
I Was His Secret Wife Until the Baby Shower Betrayal
Chapter 2
I turned to flee, my vision blurred by tears, my designer heels suddenly unsteady beneath me. The murmurs of the crowd swelled around me like a rising tide, drowning me in their judgment and Victoria's theatrical cries.
"Sarah!" Alexander's voice cut through the chaos, razor-sharp with fury.
Before I could respond, his hand clamped down on my shoulder. I felt the violent force of his grip as he spun me around, his face contorted with a rage I'd never witnessed in seven years of marriage.
"How dare you come here and embarrass me," he hissed, his voice low but vibrating with anger. "How dare you try to ruin this for me."
"Alexander, please—" I whispered, reaching for him instinctively.
Something dark flashed in his eyes. "Get out."
His hands connected with my shoulders, and suddenly there was nothing beneath me but air. The world tilted violently as I felt myself falling backward. My arms flailed, grasping for something, anything to stop my descent. There was a collective gasp from the onlookers as I tumbled down the marble staircase, each step connecting with my body in a different place—shoulder, hip, back, head.
When I finally came to rest at the bottom, the pain was everywhere and nowhere specific, a full-body throb that pulsed with each terrified beat of my heart. Above me, through the haze of shock, I saw Alexander standing at the top of the stairs, his expression unreadable.
"She tried to attack Victoria," someone was saying. "Mr. Sterling was just protecting his family."
His family. The words echoed in my mind as hotel staff rushed to my side.
"Ma'am, are you alright? Do you need an ambulance?" A concerned face swam into view—a young man in an Astoria Grand uniform.
"No," I managed, though my body screamed otherwise. "No ambulance."
I couldn't bear the thought of more public humiliation, more witnesses to my degradation. The medics from the hotel's first aid station helped me to a small room off the lobby, their hands gentle as they cleaned the visible cuts and applied bandages to my scraped palms and bruised elbow.
"You should really see a doctor," the older medic advised, her eyes kind behind practical glasses. "That was a bad fall."
"I'm fine," I insisted, though a strange cramping sensation had begun low in my abdomen. "I just want to go home."
"At least let us call someone for you," she pressed.
I almost laughed. Call who? My husband, who had just pushed me down the stairs? "No, thank you. I can manage."
The cab ride to our—to Alexander's—penthouse was a blur of pain and humiliation. I curled into myself in the backseat, one hand pressed against my stomach where the cramping was intensifying. Something felt wrong, deeply wrong, but I couldn't process it yet.
I spent the evening alone in our marble bathroom, watching droplets of blood appear in my underwear with increasing frequency. By midnight, the cramping had become unbearable waves that left me gasping. When I saw the bright red stain spreading across the bathroom tiles, I finally admitted what I'd been denying for hours.
My hands shook as I called an Uber instead of an ambulance—still protecting Alexander's privacy even now. The driver looked alarmed when I eased myself into his backseat, pale and clutching my abdomen.
"Mount Sinai Hospital, please," I whispered. "Emergency entrance."
The hospital lights were harsh after the dimness of the car. I remember fragments: the triage nurse's concerned face, the ultrasound wand cold against my skin, the doctor's solemn expression as she confirmed what I already knew in my heart.
"I'm sorry, Mrs. Mitchell. You were approximately twelve weeks pregnant. The trauma appears to have caused a complete miscarriage."
Twelve weeks. Almost three months of carrying Alexander's child without knowing. Three months of a life that ended before it had truly begun, because its father had pushed its mother down a flight of stairs.
I wept then, alone in the sterile hospital room, mourning not just the baby I'd never know, but the life I'd believed in—the marriage I'd sacrificed everything for. As dawn broke over Manhattan, casting long shadows through the hospital window, I made a silent vow through my tears: Alexander Sterling would pay for what he'd done to me. To us.
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