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Losing Baby to His Mistress Novel Cover

Losing Baby to His Mistress

The fluorescent lights of City General Hospital buzzed overhead as I sat in the sterile consultation room, my hands folded tightly in my lap. Dr. Sarah Mitchell, a woman in her early thirties with kind eyes behind wire-rimmed glasses, sat across from me with my test results spread across her desk like pieces of a puzzle I didn't want to solve. "Mrs. Mills," she began, her voice gentle but firm. "I need you to understand the gravity of what I'm about to tell you." My heart hammered against my ribs. I'd come in for what I thought was a routine check-up—the persistent nausea, the fatigue I'd attributed to stress from my crumbling marriage. Danny had barely looked up from his phone when I mentioned the appointment. "You have stage two stomach cancer," Dr. Mitchell said, each word landing like a physical blow.
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Chapter 1

The fluorescent lights of City General Hospital buzzed overhead as I sat in the sterile consultation room, my hands folded tightly in my lap. Dr. Sarah Mitchell, a woman in her early thirties with kind eyes behind wire-rimmed glasses, sat across from me with my test results spread across her desk like pieces of a puzzle I didn't want to solve.

"Mrs. Mills," she began, her voice gentle but firm. "I need you to understand the gravity of what I'm about to tell you."

My heart hammered against my ribs. I'd come in for what I thought was a routine check-up—the persistent nausea, the fatigue I'd attributed to stress from my crumbling marriage. Danny had barely looked up from his phone when I mentioned the appointment.

"You have stage two stomach cancer," Dr. Mitchell said, each word landing like a physical blow. "The tumor is approximately three centimeters and has begun to spread to nearby lymph nodes."

The room tilted. My mouth went dry, and I gripped the arms of the chair to steady myself. "Cancer?" The word felt foreign on my tongue.

"There's something else." Dr. Mitchell's expression grew more serious. "You're eight weeks pregnant."

The air rushed out of my lungs. Pregnant. After five years of hoping, of Danny's increasing indifference whenever I brought up children, now—when my body was betraying me—now there was finally life growing inside me.

"The pregnancy complicates treatment significantly," she continued, pulling out charts and pointing to areas I couldn't focus on through my shock. "The hormonal changes can accelerate cancer progression. We need to begin aggressive treatment immediately, which means..."

She paused, her eyes meeting mine with practiced compassion. "I strongly recommend terminating the pregnancy to save your life, Ashley. I know this isn't what you want to hear, but without immediate treatment, the cancer could become inoperable within months."

I pressed my hand to my stomach instinctively, imagining the tiny life inside—Danny's child, the baby I'd dreamed of. But would he even care? When was the last time he'd touched me with anything resembling tenderness?

"How long do I have to decide?" My voice came out as a whisper.

"Days, not weeks. The sooner we begin treatment, the better your prognosis."

I nodded numbly, barely processing the treatment options she outlined, the survival statistics that seemed to float around me like numbers in a nightmare. All I could think about was going home to Danny, telling him about our baby and my cancer, hoping that maybe this crisis would bring us back together.

Leaving the consultation room felt like walking through water. The hospital corridor stretched endlessly before me, filled with the sounds of life continuing—nurses chatting, machines beeping, families hugging in relief or crying in grief. I moved through it all like a ghost, my diagnosis heavy in my chest.

That's when I saw them.

Danny stood beside a hospital bed in the emergency wing, his tall frame bent over a petite woman with perfectly styled blonde hair. Luciana Hayes, his secretary. She was sitting up, her left wrist wrapped in a pristine white bandage, looking far too beautiful for someone who'd supposedly fallen at the office.

"Does it hurt much?" Danny's voice carried the gentle concern I hadn't heard directed at me in years. He held her uninjured hand between both of his, his thumb tracing circles on her palm.

"Only a little," Luciana replied, her voice soft and vulnerable in a way that made my stomach clench. "Thank you for staying with me. I was so scared."

