
I Recorded His Plan to Harvest Our Baby’s Blood
I Recorded His Plan to Harvest Our Baby’s Blood Chapter 1
The soothing voice of my yoga instructor still echoed in my mind as I waddled—yes, at eight months pregnant, there was no other word for it—into our Manhattan penthouse. I instinctively caressed my swollen belly, feeling my baby shift beneath my touch. Our baby. Mine and Alexander's. The thought still made me smile, even after five months of marriage.
"Alexander?" I called out, dropping my yoga mat by the entryway. Silence greeted me. Strange. His Bentley was in the garage, so he must be home.
I kicked off my shoes, relishing the cool marble beneath my swollen feet. Pregnancy had transformed my body in ways I never imagined, but Alexander had been nothing but supportive. Three years of pursuing him, of convincing him we were meant to be, and now we were here—married, with our first child only weeks away.
As I passed his study, a faint blue glow caught my eye. The door was slightly ajar—unusual for Alexander, who guarded his privacy fiercely. I hesitated, my hand hovering over the polished wood. He never left his study open. In five months of marriage, I'd never once been inside.
"Alexander?" I called again, softer this time. No response.
Something pulled me forward—curiosity, perhaps, or something deeper. I pushed the door open just enough to slip inside.
The blue glow came from his computer, still running but abandoned. Yet it wasn't the computer that froze me in place. It was the walls.
Every inch was covered with photographs. Not the modern art Alexander claimed to collect, not family portraits or wedding photos. Just her. Isabella. Alexander's adopted sister.
My breath caught in my throat as I moved closer, my fingers trembling as they traced the edge of a frame. Isabella as a child, her wide eyes staring into the camera. Isabella as a teenager, pale but smiling from a hospital bed. Isabella last Christmas, wearing the diamond earrings Alexander had told me were family heirlooms.
Dozens—no, hundreds—of images. A shrine dedicated to a single person.
I pulled open a drawer, finding more photos spilling out. Some recent, some years old. Isabella at parties, on vacations, sleeping peacefully. The intimacy of some images made my skin crawl.
A sound in the hallway sent panic surging through me. I ducked behind a tall bookshelf just as the door swung open. Alexander stormed in, his phone pressed to his ear, his voice tight with stress.
"No, that's not acceptable." He jabbed at his desk phone, putting the call on speaker as he paced. "Dr. Finch, I've donated millions to Mount Sinai. Don't tell me what's 'medically advised.'"
I pressed myself against the bookshelf, praying my racing heart wouldn't give me away.
"Mr. Hayes," a weary voice responded, "the procedure has risks. Your wife is only at thirty-two weeks. The cord blood extraction—"
"We need that cord blood tomorrow—no excuses. Isabella's life depends on it." Alexander's voice cracked. "The accident is already arranged. The emergency C-section will happen, and you will be ready."
Accident? C-section? My hand flew to my mouth to stifle a gasp.
"Mr. Hayes, I understand your sister's condition is deteriorating, but using your wife this way—"
"Using my wife?" Alexander laughed bitterly. "Why do you think I married her in the first place?"
The world tilted beneath my feet. The baby kicked sharply, as if sensing my distress.
"The compatibility tests were conclusive," Alexander continued. "Sophia's child—my child—is Isabella's best chance. We've waited eight months. We can't wait any longer."
"And the staged accident?" Dr. Finch sounded pained. "Isabella's idea, I presume?"
"It guarantees the emergency extraction. Higher success rates for the cord blood harvesting." Alexander's voice was clinically detached now. "Isabella has arranged everything. The FDR Drive, tomorrow afternoon."
I couldn't breathe. My vision blurred as pieces clicked into horrible place. The whirlwind romance. His sudden proposal after years of my pursuit. His insistence that we start a family immediately.
It had never been about love. It had never been about me.
I was nothing but a vessel.
"Just be ready, Doctor." Alexander's tone left no room for argument. "Tomorrow, my sister lives, regardless of the cost."
As he hung up, I saw his face in profile—a face I thought I knew. Now, it belonged to a stranger, a monster wearing my husband's features. And tomorrow, he planned to sacrifice me and our baby for Isabella's sake.
The truth congealed in my heart like ice, even as our child—the child he'd only created as a medical resource—stirred within me.
I Recorded His Plan to Harvest Our Baby’s Blood of Contents
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