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I Faked My Suicide to Save Our Baby From Him Novel Cover

I Faked My Suicide to Save Our Baby From Him

I stood alone at the bar, the crystal flute of champagne untouched between my fingers. The Maxwell Foundation charity gala swirled around me in a blur of designer gowns and polite laughter, but I might as well have been invisible. Across the grand ballroom, Lucas—my husband, my childhood sweetheart—was bent attentively toward Mia Rowan. His fingers gently guided a canapé to her parted lips, his smile warmer than any he'd directed at me in months. "Such a delicate little thing, isn't she?" The voice beside me belonged to Eleanor Wilcox, wife of one of the hospital board members. "Dr. Maxwell is so dedicated to his patients." Her words were kind, but her eyes held something else—pity, perhaps. Or was it morbid fascination? I'd become a spectacle: Summer Maxwell, the neglected wife. "Yes, he's very dedicated," I managed, my voice steady despite the knot tightening in my throat.
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Chapter 2

The sunroom was a beautiful prison—all glass walls and marble floors, filled with exotic plants and bathed in natural light. It might have been my favorite place in the penthouse once. Now, it was my cage.

I paced slowly along the perimeter, trailing my fingers across the cool glass. Three days had passed since Lucas had locked me in here, his face contorted with a rage I barely recognized as he accused me of hurting Mia. Three days of isolation, broken only by Nurse Ingrid's clinical visits and the crushing weight of betrayal.

Something caught my eye—a tiny glint in the corner where the ceiling met the wall. I stood on tiptoe, squinting upward. The realization hit like a physical blow: a camera. Small, discreet, but unmistakable. My eyes darted around the room, finding another near the door, a third by the adjoining bathroom.

He was watching me. Even in my confinement, I wasn't granted the dignity of privacy.

The door clicked open, and I quickly resumed my seat on the chaise lounge, heart hammering against my ribs. Nurse Ingrid entered, her starched uniform rustling as she moved. Her face was a mask of professional detachment as she set down a tray.

"Your prenatal vitamins, Mrs. Maxwell." Her voice was as crisp as her appearance.

I stared at the small pill cup. "Thank you."

"Dr. Maxwell wants to ensure the baby remains healthy while you... consider your options." Her pause was deliberate, loaded with meaning.

"My options?" I echoed, though I knew exactly what she meant.

Ingrid's eyes flicked briefly to my still-flat abdomen. "It would be in everyone's best interest if you made the right decision, Mrs. Maxwell. Especially yours." The threat beneath her clinical tone was unmistakable.

I swallowed the vitamins under her watchful gaze, fighting the urge to scream that this was my child—my baby that Lucas wanted erased as casually as an inconvenient appointment.

"Your parents will be arriving shortly," she informed me, collecting the empty cup. "Dr. Maxwell thought family support might help you see reason."

She left, the lock engaging with a soft but definitive click.

Family support. The bitter irony of those words twisted in my chest. When my parents arrived an hour later, their expressions confirmed what I already knew: they weren't here to rescue me.

"Summer." My father's greeting was stiff, formal. My mother didn't meet my eyes, her attention fixed on arranging her designer handbag just so on her lap.

"Dad. Mom." My voice sounded hollow even to my own ears. "Did Lucas tell you why I'm locked in here? Did he mention the security footage was edited? That Mia set me up?"

"Lucas explained the... situation." My father cleared his throat. "He's concerned about your mental state. Says you've become paranoid, making accusations."

"And you believe him." It wasn't a question.

"What we believe," my mother finally spoke, her voice brittle, "is that public scandal benefits no one. The Bennett-Maxwell merger is weeks away from finalizing. Do you understand what's at stake?"

The truth crashed down on me with stunning clarity. "So that's why you're here. Not because your daughter is being held prisoner by her husband. Not because he's demanding I abort your grandchild. But because of business."

"Don't be dramatic," my father snapped. "This isn't imprisonment; it's intervention. Lucas is a respected doctor. If he says you need help—"

"Help?" I laughed, the sound verging on hysteria. "Is that what you call this?"

My mother's perfectly manicured hand reached for mine, her grip surprisingly firm. "Summer, darling. Whatever's happening between you and Lucas needs to stay private. For everyone's sake. The merger—"

"Get out." I pulled my hand away. "Just go."

They left without argument, confirming what I'd suspected: I was truly alone.

Hours later, as dusk painted the glass walls in amber light, I noticed something I'd overlooked—a smartphone partially hidden in one of the large planters, likely forgotten by a maintenance worker. My heart raced as I carefully extracted it, checking for cameras before powering it on.

With trembling fingers, I typed a message to Emma, my college roommate—the only person outside this toxic world I could trust.

"Emergency. Trapped in Lucas's penthouse. Need help. Please come."

I hit send, then buried the phone back in the planter.

Three hours later, I heard commotion in the hallway. Pressing my ear to the door, I caught fragments of conversation—Emma's voice, insistent and worried, and the security guard's firm refusal.

"Mrs. Maxwell isn't receiving visitors... doctor's orders... please leave before we call the police..."

The front door closed with finality. My last hope of rescue, turned away at the threshold.

I slid down against the glass wall, a sob catching in my throat. The baby—my baby—fluttered inside me, a tiny reminder that I wasn't completely alone. Somehow, I had to find a way out. For both of us.

As night fell, casting the sunroom into darkness, I caught my reflection in the glass—pale, desperate, but with something new in my eyes. Determination.

They had taken everything from me. But they wouldn't take this child. And they wouldn't break me.

Somewhere in the darkness beyond the glass, I sensed I was being watched. And not just by Lucas's cameras.

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