"Of course I stayed." Danny reached up to brush a strand of hair from her face, the gesture so intimate it felt like watching a lover's caress. "I couldn't leave you alone."

I stood frozen in the doorway, watching my husband show more tenderness to his secretary's sprained wrist than he had to me in months. He'd brought her coffee—her favorite vanilla latte from the café she always talked about. The cup sat on her bedside table next to a small bouquet of flowers that definitely hadn't come from the hospital gift shop.

"Danny?" I stepped into the room, my voice barely audible.

He turned, and for a moment, I saw guilt flash across his features before it was replaced by irritation. "Ashley? What are you doing here?"

"I had a doctor's appointment." I glanced between him and Luciana, who was watching our interaction with barely concealed satisfaction. "I need to talk to you about something important."

"Can't it wait?" He gestured toward Luciana as if her minor injury trumped whatever I might need. "Luciana fell at the office. I couldn't just leave her here alone."

But you could leave me alone with cancer and your baby growing inside me, I thought, the words burning in my throat.

"It's okay, Danny," Luciana said sweetly, squeezing his hand. "Go talk to your wife. I'll be fine for a few minutes."

The dismissal in her tone, the way she emphasized 'your wife' like it was a temporary inconvenience, made my hands shake. Danny hesitated, clearly torn between staying with her and acknowledging me.

"Actually, it can wait," I said, backing toward the door. "I can see you're busy."

As I walked away, I heard Luciana's soft laughter and Danny's murmured response. The sound followed me down the corridor like an echo of everything I'd lost, everything I was about to lose.

That evening, our house felt more like a mausoleum than a home. Danny arrived two hours late, smelling faintly of Luciana's perfume, his tie loosened and his hair slightly mussed. I'd spent those hours sitting in our living room, staring at the ultrasound photo Dr. Mitchell had given me—a tiny blur that represented both hope and heartbreak.

"Danny, we need to talk." I stood as he entered, the photo clutched in my trembling hands.

He barely glanced up from his phone. "Can it wait? Luciana's setting up an emergency client meeting for tomorrow morning, and I need to review the contracts."

Luciana. Always Luciana.

"I'm pregnant," I said, the words tumbling out before I lost my courage.

That got his attention. His head snapped up, his expression shifting from annoyance to shock. "What?"

"Eight weeks." I held out the ultrasound, my hand shaking. "And Danny, there's something else. I have cancer. Stomach cancer. Stage two."

For a moment, silence filled the space between us. I watched his face, searching for some sign of the man I'd fallen in love with, the one who'd promised to love me in sickness and in health.

His phone buzzed. He glanced at it automatically.

"Jesus, Ashley." He ran a hand through his hair, looking more inconvenienced than concerned. "Are you sure? Maybe you should get a second opinion. You've been stressed lately, maybe—"

"The tests are conclusive." My voice came out steadier than I felt. "The doctor says I need to start treatment immediately, which means..."

His phone buzzed again. This time he answered it.

"Luciana? Yes, I can review those tonight." He held up a finger to me, as if my cancer diagnosis could wait for his secretary's call. "No, don't worry about your wrist. Take tomorrow off if you need to."

I watched him pace to the window, his voice dropping to the intimate tone he'd used at the hospital. The ultrasound photo fluttered to the floor as my hands went numb.

"I have to go," he said after hanging up. "There's a client emergency. We'll talk about this later, okay? Maybe you should call your doctor, make sure about the diagnosis."

He grabbed his jacket and headed for the door, pausing only to add, "And Ashley? Don't tell anyone about this yet. We need to figure out what we're dealing with first."

The door closed behind him with a soft click that sounded like the end of everything. I sank to my knees and picked up the ultrasound photo, my tears blurring the tiny image of the child I was already mourning.

In the silence of our empty house, I finally understood the choice I had to make. It wasn't just between my life and my baby's. It was between a future where I valued myself enough to survive, and a past where I'd slowly disappeared into someone who no longer saw me at all.

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