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Exposing Husband's Dark Secrets Novel Cover

Exposing Husband's Dark Secrets

The first contraction hit me like a sledgehammer to the spine as Wayne adjusted his tie in our bedroom mirror, preparing for what he called his "important academic obligation." The pain radiated through my swollen belly with such intensity that I doubled over, gripping the edge of our mahogany dresser. "Wayne," I gasped, my voice barely above a whisper. "Something's wrong. This isn't... this isn't normal." He glanced at me through the reflection, his expression more annoyed than concerned. "Amoura, you're barely at thirty-seven weeks. These are just Braxton Hicks contractions—false labor. Dr. Martinez explained this to you multiple times." Another wave of agony crashed over me, and I felt something warm and wet between my legs. My water had broken.
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Chapter 1

The first contraction hit me like a sledgehammer to the spine as Wayne adjusted his tie in our bedroom mirror, preparing for what he called his "important academic obligation." The pain radiated through my swollen belly with such intensity that I doubled over, gripping the edge of our mahogany dresser.

"Wayne," I gasped, my voice barely above a whisper. "Something's wrong. This isn't... this isn't normal."

He glanced at me through the reflection, his expression more annoyed than concerned. "Amoura, you're barely at thirty-seven weeks. These are just Braxton Hicks contractions—false labor. Dr. Martinez explained this to you multiple times."

Another wave of agony crashed over me, and I felt something warm and wet between my legs. My water had broken. The realization sent ice through my veins even as fire consumed my abdomen. "Wayne, please. My water just broke. We need to go to the hospital now."

"Don't be dramatic." He straightened his cufflinks with practiced precision, the same hands that once promised to love and protect me now dismissing my pain with clinical detachment. "Clare's daughter is having her first Thanksgiving dinner tonight, and I promised I'd be there. As her former professor and mentor, it's my responsibility to support her during this milestone."

The way he said Clare's name—soft, reverent, like a prayer—made my stomach clench with something worse than the contractions. "Your responsibility is to your wife and unborn child," I managed through gritted teeth, another contraction stealing my breath.

Wayne turned from the mirror, his jaw set in that stubborn line I'd learned to fear over our eight years of marriage. "You're being selfish, Amoura. This dinner is crucial for my academic reputation. Clare has been working tirelessly on our research project, and her personal life deserves the same support you've always received from me."

Our research project. When had it become theirs? When had my husband's priorities shifted so completely that a former student's family dinner outweighed his own child's birth?

"Wayne, please," I begged, tears streaming down my face as another contraction nearly brought me to my knees. "I'm scared. Something feels wrong. The baby—"

"The baby will be fine. Women have been giving birth for thousands of years without their husbands hovering over them." He grabbed his coat from the closet, his movements sharp and impatient. "I'll be back in a few hours. If you're still having these phantom contractions, we can discuss going to the hospital then."

Phantom contractions. As if my body was betraying me with imaginary pain. As if the life growing inside me was just another inconvenience in his carefully orchestrated academic career.

I watched him walk toward the door, my vision blurring with pain and disbelief. "Don't leave me. Please, Wayne. I need you."

He paused at the threshold, his hand on the doorknob, but didn't turn around. "You need to learn to be more independent, Amoura. You can't always rely on me to solve every little problem."

Every little problem. Our child's birth was a little problem.

The door clicked shut behind him, and I was alone.

The next few hours blurred together in a haze of agony and terror. I managed to call 911 between contractions, my voice breaking as I explained that my husband had left and I was in labor. The paramedics found me collapsed on our marble foyer floor, my designer dress soaked with blood and amniotic fluid.

At the hospital, Dr. Rebecca Stone's face grew increasingly grave as she examined me. "Mrs. Carter, your baby is in distress. We need to perform an emergency C-section immediately, but first we need to address your blood loss. You're going to need a transfusion."

"My husband," I whispered through the oxygen mask they'd placed over my face. "Call my husband. He can donate. We're compatible—"

"We've been trying to reach him for the past hour," a nurse said gently. "His phone goes straight to voicemail."

Of course it did. He was probably sitting around Clare's dinner table, carving turkey and playing the devoted mentor while his wife and child were dying.

When Wayne finally arrived, I was already in the operating room, my body failing as our baby's heartbeat grew weaker on the monitors. Dr. Stone met him in the hallway, and I could hear their muffled conversation through the thin walls.

"Mr. Carter, your wife needs an immediate blood transfusion. Are you willing to donate?"

"I... I can't," Wayne's voice carried that same clinical detachment he'd used when dismissing my contractions hours earlier. "I have a rare blood condition. We're incompatible. Surely the hospital has supplies?"

Lies. All lies. We'd donated blood together during our first year of marriage for a university drive. I remembered the technician commenting on how we were both O-positive, perfect matches.

But even as our baby's life slipped away, even as I lay bleeding on the operating table, Wayne couldn't bring himself to give me his blood. He couldn't sacrifice even that small part of himself to save the child we'd created together.

Through the fog of anesthesia, I heard the monitors flat-line. Our baby was gone.

And Wayne was checking his phone, eager to return to Clare's Thanksgiving dinner.

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