
Beneath the Billionaire's Lies
Chapter 6
The rain pounded against the windows of our penthouse, each drop an accusation against the emptiness inside. I sat on the edge of our bed—the bed Daniel hadn't slept in for weeks—clutching my phone like a lifeline. The exhibition disaster still burned fresh in my mind, Julian Croft's scathing review playing on repeat like a sadistic soundtrack.
"When desperation eclipses talent..."
"Desperate little doodles..."
"Without the Sterling name, Evelyn Carter would be nothing..."
I scrolled through my contacts until I found Daniel's name, my thumb hovering over the call button. Pride told me not to reach out—hadn't he made it clear where his loyalties lay? But something else, something primal and desperate, overrode my pride. I needed my husband. Just this once.
The phone rang once, twice, then clicked to voicemail. Not even the courtesy of three rings.
"This is Daniel Sterling. Leave a message."
I took a deep breath. "Daniel, it's me. I... I need to talk to you. Something's happened with the exhibition, and I... I'm not feeling well. Please call me back when you get this."
I ended the call, hating the tremor in my voice, the vulnerability. Five minutes passed. Ten. My phone remained silent.
I tried again.
"Daniel, please. I know things haven't been good between us, but I really need you right now. Just call me back."
Still nothing.
By the third call, desperation had crept into my voice. "Where are you? Why won't you answer? I'm your wife!"
The fourth call went straight to voicemail. He'd turned off his phone.
Outside, lightning split the sky, illuminating our bedroom in harsh white light. I caught my reflection in the mirror across the room—pale face, hollow eyes, a stranger wearing my features. When had I become this person? This desperate, clinging shadow?
I forced myself to my feet, swaying slightly as a wave of nausea washed over me. I'd been feeling unwell all day—stress, I'd told myself. The aftermath of the exhibition disaster, the public humiliation, the sleepless night.
My phone buzzed, and I lunged for it, hope flaring bright and painful.
But it wasn't Daniel. It was a news alert: "Sterling Industries CEO Daniel Sterling Makes Surprise Appearance at Davenport Foundation Charity Gala."
With shaking fingers, I opened the article. There he was, my husband, immaculate in a tuxedo I'd never seen before, raising a champagne glass in a toast. Beside him stood Victoria, resplendent in a crimson gown that clung to her curves, her hand possessively on his arm. The timestamp on the photo read: 20 minutes ago.
Something twisted inside me—a sharp, tearing sensation that had nothing to do with emotional pain. I gasped, doubling over as the first cramp hit.
"No," I whispered, one hand flying to my abdomen. "No, please no."
I stumbled to the bathroom, barely making it before another cramp seized me, this one stronger than the first. I collapsed onto the cold tile floor, my body curling in on itself as waves of pain radiated through my lower back and abdomen.
I knew what was happening. I'd suspected I was pregnant for weeks but had been too afraid to confirm it—afraid of what it might mean for my crumbling marriage, afraid of bringing a child into this toxic web Victoria had spun around us. I'd told myself I would take a test after the exhibition, when things had settled.
Now it was too late.
Another cramp, sharper this time, tore through me. I bit my lip to keep from screaming, the metallic taste of blood filling my mouth. Rain lashed against the frosted bathroom window, the storm outside mirroring the one tearing through my body.
I needed help. I needed a hospital.
I needed Daniel.
With trembling hands, I reached for my phone, which I'd dropped on the bathroom floor. Through a haze of pain, I dialed his number again.
Voicemail.
"Daniel," I gasped, unable to keep the agony from my voice. "Something's wrong. I think... I think I'm losing our baby. Please come home. Please."
Another cramp seized me, and I dropped the phone, curling into a ball on the cold tile. Tears streamed down my face, mingling with sweat as my body worked to expel what might have been our child—the child Daniel would never know about.
Time lost meaning. Minutes stretched into hours, marked only by waves of pain and brief periods of exhausted clarity. Outside, the storm raged on, rain streaking down the frosted glass of the bathroom window like tears.
Between contractions, I kept trying Daniel's number. Five calls. Ten. Fifteen. Each one went straight to voicemail, my pleas becoming increasingly desperate.
"Daniel, please. I need you. I'm scared."
"Daniel, I'm bleeding. I don't know what to do."
"Daniel, why won't you answer? Please, just this once..."
By the twentieth call, I could barely speak through my tears. The pain had subsided somewhat, leaving in its wake a hollow emptiness that went beyond physical sensation.
I knew it was over. Whatever small life had been growing inside me was gone, washed away in a tide of blood and broken trust.
The twenty-first call: "It's done. Our baby is gone. Where were you?"
The twenty-second call, my voice barely a whisper: "I hate you."
I let the phone slip from my fingers, too exhausted to try anymore. The bathroom floor was cold beneath my cheek, the porcelain offering no comfort. I should call an ambulance, I knew. I should get help. But a strange lethargy had settled over me, making even the thought of movement seem impossible.
In that moment of absolute desolation, with rain still battering the windows and my body empty of the life it had briefly harbored, I made a decision.
I would leave. Not just Daniel, not just this penthouse with its cold perfection and hollow promises.
I would leave everything.
Evelyn Carter Sterling would disappear, taking with her the last shreds of the naive, trusting woman who had believed in love at first sight and happily ever after.
In her place would rise someone new. Someone stronger. Someone who would never again mistake a gilded cage for freedom or a beautiful lie for truth.
As if in answer to my silent vow, my phone lit up with a notification. With the last of my strength, I reached for it.
It was a livestream alert from a society blog: "WATCH NOW: Daniel Sterling delivers heartfelt speech at Davenport Foundation Gala."
I tapped the link, masochism driving me to witness this final betrayal.
There he was, my husband, standing at a podium, his face solemn yet composed. Victoria stood slightly behind him, her hand resting possessively on his back.
"Tonight," Daniel was saying, his voice clear and unwavering, "we celebrate not just the incredible work of the Davenport Foundation, but the power of enduring connections. Some bonds, no matter how tested by time or circumstance, prove unbreakable."
His gaze shifted to Victoria, and something passed between them—something intimate and familiar that made my stomach lurch.
"I am honored to announce Sterling Industries' commitment to a five-year partnership with the Davenport Foundation, a collaboration that will shape the future of both our organizations."
Applause erupted. Victoria stepped forward, taking Daniel's hand in hers. Their fingers intertwined, a perfect fit.
The camera zoomed in as Daniel raised their joined hands to his lips, pressing a kiss to Victoria's knuckles. Ten fingers intertwined. Twenty-two cameras capturing the moment.
Twenty-two missed calls from his wife as she lost their child.
I closed the livestream, letting darkness reclaim the bathroom. Outside, the storm was beginning to subside, the rain softening to a gentle patter against the window.
Inside, something had hardened in me—a resolve as cold and unyielding as the marble beneath my cheek.
Daniel Sterling had made his choice.
Now I would make mine.
And God help anyone who stood in my way.
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