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I Carried Her Labor, He Stole My Life Novel Cover

I Carried Her Labor, He Stole My Life

Pain sliced through me like a hot blade, driving me to my knees against the cold hospital wall. I bit down on my fist to muffle my scream, tasting blood as another contraction tore through my body. My vision blurred, sweat plastering my hair to my forehead as I struggled to breathe through the agony. "Please," I gasped to a passing nurse, reaching out with trembling fingers. "Help me." Her eyes flickered to mine, a flash of pity quickly replaced by practiced indifference. She stepped around my crumpled form without breaking stride, her shoes squeaking against the polished floor as she disappeared down the corridor. They'd been told to ignore me. All of them. Nathan's orders. I dragged myself up using the wall for support, my legs quivering beneath me.
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Chapter 2

I dragged myself through the door of our Palo Alto loft, my body still aching with phantom pains. Three days had passed since I'd endured Olivia's labor, yet my muscles remembered every contraction, every moment of agony I was never meant to bear. The silence of the apartment greeted me—Nathan hadn't come home since the birth of his son.

The entryway looked like a high-end florist's showroom. Dozens of elaborate arrangements lined the marble console table and spilled onto the floor, their perfume hanging thick and cloying in the air. I plucked a card from the nearest bouquet of white roses.

"Congratulations to Nathan & Olivia on your beautiful baby boy!"

Another read: "A toast to the new family! Can't wait for the wedding!"

Family. Wedding. The words blurred before my eyes as I dropped the cards to the floor. I sank onto the bench by the door, my legs too weak to carry me further. This had been our home—mine and Nathan's. Now it felt like I was trespassing in someone else's life.

My phone buzzed. Nathan.

"Coming home tonight?"

Not "How are you?" Not "Thank you for bearing the pain that should have been Olivia's." Just a question about his schedule, as if I were his housekeeper rather than the woman who had once been the center of his world.

"Yes," I texted back, my fingers trembling. "When will you be here?"

Three dots appeared, disappeared, then reappeared.

"Late. Don't wait up. Need to finalize venue for the wedding."

I stared at the screen until it went dark, then hurled the phone across the room. It hit the wall with a satisfying crack before falling onto the plush carpet.

Hours later, I prowled the darkened apartment like a ghost. Sleep was impossible. Every time I closed my eyes, I saw Nathan's face as he gazed at Olivia, heard the baby's cry that should have been ours. The pain had hollowed me out, leaving nothing but a shell filled with rage.

I found myself outside his home office, a room that had once been as familiar to me as my own skin. Now the door was locked—another barrier between us that hadn't existed before. The spare key was still hidden in the potted plant beside the door. Some habits die hard.

The office smelled of him—expensive cologne and the faint metallic scent that always clung to him after hours in his lab. I switched on the desk lamp, casting the room in a soft golden glow. Everything was meticulously organized, just as he liked it. The man who had implanted a torture device in my body without my consent couldn't bear a paperclip out of place.

I ran my fingers along his bookshelf—law books, technical manuals, business strategies. Nathan had always been proud of his diverse knowledge. Behind a row of legal volumes, my fingers caught on something that didn't belong—a leather-bound notebook secured with a small lock.

The lock was no match for a hairpin and determination. Inside, page after page of schematics and notes detailed the neural transmitter—my neural transmitter. The device had been created years ago, when I still suffered from pain related to a childhood injury. Nathan had designed it to help me.

"Neural pain redirection prototype," one heading read. "Subject: Emily Carter."

Subject. Not fiancée. Not beloved. Subject.

As I flipped through the pages, the evolution of his invention became clear. What had started as a healing tool had been perverted into something monstrous. The final pages contained detailed notes on how he had modified the device to channel Olivia's labor pains to me.

"Subject will experience 100% of redirected pain stimuli while primary patient remains comfortable."

My hands shook as I used my phone to photograph page after page. Evidence of his betrayal, documented in his own handwriting.

A week later, I stood in the shadows of TechVision's annual gala, watching as colleagues who once greeted me warmly now averted their eyes. I wore the same black gown Nathan had bought for me months ago, when I was still his partner, his future. Now I was a ghost at my own funeral.

The lights dimmed, and Nathan took the stage to thunderous applause. He looked immaculate in his tuxedo, not a hint of the monster I now knew him to be visible on his handsome face.

"I have an announcement to make," he said, his voice carrying through the ballroom. "As many of you know, I recently became a father."

More applause. Congratulatory shouts.

"And today, I'm honored to introduce the mother of my son and my future wife, Olivia Morgan."

She appeared beside him in a shimmer of gold, radiant and recovered, showing no signs of having given birth just days ago. Of course not—I had borne that burden for her.

Later, as guests mingled and champagne flowed, Nathan approached me. His smile didn't reach his eyes.

"You came," he said, as if my presence was a pleasant surprise rather than a knife in my heart.

"Did you think I wouldn't?" I kept my voice steady, though inside I was screaming.

He pressed something into my hand—a heavy cream envelope with gold embossing.

"The wedding is next month at the Silverado Vineyard in Napa," he said. "Your presence would mean the world to me, Emily."

I looked down at the invitation, then back at his face—the face I had once kissed, had once believed in completely.

"Of course," I whispered. "I wouldn't miss it for the world."

The lie tasted like ashes on my tongue, but the smile I gave him was bright enough to blind. Behind it, I was already planning my escape.

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