
Love After a Broken Heart
Chapter 2
The hospital room smelled of antiseptic and despair. I stared at the ceiling, counting the tiny holes in each tile as nurses came and went. My body ached from the near-drowning, but the physical pain was nothing compared to the hollow ache in my chest.
"Miss Kennedy?" A nurse with kind eyes checked my IV. "Your vitals are stabilizing. The doctor says you had a mild case of hypothermia, but you should be fine to go home tomorrow."
Home. Where was home anymore?
The door opened, and Eduardo stepped in, his hair slightly disheveled, his expensive shirt wrinkled. For a moment, my traitorous heart leapt at the sight of him.
"Maia." He approached the bed, placing a hand on mine that felt as cold as the lake water I'd nearly drowned in. "How are you feeling?"
"Like I almost died," I whispered, my voice still raw.
He nodded, his eyes already drifting toward the door. "The doctors say you'll be discharged tomorrow. That's good news."
I waited for more—words of comfort, perhaps, or concern—but he was already reaching for his phone.
"Bellamy's just down the hall," he said, thumbs flying across his screen. "She's asking about you."
Of course she was. The perfect secretary, even in a hospital gown.
"Is she okay?" I asked, though I already knew the answer.
"Just some mild hypothermia. She's already been discharged." He paused his texting to look at me. "I should check on her again."
And just like that, he was gone, leaving behind nothing but the lingering scent of his cologne and the bitter taste of reality.
I closed my eyes, trying to hold back tears that threatened to spill. My fingers found their way to my collarbone, tracing its outline as I'd done countless times before when anxiety gripped me.
Hours passed. Nurses brought medication. Eduardo returned briefly, made a phone call from my room—something about a client meeting—and left again. Each time he entered, his eyes would flick to his phone before truly seeing me.
As evening fell, a sharp cramp seized my abdomen. I curled into myself, gasping as another wave of pain hit harder than the first.
"Help," I called weakly as warm wetness spread between my thighs. "Nurse?"
The pain intensified, bringing with it a clarity I hadn't expected. Something was terribly wrong.
When the nurse finally came, her face changed from professional concern to alarm as she pulled back the blanket.
"Oh dear," she whispered, pressing the call button. "You're bleeding."
More medical staff rushed in. Words like "hemorrhage" and "possible miscarriage" floated around me as they worked. I lay perfectly still, my mind oddly calm as the truth settled over me like a shroud.
A baby. My baby. Eduardo's baby.
A child neither of us had known existed.
"I'm sorry, Miss Kennedy," the doctor said later, her voice gentle. "There was nothing we could do."
I nodded, tears sliding silently down my temples into my hair. Two months pregnant. Eight weeks of a life growing inside me that I hadn't even known about.
And now it was gone.
Just like Eduardo's love. Just like my illusions.
The next morning, I signed my discharge papers with steady hands. Jessica offered to drive me home, but I declined.
"I need to get some things from Eduardo's place," I said quietly.
She looked concerned but didn't push.
Eduardo's apartment was silent when I entered, using the spare key I'd kept for three years. The key I'd used countless times to slip in after hours, to leave before dawn, to be his secret.
I moved methodically through the space, gathering my belongings—the spare toothbrush in his bathroom, the few clothes I kept in his closet, the novels I'd left on his nightstand. Each item I collected felt like reclaiming a piece of myself.
In the bedroom, I paused at the dresser where a framed photo of us stood—one of the few he'd allowed to be taken. We were at some corporate event, standing at a safe distance from each other. I turned the frame face-down.
On his desk, I placed my key and a simple note:
"I'm returning to my family's business. Don't try to contact me."
No accusations. No dramatic confrontations. No explanations of the child he would never know existed.
As I closed the door behind me, my phone buzzed with a text from Eduardo:
"Where are you? Bellamy says you've been discharged but you're not answering her calls."
I slipped the phone back into my pocket without responding and stepped into the sunlight, feeling lighter than I had in years.
The baby was gone. The relationship was over. But somewhere ahead, I sensed something new waiting to begin.
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