Betrayed Wife's New Start Novel Cover

Betrayed Wife's New Start

8.0 / 10.0
I shifted uncomfortably in the stiff hospital chair, my eight-month pregnant belly making it impossible to find a comfortable position. The waiting room's mint-green walls were meant to be soothing, but today they just made me feel nauseous. I checked my phone again—2:15 PM. Nathan was officially fifteen minutes late for our fifth prenatal appointment. My fingers hovered over my carefully curated birthing playlist. I'd spent hours selecting songs that would help me stay calm during labor—something Nathan had mockingly called "your little music project" when I'd tried to share it with him last week. The phone buzzed in my hand, and my heart leapt before I could stop it. A text from Nathan lit up the screen: "Something urgent came up with Victoria. Can't make it today." No apology. No question about how I was feeling.

Betrayed Wife's New Start Chapter 1

I shifted uncomfortably in the stiff hospital chair, my eight-month pregnant belly making it impossible to find a comfortable position. The waiting room's mint-green walls were meant to be soothing, but today they just made me feel nauseous. I checked my phone again—2:15 PM. Nathan was officially fifteen minutes late for our fifth prenatal appointment.

My fingers hovered over my carefully curated birthing playlist. I'd spent hours selecting songs that would help me stay calm during labor—something Nathan had mockingly called "your little music project" when I'd tried to share it with him last week.

The phone buzzed in my hand, and my heart leapt before I could stop it. A text from Nathan lit up the screen:

"Something urgent came up with Victoria. Can't make it today."

No apology. No question about how I was feeling. Just another cancellation, another reminder of where I ranked in the hierarchy of Nathan Sterling's priorities.

I swallowed the lump in my throat and glanced through the large glass window separating the waiting area from the hallway. A couple emerged from an examination room, the woman's face glowing as she clutched a small envelope of ultrasound photos. Her husband—I could see the matching wedding bands—had his arm wrapped protectively around her shoulders, his face bent close to hers as they shared some private joke. He placed his hand on her belly, and they both laughed when something—a kick, maybe—happened beneath his palm.

The woman caught me watching them and smiled, a gesture of solidarity between expectant mothers. I forced my lips to curve upward in return, though the effort made my face ache.

"Mrs. Sterling?" The nurse's voice pulled me back to reality. "Dr. Patel is ready for you."

I gathered my purse and coat, thumbs moving automatically across my phone screen: "Okay. Love you."

Three words I kept sending into the void, like prayers to a god who had long since stopped listening.

* * *

The evening traffic on Park Avenue crawled at a maddening pace. I drummed my fingers against the steering wheel, trying to ignore the growing heaviness in my lower back—just another pregnancy discomfort to add to the collection.

I'd left the hospital with a folder of information about labor signs and a recommendation to "take it easy" for the next few weeks. Dr. Patel had frowned slightly when I mentioned Nathan's absence, again. "Everything alright at home, Amanda?" she'd asked, her dark eyes studying my face a beat too long.

"Just work," I'd replied, the lie slipping out as easily as breathing. "He's very busy."

A sudden, knife-like cramp doubled me over against the steering wheel. The pain was different—sharper, more focused than the practice contractions I'd been experiencing. I gasped, forcing myself to breathe through it as I pulled over to the curb.

When the pain subsided, I looked down and froze. A dark stain was spreading across my light gray skirt, the unmistakable crimson of blood.

"No, no, no," I whispered, panic rising in my throat. My hands shook as I fumbled for my phone, hitting Nathan's number without thinking.

One ring. Two rings. Three.

"This is Nathan Sterling. Leave a message."

"Nathan," I gasped, unable to keep the fear from my voice. "Something's wrong with the baby. I'm bleeding. I need you to meet me at the hospital. Please call me back as soon as—"

The voicemail cut me off. I tried again, then a third time. Text messages followed, each more desperate than the last.

No response.

I drove home in a daze, the cramps intensifying. In our kitchen—the one place in our penthouse that still felt like mine—I sat at the marble island and stared at the envelope I'd been carrying in my purse for weeks. The divorce papers my friend Rachel had helped me prepare, "just in case."

Another cramp seized me, this one worse than before. As it ebbed, clarity washed over me like cold water.

I was done waiting for Nathan Sterling to remember I existed.

With steady hands, I signed my name on each flagged line, the pen's scratching unnaturally loud in the empty kitchen. I sealed the envelope, addressed it to Nathan's Manhattan office for next-day delivery, and placed it by the door.

Then I grabbed my keys and headed for the ER alone, one hand on my belly, praying I wasn't too late to save the life growing inside me.

