
My Groom Cheated With My Sister At Our Wedding
Chapter 2
The rain hammered against my apartment window like fists demanding entry. I clutched my phone with trembling fingers, my mother's voice still echoing in my ears from our last call.
"You're a stain on this family, Lily. A constant reminder of your father's weakness. At least have the decency to disappear quietly."
A sharp pain ripped through my abdomen, stealing my breath. I doubled over, gripping the kitchen counter as another contraction hit, stronger than before. This wasn't supposed to happen yet. I still had three weeks.
"No, no, no," I whispered, feeling wetness between my legs. My water had broken.
I fumbled with my phone, barely able to see through the tears and pain. 911. The numbers blurred as another contraction seized me.
"911, what's your emergency?"
"I'm in labor," I gasped. "I'm alone. Please—"
The operator's calm voice guided me through the next few minutes as I gave my address, described my symptoms. Twenty-eight minutes, she said. The ambulance would be here in twenty-eight minutes.
I slid down the wall, cradling my belly as the storm outside seemed to mirror the chaos in my body. My daughter was coming too soon, and I was utterly alone.
The paramedics burst through my door in a blur of blue uniforms and efficient movements. They lifted me onto a stretcher, asking questions I could barely process through the pain. The ambulance ride passed in fragments—sirens wailing, rain streaking the windows, a young EMT holding my hand and telling me to breathe.
New York Presbyterian's emergency entrance glowed like a beacon through the storm. They wheeled me through corridors that smelled of antiseptic and fear, voices calling out medical terms I didn't understand.
"Is there someone we should call?" a nurse asked as they transferred me to a hospital bed.
I stared at the ceiling, another contraction building. Who was there to call? My mother who wished I'd disappear? My sister who'd stolen everything?
My fingers found Ethan's number almost by instinct. Even after everything, even knowing what he'd done, some desperate part of me clung to the memory of who I'd thought he was.
"Lily?" His voice was sharp with surprise.
"The baby's coming," I sobbed. "I'm at Presbyterian. I'm scared."
Silence. Then, impossibly, "I'll be right there."
He arrived within the hour, his hair damp from the rain, his expression a mask of concern that almost looked genuine. He took my hand, and for a moment—just a moment—I let myself believe this was real.
"Everything's going to be fine," he murmured, brushing hair from my sweaty forehead. "I'm here now."
The doctors decided on an emergency C-section. My blood pressure was too high, the baby showing signs of distress. As they prepped me for surgery, Ethan stayed by my side, the perfect picture of a devoted father.
"I'll make sure they take good care of her," he promised as they wheeled me toward the operating room. "Trust me."
Trust. Such a simple word that I'd given so freely.
The anesthesia pulled me under like a tide. The last thing I saw was Ethan's face, and something in his eyes that made my heart stutter with a fear I couldn't name.
I surfaced from the darkness slowly, my body heavy and disconnected. The recovery room came into focus—white walls, beeping machines, the antiseptic smell that meant hospital.
"My baby," I croaked, my throat raw. "Where's my baby?"
A nurse appeared at my bedside, her face carefully neutral. "The doctor will be in shortly."
"No." I tried to sit up, but the incision screamed in protest. "I want to see her. Now."
The doctor who entered wasn't smiling. He pulled a chair close to my bed, and I knew—somehow I knew—before he even opened his mouth.
"Ms. Carter, I'm very sorry. There were complications."
"No."
"Your daughter didn't survive. We did everything we could."
"No!" The word tore from my throat, raw and primal. "She was fine! The monitors said she was fine!"
He placed a document on the bedside table. Death certificate. Time of death: 3:47 AM.
"This is wrong," I sobbed, shoving the paper away. "She was healthy. You said she was healthy!"
"Sometimes these things happen," he said gently. "There was nothing anyone could have done."
But as he left, as the nurses tried to comfort me with empty platitudes, all I could see was Ethan's face before I went under. That look in his eyes.
What had he done while I was unconscious? What had he done to our daughter?
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