
My Fiancé Let Our Son Nearly Die to Test Me
Chapter 3
Dawson's breathing grew more labored with each passing hour. His tiny chest rose and fell in rapid, shallow bursts, his lips taking on a bluish tinge that sent ice through my veins.
"Call Dr. Mercer," I told Willow over the phone, my voice steady despite the panic clawing at my throat. "Tell him we're coming."
Willow had arranged everything through her mother's connections—a private clinic in Brooklyn, away from Edward's sphere of influence. The doctor was discreet, paid handsomely for his silence.
"Hurry," Willow said. "The coroner is waiting."
I wrapped Dawson in his favorite blanket, the one with tiny airplanes that Edward had bought during one of his brief visits. The irony wasn't lost on me.
"I've got you, baby," I whispered, pressing my lips to his feverish forehead. "We're going to fix this."
The taxi ride to the clinic passed in a blur. Dawson's eyes fluttered open once, his gaze unfocused.
"Mommy?" he whispered.
"I'm here," I choked out, holding him closer. "Everything's going to be okay."
Dr. Mercer met us at the back entrance. His face was grim as he examined Dawson.
"We need to operate immediately," he said. "But first—"
"First we need the paperwork," I finished for him. "For Dawson Hawkins."
The coroner was waiting in a small office, a man with tired eyes and hands that trembled slightly as he counted the cash I placed on his desk.
"Sudden infant death syndrome," he said, not meeting my eyes. "Complicated by malnutrition."
I flinched at the last word, but nodded. "Can you issue the certificate today?"
"Already done." He slid a document across the desk. "My condolences, Ms. Hawkins."
---
The call to Edward came three hours later. I stood in the hospital bathroom, staring at my reflection—a woman I barely recognized, with eyes hard as flint and hands that wouldn't stop shaking.
"Edward," I sobbed into the phone, my voice breaking perfectly. "Dawson—he's not breathing!"
"What?" His voice sharpened with surprise rather than alarm. "Where are you?"
"The hospital! I don't know what to do!" I screamed, letting hysteria crack my voice. "He was fine and then—please hurry!"
I hung up before he could respond, then texted Willow: "He's coming."
Edward arrived forty minutes later, his hair damp from what smelled like expensive shampoo. No hospital antiseptic or sweat of panic—just the faint scent of sandalwood and mint.
"Where is he?" he demanded, looking around the empty waiting area.
"The paramedics took him," I said, my face buried in my hands. "They said... they said it was too late."
Edward's face went white. "What do you mean, too late?"
I looked up at him, letting tears stream down my face. "He's gone, Edward. Our son is gone."
---
Three days later, we stood in a small chapel, surrounded by a handful of people—mostly Willow's friends posing as mourners. The coffin was small, white, and closed.
Edward approached it hesitantly, his hand reaching out.
"Don't touch him!" I shrieked, throwing myself between them. "You can't touch him!"
"Ember, please—" Edward's voice broke.
"No!" I spat, my voice raw from days of crying. "You did this! Your poverty, your disease—you couldn't even afford decent food for our son! Look what your pride cost us!"
Edward staggered back as if I'd struck him. For the first time, I saw genuine pain in his eyes—not for our son, but for himself.
"Ember, I never meant—"
"Get out!" I screamed, pointing to the door. "Get out before I call the police!"
As he stumbled away, Willow squeezed my arm. "The car's waiting," she whispered.
---
The private cargo plane hummed beneath us as we climbed into the night sky. Dawson slept peacefully beside me, sedated and stable, his small body finally at rest.
"Is he going to be okay?" I asked Willow, who sat across from us, monitoring Dawson's breathing.
"The surgery in Paris has a ninety percent success rate," she said. "Dr. Moreau is the best."
I nodded, unable to speak past the knot in my throat. Below us, New York's lights blurred into a glittering smear as we climbed higher.
"Look," Willow said softly, pointing out the window at the receding cityscape.
I pressed my palm against the cold glass, watching America—watching Edward—fall away from us.
"I'll never come back here," I whispered, more to myself than to Willow. "Not ever."
As the plane banked east toward Paris, I held Dawson closer, feeling his steady heartbeat against my chest. We were leaving behind everything—except each other.
Somewhere below, Edward Brooks was discovering that his billions couldn't bring back what he'd thrown away. And I was discovering that sometimes, the only way forward is to disappear completely.
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