
Betrayal's Endgame
Chapter 1
I clutched the small velvet box against my chest, my heart hammering with an excitement so pure it made my hands tremble. Inside, nestled in soft tissue paper, were the tiniest pair of baby shoes I'd ever seen—white leather with pearl buttons, perfect and precious. Beneath them lay the pregnancy test, its pink lines bold and unmistakable.
Three years. Three years of marriage to Adonis, and finally, finally we were going to have the family I'd dreamed of since our wedding day. The baby was barely the size of a poppy seed, but already I could picture everything—Adonis's face when I told him, the nursery we'd design together, tiny fingers wrapped around mine.
The hospital corridors buzzed with their usual activity, but I floated through them as if walking on air. Adonis had texted that he was finishing rounds in the east wing. I'd surprise him in his office, maybe we'd celebrate with dinner at that little Italian place where he proposed. My free hand drifted to my still-flat stomach, a gesture that felt both protective and wondering.
"Mrs. Cole!" A nurse smiled as I passed. "Looking for Dr. Cole? I think I saw him head toward the supply closets near pediatrics."
"Thank you," I managed, though my voice came out breathless with anticipation.
I turned the corner toward the pediatrics wing, my heels clicking softly against the polished floor. How fitting that our news would be shared so close to where children were cared for. Everything felt like a sign, like the universe aligning to give us this perfect moment.
Then I heard his voice.
"...can't keep doing this, Malayah. Eleanor's getting suspicious."
I froze. Adonis was behind the partially open door of a supply closet, but he wasn't alone. My best friend's voice drifted out, low and intimate in a way that made my stomach clench.
"She suspects nothing, darling. She's too trusting, too naive. Just like when we planned her kidnapping."
The words hit me like physical blows. My fingers tightened around the gift box until the edges cut into my palm. This couldn't be real. I had to have misheard.
"That was different," Adonis said, his tone strained. "I never meant for it to go that far. And what you did to her mother—"
"Was necessary." Malayah's voice turned sharp, cutting. "Catherine Webb was getting too close to the truth about the medical records. One little slip during surgery, a moment of convenient negligence, and problem solved. Eleanor never suspected her precious friend was holding the scalpel."
My knees buckled. I pressed my back against the wall, the gift box slipping from nerveless fingers to clatter on the floor. The sound echoed in the corridor like a gunshot.
"And those vitamins I've been giving her?" Malayah continued with sickening satisfaction. "Experimental compounds from my research. By now, they should have done their job quite thoroughly."
"What job?" Adonis's voice had gone very quiet, very dangerous.
"Making sure she never carries your child, of course. Can't have her producing an heir when our Felix needs to be your only son."
The world tilted sideways. Those vitamins—the ones Malayah had insisted would help with my health, that she'd brought me personally every week for months. My hand flew to my stomach as a cramping pain shot through my lower abdomen.
"You what?" Adonis's voice cracked like a whip.
"Don't act so shocked, my love. You knew this day would come. You've always known Eleanor was just a convenient cover, a way to maintain your reputation while we—"
Another cramp, sharper this time, doubled me over. Something warm and wet spread between my thighs, and when I looked down, I saw the first drops of blood staining my dress. The pregnancy test fell from the gift box, its pink lines now seeming to mock me as red bloomed across the white fabric.
"No," I whispered, but my voice was lost in the sudden roaring in my ears. "No, no, no..."
The cramping intensified, waves of pain that left me gasping. I pressed both hands to my stomach, trying to hold on to what I was already losing, but my body was betraying me just as completely as everyone else had.
Footsteps echoed down the corridor—nurses responding to my collapsed form, voices calling for a gurney, medical terminology floating around me like a foreign language. But all I could think about were Malayah's words, replaying on an endless loop: *making sure she never carries your child.*
As they lifted me onto a stretcher, I caught a glimpse of the supply closet door closing firmly, sealing away the two people who had destroyed everything I'd ever loved. The gift box lay forgotten on the floor, those perfect baby shoes scattered like broken dreams.
The emergency room lights blurred above me as another wave of pain crashed through my body, taking with it not just the tiny life I'd carried for such a brief, precious moment, but every hope I'd ever held for the future.
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