "She pushed me."
The next few hours passed in fragments. The wail of sirens. Being lifted onto a stretcher. Lucas's voice insisting on accompanying me in the ambulance. Bright hospital lights. Doctors speaking in urgent tones. And finally, the words that shattered what remained of my heart.
"I'm sorry, Mrs. Chen. We couldn't save the baby."
I lay in the hospital bed, staring at the ceiling, feeling hollowed out. Not just from the physical trauma, but from the emotional devastation. I had lost my child—the innocent life I hadn't even had the chance to tell its father about. A child that would never know how much I already loved it.
A soft knock at the door pulled me from my thoughts. Lucas entered, carrying a small bouquet of white lilies. The irony of the flower choice wasn't lost on me, but I couldn't summon the energy to comment on it.
"How are you feeling?" he asked, setting the flowers on the bedside table before taking a seat in the chair next to my bed.
"Empty," I answered honestly, my voice hoarse. "Like something precious was stolen from me."
Lucas nodded, his expression solemn. "The doctors said you're stable now, but you'll need to rest for a few days." He hesitated before adding, "I haven't told Ethan yet. I thought you might want to be the one..."
"Don't," I said sharply, then softened my tone. "Please don't tell him. Not yet."
Lucas studied me for a long moment. "You said someone pushed you. Who was it, Mia?"
I turned my face away, tears burning behind my eyelids. "It doesn't matter now."
"It matters to me," he said, his voice taking on a quality I hadn't heard before—protective, almost fierce. "Whoever did this needs to be held accountable."
Something about his tone, about the genuine concern in his eyes, broke through the wall I'd built around myself. The tears came then, hot and unrelenting. Lucas didn't say anything, just moved to sit on the edge of the bed and held my hand as I sobbed.
When I finally quieted, he spoke again, his voice soft but somehow familiar in a way I couldn't place. "You know, your voice reminds me of someone I used to know. A girl I played games with online when we were kids. She called herself StarLight."
My breath caught. No one had called me that in years. Not since I was fourteen, playing online games to escape my lonely existence as the only child of wealthy, distant parents.
"NightWalker?" I whispered, using the gamertag of the boy who had been my closest friend during those years.
Lucas's eyes widened in recognition. "It is you."
In that moment, as our shared past connected us in this painful present, I felt something I hadn't experienced in a long time—a genuine human connection untainted by manipulation or deceit.
"You were there for me when my parents were divorcing," Lucas said quietly. "Let me be here for you now."
I looked into the eyes of this man who had once been the boy who understood me better than anyone, and for the first time since discovering Ethan's betrayal, I felt a tiny spark of hope ignite within the darkness.
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