
After My Miscarriage, He Took in His Pregnant Lover
Chapter 3
The steady beep of monitors filled the recovery room as I drifted in and out of consciousness. The D&C procedure had been quick but emotionally devastating. My babies—my twins—were gone. The ultrasound images I'd held just yesterday now felt like artifacts from another life.
I forced my eyes open, wincing at the fluorescent lights overhead. My body felt hollow, emptied of both life and hope. The cramping pain in my abdomen was nothing compared to the ache in my chest.
"Dr. Parker?" A nurse poked her head in. "How's your pain level?"
"Manageable," I lied.
She adjusted my IV drip. "Dr. Patel said you should be able to go home tomorrow."
Home. The word felt strange now. Was it still home if Vincent had been lying to me? If he'd been playing husband to another woman while I carried our children?
Voices and footsteps echoed outside my door—laughter, congratulations, the rustle of wrapping paper.
"Someone must be having a good day," the nurse remarked, glancing toward the hallway.
I turned my head, following her gaze. Through the partially open door, I could see a cluster of staff gathered outside a room down the hall. Balloons bobbed above their heads—blue and green, with a banner that read "It's a Boy!"
My heart clenched. Someone else's miracle while mine had ended.
"Who had a baby?" I asked, already knowing the answer.
The nurse checked my chart. "Oh, that's the VIP patient from earlier—Brielle West. She delivered a healthy boy despite the complications. Dr. Hartwell just left her room."
Of course. Brielle. The woman Vincent had claimed to be "standing in" for.
"Has anyone... has my husband been by?" I hated how small my voice sounded.
The nurse's expression shifted slightly. "I'm not sure, Dr. Parker. I can check."
But I already knew the answer. Vincent hadn't come to see me once since the procedure. Not when they'd wheeled me into surgery, not when I'd woken up alone, not now.
Later, a sympathetic orderly brought me a cup of water and mentioned seeing Vincent on the security monitors—celebrating with Brielle's family in the VIP lounge.
---
Three days later, I signed my discharge papers with trembling hands. Dr. Patel had offered to arrange a ride home, but I insisted on taking a taxi. I needed those few minutes alone to prepare myself.
The suburban streets looked the same as always—well-manicured lawns, children playing in driveways, the afternoon sun casting long shadows. But something had shifted. I could feel it in the air as the taxi pulled up to our craftsman-style home.
I paid the driver and approached the front door, my hospital bag clutched in one hand. When I turned the key, it wouldn't budge.
"Vincent?" I called through the door, jiggling the key again.
No answer.
After trying three more times, I realized the locks had been changed. My heart pounded as I punched in the garage code—at least that still worked.
The garage was empty except for Vincent's BMW. No sign of forced entry or disturbance. Just... locked doors.
I made my way through the kitchen, noting nothing seemed out of place until I reached the foyer. There, sitting prominently by the staircase, was a set of designer luggage with "B.W." monogrammed on the side.
"Brielle West," I whispered, my fingers tracing the initials.
A noise from upstairs made me freeze. I followed the sound to what was supposed to be our nursery—the room I'd already started mentally designing for our twins.
Two men in delivery uniforms were assembling a crib—a sleek, expensive model I didn't recognize.
"Excuse me," I said, my voice barely audible.
One of the men turned. "Almost done here, ma'am. Just need to attach the mobile."
"That's not... this isn't..." I couldn't form a coherent sentence.
The front door opened behind me. Vincent's voice called out, "Is the crib arriving?"
He appeared in the doorway, his expression shifting from cheerful to guarded when he saw me.
"Sophia," he said, as if surprised. "You should have called. I would have picked you up."
"The locks were changed," I said flatly.
"Oh." He shrugged. "Brielle's apartment flooded. She needed a place to recover while Jonathan is still overseas."
"So you invited her here? To our home?"
Vincent's face hardened slightly. "She needs help, Sophia. The baby needs a stable environment."
"And what about me?" My voice cracked. "What about our babies?"
"You're being hormonal," Vincent said dismissively. "The doctor said you might be unstable after the miscarriage."
I pushed past him, heading for our bedroom—our sanctuary. But when I opened the door, I stopped dead.
Brielle's toiletries were spread across my vanity. Her silk robe hung on my closet door. And my clothes... my clothes had been moved to the guest room.
"Vincent," I called, my voice dangerously quiet. "What have you done?"
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