
Betrayed by Her Husband
Chapter 3
The fluorescent lights of the delivery room cast a harsh glow over everything, making the blood on my hospital gown look almost black. Dr. Chen's face was a mask of professional concern as she worked, her hands moving with practiced precision inside me.
"Stella, I need you to push," she urged, her voice steady despite the tension filling the room. "Your baby is crowning."
I bore down with what little strength I had left, a guttural cry escaping my lips. Hours had passed since my water broke in that ambulance. Hours of desperate attempts to save my child.
"I'm sorry," Dr. Chen whispered, her eyes meeting mine for just a moment. "The cord was wrapped around his neck. The delay in treatment... it was too long."
The words hung in the air like a physical presence, heavy and suffocating. I knew what she meant. Two hundred dollars. Just two hundred dollars for an ambulance, and Elliott had refused.
"Can I hold him?" My voice was barely audible.
Dr. Chen nodded, her hands gentle as she placed my son's tiny body on my chest. He was so small, so perfect. Ten fingers, ten toes. Dark lashes resting against pale cheeks. But he was still. So terribly still.
"I'm so sorry, baby," I whispered, tracing his cold cheek with my finger. "Mommy's so sorry. I couldn't protect you. I couldn't get you here in time."
A nurse stepped forward, her eyes kind but sad. "Mrs. Shaw, the delay in receiving proper medical care was the determining factor," she said softly. "If we'd gotten you into treatment sooner..."
She didn't need to finish. We both knew what she meant.
I held my son for hours, memorizing every feature of his face, the shape of his lips, the curve of his nose. I made promises to him that I would never be able to keep. I apologized for failures that were not mine to bear.
* * *
Three days later, I stood in the foyer of our penthouse, a small silver urn clutched to my chest. Inside were the ashes of my son—my beautiful boy who never got to open his eyes, never got to know his mother's love.
"Stella?" Elliott's voice came from the living room. "Is that you?"
I stepped into the doorway, still wearing my hospital clothes, my hair unwashed, my eyes swollen from days of tears.
"Elliott," I said, my voice hollow. "I brought our son home."
He looked up from his laptop, his expression flickering between annoyance and disbelief.
"Don't start this again," he said, closing his computer. "There is no son, Stella. You're having some kind of breakdown."
I stared at him, unable to comprehend how the man I'd married could deny our child's existence so easily.
"This is his ashes," I said, holding out the urn. "Our baby died because I couldn't get to the hospital in time."
Elliott's laugh was sharp and cold. "Really? You expect me to believe that?"
"Believe what you want," I whispered. "But our son is dead."
He stood abruptly, his chair scraping against the hardwood floor. "This pathetic display isn't going to work. Phoenix is one month pregnant with my child, and I won't let you manipulate me with these lies."
The urn nearly slipped from my grasp. "What?"
"Phoenix is carrying my child," he repeated, his voice smug. "A real child, not some fantasy you've concocted."
Before I could respond, Phoenix herself appeared in the doorway behind him, her hand resting protectively over her still-flat stomach.
"Hello, Stella," she said, her red lips curving into a smile that didn't reach her eyes. "I was wondering when you'd come home."
* * *
"Get out," I whispered, my body trembling with rage. "Get out of my house."
"This is Elliott's house," Phoenix corrected, stepping closer to him. "And soon it will be our family's house."
I moved toward the mantle where I'd placed my son's urn, needing to protect the only thing I had left of him.
"Don't touch that," I warned as Phoenix followed me.
"Why not?" she asked, her eyes gleaming with malice. "It's just an empty vase, right? Since there's no baby?"
Before I could stop her, she reached out and knocked the urn off the mantle. It fell to the marble floor with a sickening crash, shattering into a dozen pieces. My son's ashes spilled across the polished surface.
"No!" The scream tore from my throat as I lunged at Phoenix, my hands outstretched toward her throat.
I never reached her. Elliott's foot connected with my ribs, sending me sprawling across the floor, my body landing in the scattered ashes of my child.
Through my tears, I saw Phoenix smile down at me, her hand still resting on her stomach.
"Now look what you've done," she said softly. "You've made such a mess."
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