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My Husband Believed Her Lies and Ended Our Child Novel Cover

My Husband Believed Her Lies and Ended Our Child

The rain slashed against the windshield of the Mercedes, a relentless drumbeat matching the suffocating tension inside the cabin. I gripped the leather steering wheel, my knuckles stark white under the dashboard’s glow. Beside me, my mother stared out at the blurred taillights of the New York highway, oblivious to the heavy silence emanating from the backseat. Julian. My husband of three years, my protector of eighteen. He sat directly behind me, his broad shoulders encased in a charcoal bespoke suit. And beside him—Jane. My adopted sister. She wore a pristine, pastel-pink cashmere cardigan, her hands folded neatly in her lap. Then, the tires lost the road.
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Chapter 3

The black sedan wound through the dense, skeletal woods of upstate New York, carrying me toward what was supposed to be my salvation. The Sterling Institute. According to the email from the family trust’s board of directors, a “mandatory psychological evaluation” was the only hurdle standing between me and the liquidity I needed to vanish. I sat in the back, my ribs throbbing against the compression bandage, my hand shielding my lower abdomen. I needed that money. I needed to run.

The car stopped before a brutalist concrete structure that looked less like a clinic and more like a fortress.

Dr. Victoria Sterling met me at the entrance. She was a woman of sharp angles—razor-cut blonde bob, stiletto heels that clicked like hail on the marble floor, and eyes that assessed my net worth rather than my health.

"Mrs. Harvey," she said, her smile not reaching those predatory eyes. "This way. We need to ensure you're stable before the trust releases the assets."

She led me down a corridor that smelled of ozone and expensive lilies. We stopped at a heavy oak door. She swiped a keycard, ushered me inside, and before I could turn, the door slammed shut. The electronic lock engaged with a final, echoing *thud*.

"Dr. Sterling?" I pressed the handle. Rigid.

The room was luxurious but sterile—a gilded cage. A large mirror dominated the far wall. I knew enough about interrogation rooms to know what it was.

"Open the door!" I shouted, panic clawing at my throat.

The door didn't open. Instead, a side panel slid away, and Jane stepped in.

She wasn't wearing her pastel cardigans or her mask of tearful fragility. She wore a crimson silk blouse, her posture languid and victorious. She leaned against the doorframe, twirling a strand of hair around her finger.

"You always were gullible, Elena," she said, her voice dropping the breathy falsetto she used for the cameras. It was low, smooth, and cold. "Did you really think the board called for this?"

My blood ran cold. "Let me out, Jane. I’m leaving. You can have the house, the press, all of it."

"Oh, I know I can," she purred, stepping closer. She invaded my personal space, smelling of Julian’s cologne and my mother’s favorite perfume. "But I can't have you running off with an heir, can I?"

My hand flew instinctively to my stomach.

Jane laughed, a dry, brittle sound. "I saw the labs, Elena. A little miracle baby. Julian would be so happy. If he knew."

She circled me like a shark. "You know, it’s almost poetic. You losing everything. Just like I did when your father brought me into that house as a prop for his charity gala."

"My father loved you," I spat, backing away until my legs hit the edge of the stiff hospital bed.

"Your father loved his image," Jane hissed, her face twisting into a snarl. "Do you want to know a secret, little sister? The night he died... he didn't just have a heart attack. He asked for his pills. I had them in my hand." She held up her empty palm, mimicking the gesture. "I just... waited. Five minutes. Ten. Until the gasping stopped."

The air left the room. My knees buckled, and I sank onto the mattress. "You killed him."

"I took what was owed," she corrected, smoothing her silk sleeve. "And now, I'm taking the rest."

She pulled a remote from her pocket and pointed it at the large mirror on the wall. The glass flickered, transforming from a reflection into a window.

On the other side, in an observation room, stood Julian.

He looked shattered. His tie was undone, his eyes rimmed with red, his face buried in his hands. Victoria Sterling stood over him, holding a thick file and a pen.

"Julian!" I screamed, rushing to the glass. I pounded on it with my fists, ignoring the agony in my ribs. "Julian, I'm here! She's lying to you!"

The glass was soundproof. He didn't even flinch.

"He can't hear you," Jane said softly, standing right behind my shoulder, watching him with a twisted affection. "Dr. Sterling is explaining your condition to him right now. According to your file—which we’ve adjusted—you’re suffering from a severe psychotic break induced by the trauma. You're a danger to yourself."

Through the glass, I saw Julian look up. He looked sick, his skin gray. Victoria pointed to a page in the file, speaking with urgent, professional gravity.

"And the pregnancy?" Jane whispered in my ear. "Ectopic. A rupture is imminent. If they don't operate immediately, you’ll die. That’s what he’s being told."

"No," I sobbed, slapping the glass, leaving sweaty palm prints against the barrier. "Julian, look at me! It’s a lie!"

In the other room, Julian took the pen. His hand trembled violently. He looked at the consent forms, then at the one-way mirror. He looked straight at me, but all he saw was his own reflection. His eyes were filled with a tortured, desperate love—he thought he was saving my life.

"Don't do it," I whispered, sliding down the glass as my strength gave out. "Please, Julian. Don't."

He squeezed his eyes shut, a single tear tracking through the grime on his cheek, and signed the paper.

Jane hummed a satisfied note. "Goodbye, Elena."

The door to my room hissed open. Two orderlies with thick, uncaring hands marched in, followed by a nurse holding a syringe. As they grabbed my arms, dragging me toward the gurney, I kept my eyes on Julian through the glass, screaming a silent vow of vengeance that he would never hear.

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