
Escape from Cruel Marriage
Chapter 2
Beeping machines pulled me from darkness. My eyelids felt weighted, but I forced them open to a sterile white ceiling. The sharp scent of antiseptic filled my nostrils as consciousness returned in painful fragments—the Hamptons, the wine glass, the blood... my blood that wouldn't stop flowing.
A woman's face came into focus above me—kind eyes behind tortoiseshell glasses, silver-streaked hair pulled into a neat bun.
"Mrs. Sterling," she said, relief evident in her voice. "I'm Dr. Reed. You're at Mount Sinai Hospital in Manhattan. You've been unconscious for nearly forty-eight hours."
I tried to speak, but my throat felt like sandpaper. Dr. Reed offered me water through a straw, her movements efficient yet gentle.
"What happened?" I finally managed.
"You suffered severe blood loss complicated by high altitude during your flight back to the city." Her expression tightened. "With your hemophilia, the combination was life-threatening. We nearly lost you twice."
Memories flickered like broken film—Vivian's calculated smile as the glass shattered, Marcus's cold dismissal, the spreading crimson stain on white linen...
"There's something else," Dr. Reed continued, her voice softening. "Something unexpected we discovered during your treatment."
My heart stuttered. In my experience, unexpected news was rarely good.
"You're pregnant, Mrs. Sterling. About eight weeks along."
The world seemed to stop. A child. My child. Growing inside me all this time without my knowledge. My hand instinctively moved to my still-flat stomach.
"The baby?" I whispered.
"Stable, against considerable odds." Dr. Reed checked my monitors. "Both of you are fighters, it seems."
Tears blurred my vision as contradictory emotions crashed through me—wonder, terror, joy, and overwhelming dread. A baby. Marcus's baby. A child who would be born into a home filled with cruelty and contempt.
"Your pregnancy is high-risk given your condition," Dr. Reed continued. "You'll need specialized care, absolute rest, and—most importantly—a stress-free environment."
I almost laughed at the impossibility of her last requirement. Stress-free. As if such a state existed in the Sterling household.
"Has my husband been notified?" I asked, already knowing the answer from her expression.
"Mr. Sterling was informed immediately. He visited briefly yesterday while you were still unconscious."
Of course. Marcus would fulfill the minimum social obligation and nothing more.
As if summoned by my thoughts, the door opened. Marcus entered, impeccable in a navy suit, phone clutched in one hand. His eyes swept over me clinically, without warmth.
"You're awake," he stated flatly. "Good. I have meetings I can't reschedule."
"Did Dr. Reed tell you?" I asked, one hand still protectively covering my abdomen.
His gaze flickered to my gesture, understanding dawning. "Yes. Congratulations." The word fell from his lips like a stone, hollow and cold. "I've arranged for a private nurse once you're discharged. She'll ensure you don't... inconvenience yourself further."
No joy. No tenderness. Just logistics and thinly veiled annoyance at this complication to his schedule.
In that moment, something crystallized within me—a certainty as sharp and clear as diamond. I could not return to that penthouse. I would not bring my child into that poisonous atmosphere. Whatever happened next, whatever it cost me, I was done.
Marcus checked his watch. "I need to go. The board meeting—"
"Go," I said quietly.
He paused, perhaps surprised by my calm tone. For a moment, our eyes met, and I wondered if he saw the change in mine. Then he nodded once and left without another word.
I lay back against the pillows, one hand still cradling my secret miracle, and felt a strange peace descend. The decision made, I closed my eyes and drifted into the first restful sleep I'd had in years.
Hours later, I awoke to hushed voices in the corridor outside my room. The hospital had grown quieter, visiting hours nearly over. The door opened slowly, and I tensed, expecting Marcus or perhaps a nurse.
Instead, a tall figure stepped inside—broad-shouldered, with kind eyes I hadn't seen in years but would recognize anywhere.
"Sebastian?" I whispered, disbelieving.
Sebastian Mitchell closed the door quietly behind him, his familiar face lined with concern. "Hello, Isabella," he said softly, approaching my bedside. "I've been following your updates with Dr. Reed. I hope you don't mind."
"How did you...?"
"That's not important right now." He pulled a chair close, his movements careful, deliberate. "What matters is getting you somewhere safe to recover. I have a place ready, if you'll accept my help."
I stared at him, this ghost from my past who had appeared exactly when I needed him most. His eyes held no pity, only steady resolve and something else I couldn't quite name.
"Why?" I managed.
"Because you deserve better than this," he said simply. "And I think you finally know that too."
I looked into his eyes and saw a lifeline being extended. All I had to do was reach for it.
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