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When My Miracle Pregnancy Revealed My Husband’s Billionaire Lies Novel Cover

When My Miracle Pregnancy Revealed My Husband’s Billionaire Lies

The phone's vibration against my nightstand woke me before my alarm could. Groggily, I reached for it, squinting at the screen: *New York Fertility Center*. My heart skipped a beat as I swiped to answer. "Mrs. Hudson?" Dr. Keller's voice came through, professional but with an undercurrent of something I couldn't quite place. "Yes, this is Taylor," I said, sitting up straighter against the headboard, suddenly wide awake. The silk sheets pooled around my waist as I braced myself for another disappointment—our sixth failed IVF attempt in seven years of marriage. "I'm calling with your results." A brief pause. "Congratulations, Taylor.
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Chapter 1

The phone's vibration against my nightstand woke me before my alarm could. Groggily, I reached for it, squinting at the screen: *New York Fertility Center*. My heart skipped a beat as I swiped to answer.

"Mrs. Hudson?" Dr. Keller's voice came through, professional but with an undercurrent of something I couldn't quite place.

"Yes, this is Taylor," I said, sitting up straighter against the headboard, suddenly wide awake. The silk sheets pooled around my waist as I braced myself for another disappointment—our sixth failed IVF attempt in seven years of marriage.

"I'm calling with your results." A brief pause. "Congratulations, Taylor. You're pregnant."

The world stopped. I couldn't breathe, couldn't speak. Seven years of negative tests, of Graham holding me while I cried, of injections and procedures and hope crushed again and again.

"Taylor? Are you there?"

"Yes," I whispered, tears already streaming down my face. "Are you sure?"

Dr. Keller's laugh was gentle. "Very sure. Your hCG levels are strong. We'll want to see you next week for an ultrasound, but everything looks promising."

After ending the call, I sat frozen, my hand drifting to my still-flat stomach. Inside me grew the miracle we'd fought so hard for—the family Graham had promised we would have, even after the accident that took my ability to walk and, I thought, my chance at motherhood.

"We're going to have a baby," I whispered to the empty room, testing the words I'd longed to say for so long.

---

The afternoon light streamed through the penthouse windows as I held up two different pearl necklaces, studying my reflection in the full-length mirror. My wheelchair was positioned perfectly to give me the best view.

"The strand with the engraving," I decided aloud, setting aside the simpler piece. The clasp of the chosen necklace bore a single word in delicate script: *Forever*. Graham had given it to me on our first anniversary, promising that no matter what challenges my paralysis brought, he would be by my side forever.

Now I would wear it to tell him about our child.

I practiced my speech again, rehearsing the words I would say when I surprised him at his law firm. "Seven years ago today, you promised to love me in sickness and in health," I whispered to my reflection, watching my eyes fill with tears of joy. "Today, I'm giving you the gift we've prayed for..."

My phone buzzed with a confirmation from the caterer—champagne (real for Graham, sparkling cider disguised as champagne for me) would be delivered to his office at 4:30. The cake, a replica of our wedding cake's top tier, was already en route.

Everything had to be perfect. After all Graham had sacrificed for me—taking on my care after Jason abandoned me, standing by me through endless medical appointments, even as Quinn, my supposed best friend, disappeared from my life—he deserved this moment of pure happiness.

I touched my stomach again. *Your daddy is going to be so happy to meet you.*

---

The elevator doors opened directly into the reception area of Hudson & Associates. Familiar faces greeted me with warm smiles as I wheeled myself forward, the cake box balanced carefully on my lap, a gift bag containing the chilled champagne hanging from my chair's handle.

"He's in the main conference room," Graham's assistant whispered with a conspiratorial wink. "End of the hall. They're wrapping up a meeting."

I nodded gratefully, my heart pounding with anticipation. As I approached the glass-walled conference room, I could see Graham's broad shoulders, his back to me as he leaned over the table. Across from him sat a woman with sleek dark hair.

Quinn.

My wheels slowed involuntarily. What was my former best friend doing here? I hadn't seen her since before the accident seven years ago, when she'd vanished from my life without explanation.

I was about to announce myself when Graham's voice, unusually cold and sharp, cut through the air.

"She'll never suspect we rigged that crash," he said, his tone so casual he might have been discussing the weather. "The trust fund is almost completely in our control, and now she's our unpaid surrogate."

Quinn's laugh—a sound I once associated with late-night confidences and shared secrets—sliced through me like a blade. "Poor, pathetic Taylor. Still thinks you're her knight in shining armor after all these years."

The cake box slipped from my suddenly numb fingers, hitting the floor with a soft thud that neither of them heard.

My entire world—the marriage I cherished, the husband I adored, the baby I already loved—shattered into a thousand irretrievable pieces.

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