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Breaking Free from False Love Novel Cover

Breaking Free from False Love

The cramping started at three in the morning, sharp and relentless, tearing through my abdomen like broken glass. By the time I stumbled into the emergency room at Mercy General, blood was already soaking through my nightgown, and the world had narrowed to a tunnel of fluorescent lights and sterile white walls. "Mrs. Richardson?" The nurse's voice seemed to come from underwater. "We need to get you into a room immediately." The next few hours blurred together in a haze of medical terms I didn't want to understand. Miscarriage. Complete. Inevitable. Each word landed like a physical blow, stealing what little breath I had left. When Dr.
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Chapter 1

The cramping started at three in the morning, sharp and relentless, tearing through my abdomen like broken glass. By the time I stumbled into the emergency room at Mercy General, blood was already soaking through my nightgown, and the world had narrowed to a tunnel of fluorescent lights and sterile white walls.

"Mrs. Richardson?" The nurse's voice seemed to come from underwater. "We need to get you into a room immediately."

The next few hours blurred together in a haze of medical terms I didn't want to understand. Miscarriage. Complete. Inevitable. Each word landed like a physical blow, stealing what little breath I had left. When Dr. Sarah Mitchell finally sat beside my hospital bed, her kind eyes filled with sympathy, I already knew what she was going to say.

"I'm so sorry, Autumn," she said softly, her hand gentle on my arm. "We did everything we could, but the pregnancy wasn't viable. Your body is healing now, and physically, you'll recover completely."

Physically. As if the rest of me wasn't shattered into a thousand pieces.

The moment she left, I reached for my phone with trembling fingers. Lincoln needed to know. He needed to be here. My husband of eight years, the man who had promised to stand by me through everything—surely he would drop whatever he was doing and rush to my side.

The phone rang once, twice, three times before going to voicemail.

"Lincoln, it's me," I whispered, my voice cracking. "I'm at the hospital. Something's happened with the baby. Please call me back."

I hung up and stared at the ceiling, counting the tiles to distract myself from the hollow ache in my chest. Twenty minutes passed. Then thirty. I called again.

Voicemail.

"Lincoln, please. I really need you right now. I'm at Mercy General. Room 314. Please come."

By the fifth call, my voice had steadied into something mechanical. By the tenth, I was no longer leaving messages. By the twentieth, my thumb moved across the screen automatically, muscle memory taking over where hope had failed.

Call. Ring. Voicemail. Hang up. Repeat.

The red bracelet on my wrist caught the harsh hospital lighting as I lifted the phone again and again. Lincoln had given it to me years ago, back when I still believed in fairy tales and second chances. Now it felt like a shackle, weighing down my arm as I dialed his number for the thirty-seventh time.

Where was he? What could possibly be more important than this?

The afternoon sun slanted through the blinds, casting long shadows across my hospital bed. I'd lost count somewhere in the seventies, but my phone's call log told the story in neat, timestamped rows. Each missed call was a small death, another crack in the foundation of everything I thought I knew about my marriage.

Dr. Mitchell returned during visiting hours, her expression concerned as she noticed my phone clutched in my white-knuckled grip.

"Have you been able to reach your husband?" she asked gently.

I shook my head, not trusting my voice. How could I explain that the man who was supposed to love me, protect me, comfort me in my darkest hour, couldn't even be bothered to answer his phone?

"Sometimes grief affects people differently," Dr. Mitchell said, though her tone suggested she didn't believe her own words. "Some people need time to process before they can face difficult situations."

But I knew Lincoln. He didn't need time to process anything. He was decisive, commanding, always in control. If he wasn't answering, it was because he was choosing not to.

The realization hit me like ice water: I was completely alone.

I dialed again anyway. Ninety-three. Ninety-four. Ninety-five.

As evening fell and the hospital grew quieter, I finally stopped at ninety-nine. My thumb hovered over the call button, trembling with exhaustion and something that felt dangerously close to despair. One more call would make it an even hundred—a nice, round number that would somehow make this rejection complete.

But I couldn't do it. I couldn't make that hundredth call and confirm what I already knew in my heart: that when I needed him most, Lincoln Richardson had abandoned me.

I set the phone on the bedside table and closed my eyes, but sleep wouldn't come. Instead, I lay there listening to the sounds of the hospital—the soft beeping of machines, the whispered conversations of nurses, the distant cry of a newborn in the maternity ward down the hall.

Somewhere in the darkness beyond my room, two voices drifted through the partially open door. Female voices, casual and conversational, growing clearer as they approached.

"Did you hear about Lincoln Richardson?" one of them said, and my eyes snapped open.

"The CEO? What about him?"

"He's been having an affair with his secretary. Jessie something. Apparently, she's pregnant now."

The words hit me like a physical blow, stealing the air from my lungs. I lay frozen, every muscle in my body rigid as the voices continued down the hallway, their casual gossip fading into the distance.

Pregnant. Jessie was pregnant.

While I lay here, bleeding and broken from losing the child Lincoln had never wanted anyway, his secretary was carrying the baby he'd apparently decided he could give to someone else.

The red bracelet felt heavy on my wrist as the truth settled over me like a suffocating blanket. This wasn't just neglect. This was betrayal in its purest, most devastating form.

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