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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 2

I fled the law firm in a blur of motion, my wheelchair wheels skidding dangerously across the polished marble floor. The receptionist called after me, but her voice was distant, drowned out by the roaring in my ears. *Rigged that crash. Trust fund. Unpaid surrogate.* The words pounded through my head with each frantic push of my wheels.

The elevator seemed to take an eternity. I pressed the button repeatedly, my hands shaking so violently I could barely control them. When the doors finally opened, I nearly collided with a man in a suit who stepped back, startled.

'Mrs. Hudson? Are you alright?'

I didn't answer. Couldn't answer. The lobby swam before my eyes as I propelled myself through it, past the doorman who rushed to help me.

'Ma'am, should I call your driver?'

'No!' The word tore from my throat, raw and desperate. Graham controlled the driver. Graham controlled everything.

Outside, the autumn air hit my face like a slap. I wheeled blindly forward, no destination in mind except *away*. My chest constricted, lungs refusing to fill properly. Central Park loomed ahead, and I made for it instinctively, needing green space, open air, somewhere to breathe.

The park path sloped upward, and my arms burned with the effort of pushing myself up the incline. Sweat beaded on my forehead despite the cool October breeze. When I reached a secluded bench overlooking the pond, my strength finally gave out. I stopped, gasping, and doubled over.

*Seven years. Seven years of lies.*

The world tilted sickeningly as memories realigned themselves in horrifying new patterns. Graham's insistence on handling all my medical care. The endless fertility treatments that never seemed to work—until now. The 'accident' that had robbed me of my ability to walk, conveniently occurring just as my trust fund was set to transfer fully into my control.

A sob ripped from my throat, then another, until I was shaking with them. My hands clutched my stomach protectively. *My baby. Our baby.* No—*their* baby. The child Graham and Quinn had wanted me to carry for them.

'Miss? Miss, are you okay?'

I looked up through tear-blurred vision to see a middle-aged woman in running clothes, her face creased with concern.

'I need...' My voice broke. What did I need? Where could I go? Graham owned our home. He controlled our finances. He'd isolated me from every friend I had.

'Can I call someone for you?' she asked gently.

I shook my head, wiping furiously at my tears. 'I just need to get home,' I managed. 'I can manage.'

But I couldn't. My arms felt like lead, my body betraying me just when I needed strength most. The woman—Linda, she told me—helped me navigate back to Fifth Avenue, where the doorman's eyes widened at my disheveled appearance.

'Mrs. Hudson! What happened?'

'I'm fine,' I lied, my voice hollow. 'Just tired.'

Upstairs in the penthouse, the space I'd once found so comforting now felt like a beautifully appointed prison. I wheeled straight to the bathroom, to the medicine cabinet where my prescriptions were kept in neat rows. With trembling fingers, I pushed aside the labeled bottles of muscle relaxants and pain medications.

Behind them, partially hidden, sat three unmarked orange prescription bottles. I'd never noticed them before—Graham always organized my medications. I opened one, examining the small white pills inside. They weren't any of my regular prescriptions.

My phone buzzed with a text from Graham: *Working late. Don't wait up.*

I replaced the bottles exactly as I'd found them and wheeled myself to the computer. A quick search of the pill descriptions brought up results that made my blood run cold: fertility suppressants and sedatives. Drugs that would ensure I stayed docile and infertile—until they decided otherwise.

By dinner time, I'd composed myself enough to sit across from Graham at our dining table, watching him cut into his steak as if today were like any other. The candlelight caught the gleam in his eyes as he looked up at me.

'You're quiet tonight,' he observed, reaching across to touch my hand. 'Everything okay?'

I took a deep breath. 'I know you're lying to me, Graham.'

His expression didn't change, but something flickered behind his eyes—surprise, perhaps, or calculation. Then he smiled, the same smile I'd once found so reassuring.

'Sweetheart,' he said, voice gentle as he squeezed my hand. 'It's just the pregnancy hormones making you anxious. Dr. Keller warned us this might happen.'

He rose from his chair and came around to me, pressing a kiss to my forehead. 'Why don't you rest? I'll bring you some tea.'

As he walked toward the kitchen, his back straight and confident, I realized with terrifying clarity: he had no idea I'd overheard him with Quinn. And if I wanted to survive—if my baby and I were going to escape—I needed to keep it that way.

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