
Husband's Manipulative Games
Chapter 1
The pain ripped through me like a serrated knife, tearing at my insides as I doubled over on our bedroom floor. My hands instinctively cradled my swollen belly, feeling the wetness spreading beneath me on the expensive Persian rug Marcus had insisted on buying.
"The baby," I gasped, my voice barely audible even to my own ears. "Mom, the baby's coming!"
My mother, who had been staying with us during my final trimester, rushed into the room. Her face paled at the sight of the clear fluid pooling around me.
"Your water broke. We need to get you to the hospital now," she said, her voice steady despite the panic I could see flickering in her eyes.
The contractions intensified as we made our way to Seattle General. Each wave of pain crashed over me with increasing ferocity, leaving me breathless and terrified. This wasn't right. It was too early, too sudden. Something was wrong.
"Where's Marcus?" I managed between contractions as my mother pulled up to the emergency entrance. "He should be here."
"I've called him three times," my mother replied, her lips pressed into a thin line. "He's not answering."
Of course he wasn't. My husband, the brilliant Dr. Marcus Whitfield, was probably still at the lab with Elena. Always with Elena.
The hospital staff rushed me inside, their faces grim as they assessed my condition. Words floated around me—"fetal distress," "emergency C-section," "we need to move quickly."
"Please," I begged the nurse who was wheeling me toward the operating room. "My husband—he's Dr. Whitfield. He works here. Someone needs to find him."
The nurse nodded, her eyes sympathetic. "We've paged him, Mrs. Whitfield. He's on his way."
The corridor lights blurred above me as they rushed me toward the double doors of the operating theater. The pain was unbearable now, white-hot and relentless. I could feel my baby struggling, fighting for life inside me.
"We're almost there," a voice assured me. "Just hold on."
And then suddenly, there he was. Marcus burst through the side entrance, his white coat flapping behind him. For one brief, beautiful moment, I felt relief wash over me. My husband was here. Everything would be okay.
But instead of rushing to my side, Marcus planted himself in front of the operating room doors, effectively blocking our path.
"Where is she?" he demanded, his voice sharp with panic. His eyes weren't even on me but scanning the corridor behind us.
"Dr. Whitfield, your wife needs emergency surgery," a nurse explained, her voice rising with urgency. "The baby—"
"I need to know where Elena is," Marcus interrupted, his face contorted with what looked like genuine fear. "She's having an anxiety episode. She needs me right now."
I stared up at him, unable to process what I was hearing. Elena. He was looking for Elena while I lay here, our child dying inside me.
"Marcus," I whispered, reaching for him. "Please. Our baby."
His eyes finally found mine, but there was no recognition there, no love. Just impatience.
"Jessica, you don't understand. Elena's condition—her touch-sensitive anxiety—she could hurt herself if I'm not there."
"Dr. Whitfield!" A surgeon in full scrubs pushed through the doors. "Step aside immediately. Your wife needs a C-section now."
"I can't," Marcus said, his voice breaking. "Not until I know Elena is safe."
Time seemed to slow as I watched my husband—the man who had promised to love and protect me—choose another woman over me and our child. The betrayal cut deeper than any surgical knife ever could.
By the time they finally wheeled me into surgery, it was too late. I woke hours later to a silent room and an empty bassinet beside my bed. The hollow ache in my arms matched the emptiness in my chest where my heart used to be.
Marcus stood at the foot of my bed, his face composed now, as if he hadn't just destroyed our world. In that moment, looking into his cold, distant eyes, I finally saw the truth that had been there all along.
The man I had married was gone. Perhaps he had never existed at all.
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