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My Fiancé Let Our Son Nearly Die to Test Me Novel Cover

My Fiancé Let Our Son Nearly Die to Test Me

The scent of greasy plates and burnt coffee clung to my skin as I fumbled with the keys to our apartment. My hands trembled—not from exhaustion, though I'd been on my feet for twelve hours straight, but from the constant, gnawing fear that had become my companion these past months. "Almost there, baby," I whispered to Dawson, whose small body felt heavier than usual against my chest. His breathing seemed labored, his normally rosy cheeks pale and drawn. Our apartment in Queens was little more than a glorified storage unit—peeling paint, water-stained walls, and a persistent smell of something rotting beneath the floorboards. But it was ours, or rather, it was what I could afford now that I'd abandoned my Harvard scholarship to care for Edward. "He'll be okay," I told myself, setting Dawson down on our threadbare couch. "We both will be." I examined my hands in the dim light—scarred, red, and raw from the harsh cleaning chemicals at the diner. The tendonitis had gotten worse, making even simple tasks like buttoning Dawson's clothes a painful ordeal. I smeared ointment on the worst spots, biting my lip against the stinging sensation.
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Chapter 1

The scent of greasy plates and burnt coffee clung to my skin as I fumbled with the keys to our apartment. My hands trembled—not from exhaustion, though I'd been on my feet for twelve hours straight, but from the constant, gnawing fear that had become my companion these past months.

"Almost there, baby," I whispered to Dawson, whose small body felt heavier than usual against my chest. His breathing seemed labored, his normally rosy cheeks pale and drawn.

Our apartment in Queens was little more than a glorified storage unit—peeling paint, water-stained walls, and a persistent smell of something rotting beneath the floorboards. But it was ours, or rather, it was what I could afford now that I'd abandoned my Harvard scholarship to care for Edward.

"He'll be okay," I told myself, setting Dawson down on our threadbare couch. "We both will be."

I examined my hands in the dim light—scarred, red, and raw from the harsh cleaning chemicals at the diner. The tendonitis had gotten worse, making even simple tasks like buttoning Dawson's clothes a painful ordeal. I smeared ointment on the worst spots, biting my lip against the stinging sensation.

"You sold your mother's locket today," I reminded myself aloud, trying to feel noble rather than defeated. The memory of placing that small silver oval into the pawnbroker's hands made my chest tighten. It had been my only connection to the woman I never knew—the only thing of value I'd managed to keep through foster care.

But Edward needed medication. Edward needed me.

I packed a small bag with carefully measured doses of what I believed were his chemotherapy drugs, stolen moments ago from the locked cabinet at the diner where I worked double shifts. The pharmacy had refused my request to "borrow" samples, citing company policy. As if company policy mattered when someone was dying.

"Mommy?" Dawson's voice was weak, barely audible.

"I'm here, sweetheart." I rushed to his side, brushing damp curls from his forehead. His skin felt clammy, too cool. "We're going to see Daddy soon."

His eyelids fluttered. "Is Daddy still sick?"

"Yes, baby. But we're going to help him get better." The lie tasted bitter on my tongue, but what choice did I have? Dawson adored his father, even though Edward had only met him twice since his birth.

---

The address Edward had given me didn't match any hospital I knew in Manhattan. Still, I clutched my bag of "medication" and followed the numbers until I stood before an elegant building with a blue neon sign reading "Sapphire Lounge."

"This can't be right," I muttered, checking the paper again.

A service door opened nearby, and I slipped inside, following the sound of voices. The contrast was jarring—from the dingy street to opulent leather booths and crystal chandeliers. Men in tailored suits lounged with women dripping in diamonds, champagne flowing freely.

And there, in the center VIP booth, sat Edward.

My Edward. Alive. Vital. Drinking expensive scotch with three other men in their twenties.

"The leukemia play was genius," he was saying, his voice carrying across the room as he raised his glass. "She actually gave up Harvard to scrub floors for me."

The bag slipped from my fingers, landing silently on the plush carpet.

"That's how you know she's loyal," Edward continued, laughing. "Unlike the gold diggers who only wanted my money when they thought I had it."

One of his friends—Trevor, I remembered—slapped him on the back. "You're twisted, man. But I get it. After that last fiancée tried to empty your accounts..."

"The test worked perfectly," Edward replied, swirling amber liquid in his glass. "She's proven herself. Now I can let her back into my life... slowly, of course. Keep her grateful."

I couldn't breathe. Couldn't move. The room spun around me as fragments of our life together rearranged themselves into a horrifying new pattern.

---

I ran until my lungs burned, until I reached the hospital where Dawson was born. The fluorescent lights of the maternity ward seemed to pulse with my racing heartbeat as I demanded access to his records.

"Ma'am, I can't just—" the nurse began.

"Please," I begged, no longer caring about pride or dignity. "My son is sick. I need to see his records."

Something in my face must have convinced her. With reluctant movements, she pulled up Dawson's file on the computer.

"Was there... was there anything unusual about his heart?" I asked, remembering how Edward had dismissed my concerns about Dawson's rapid breathing and occasional cyanosis.

The nurse hesitated, then glanced at the screen. "Oh, I wasn't supposed to—Ms. Hunt said these findings weren't significant enough to—"

"Ms. Hunt?" My blood turned to ice. "Mazie Hunt?"

The nurse nodded, then looked uncomfortable. "She's the one who requested the cardiac anomalies be flagged as 'inconclusive pending further testing.'"

With shaking hands, I forced the keyboard toward me and scrolled through the report. There it was—congenital heart defect requiring immediate surgical intervention.

They had known. Edward and Mazie had known our son was dying while they played their sick game.

And I had believed every word.

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