Continue Reading

Betrayed Wife's New Start of Contents

Ch. 1 Ch. 2 Ch. 3
Ch. 4
Ch. 5
Ch. 6
Ch. 7
Ch. 8
Ch. 9
Ch. 10

You may also like

New Release Novels

Alpha Rejected True Mate Novel Cover
9.5
The greenhouse was my sanctuary in a pack house that had never felt like home. Dawn hadn't yet broken when I slipped inside, the familiar scent of damp soil and blooming flowers wrapping around me like an embrace I'd long been denied elsewhere. My fingers trembled slightly as I reached for the watering can—a weakness I couldn't afford to show outside these glass walls. I focused on the white lilies, my favorites. Their pure petals reminded me of what I once was—hopeful, untainted. Before the mate bond that became my prison. "You're wilting too, aren't you?" I whispered to a drooping bloom, gently supporting its stem. My wolf, Luna, whimpered softly in the back of my mind. Once silver and strong, she now barely stirred, weakened by the sickness that had been consuming us both since I gave too much blood to save William three years ago. A sudden tremor ran through my bones, stronger than the usual morning weakness.
Alpha's Betrayal, New Bond Novel Cover
7.9
The scent of pine and mountain air clung to my skin as I stepped into the sprawling neutral-territory lodge. My heart fluttered with anticipation, one hand instinctively resting on my still-flat stomach where our future heir grew. Three weeks of morning sickness had confirmed what my wolf, Luna, had already whispered to me – I was carrying Michael's pup, the future Alpha of Silver Creek Pack. "He's going to be so happy," I whispered to my wolf, feeling her eager agreement pulse through our shared consciousness. *He'll finally look at us the way he did when we first mated,* Luna murmured inside my mind. I hadn't told anyone about my pregnancy, not even my mother back in the Moonstone Pack. This moment belonged to Michael first – my Alpha, my mate, the man who had swept me into his world three years ago with promises of devotion and protection. The marble floors echoed beneath my careful steps as I followed the familiar trail of Michael's scent – sandalwood and authority, a commanding presence that had always made my knees weak. The diplomatic meetings between packs had kept him away for nearly two weeks, and though he'd ordered me to stay at our pack house, I couldn't bear to wait another day to share our miracle. My fingers trembled slightly as I traced his scent down a long corridor lined with carved wooden doors.
Betrayed Luna Finds True Love Novel Cover
8.6
I woke up with that familiar churning in my stomach, the third morning in a row. My inner wolf, Lily, stirred restlessly as I bolted to the bathroom, barely making it before emptying what little remained in my stomach from last night's dinner. '*This has to be it*,' I thought, pressing my palm against my still-flat abdomen. After three years as Ryan's Luna, the Moon Goddess had finally blessed us. I splashed cold water on my face and brushed my teeth, studying my reflection. My skin glowed despite the nausea, and my wolf seemed unusually protective, urging me to rest more, eat better. All the signs were there. "We need to be sure before we tell him," I whispered to Lily, who hummed in agreement. I padded back to our bedroom, noticing Ryan had left his laptop open on his desk. He'd rushed out before dawn for an emergency meeting with neighboring packs—at least that's what he'd said.
He Saw My Soul, Not My Scars Novel Cover
9.4
My husband, Jeremiah, let me die from an allergic reaction because he couldn't pause his video game. He dismissed my kidnapping as a prank and refused to come to the hospital when I was miscarrying our child. But the final straw came when he ordered doctors to carve skin from my body for his mistress's minor burn. He thought he had broken me, but he was wrong. I exposed his affair, took his company, and left him with nothing. Years later, he crashed my wedding to another man, begging for a second chance. "Elena lied to me! She manipulated me! It was always you, Celina!" I looked at the monster who had destroyed my life, my family, and my child. Then I picked up a wine bottle and smashed it over his head.
My Husband Left Me for His Sick Mistress Novel Cover
9.7
At six in the morning, the penthouse was a hush of pale gray light. The marble under my bare feet was cold. I sat on the edge of the bathtub with the test stick in my hand and watched the second pink line darken until there was no more pretending. Eight weeks. Maybe nine. My thumb found the inside of my left wrist and pressed there. A small habit. A way to hold myself in one piece. I did it without thinking, the way some people pray. I looked up at the mirror across from me.
My Husband Used Me as a Shield for His Mistress Novel Cover
7.9
The lingerie felt like a mistake the moment I slipped it on. I stood in our penthouse bathroom—all marble and chrome, cold as a morgue—staring at my reflection. Black lace. Nothing too obvious. The saleswoman at La Perla had promised it was elegant, sophisticated. I'd nodded like I knew what I was doing, like I hadn't spent the last five years sleeping alone in a king-sized bed while my husband worked through the night in his study. Five years. Our anniversary. I twisted my wedding ring. The platinum band caught the light, throwing fractured rainbows across the mirror.
Chapters
Read now
Share