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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 4

The strap across my chest dug into my collarbone, rough canvas biting into my skin. The fluorescent lights overhead buzzed, a relentless, mechanical hum that vibrated in my teeth. I thrashed against the restraints, my wrists burning as the leather cuffs held firm against the cold steel of the gurney.

"Please," I gasped, the word tearing from my dry throat. "Please, check the ultrasound again. There's a heartbeat. There is a heartbeat!"

Dr. Victoria Sterling stood over me, her razor-cut blonde bob immaculate, her expression a mask of clinical detachment. She adjusted the surgical mask over her face, the latex of her gloves snapping sharply in the sterile room.

"Administer the sedative," Sterling ordered, not looking at my face. She looked at my abdomen. It was a terrifying, dehumanizing gaze.

"No!" I screamed, bucking my hips, the agony in my broken ribs blinding me. "Julian! Julian, stop them!"

But Julian wasn't here. He was on the other side of that one-way glass, or perhaps already in the back of his town car, clutching his signed proxy, believing he had just saved his hysterical, broken wife from a fatal ectopic rupture. He had signed away my child. He had handed the pen to Jane.

A nurse with dead eyes stepped to my side. I felt the cold swab of alcohol in the crook of my arm.

"Don't do this," I whispered, my voice breaking, tears finally spilling hot and fast down my temples, pooling in my ears. I looked at the nurse, searching for a flicker of humanity. "I'll pay you. Whatever she's paying you, I'll double it. I have trusts—"

The needle pierced my vein. The cold fire of the sedative rushed up my arm, heavy and thick.

"Count backward from ten, Mrs. Harvey," Sterling said, her voice echoing as if underwater.

My vision blurred. The edges of the room darkened, creeping inward like ink spilled on parchment. My hand flexed against the leather strap, my fingers curling inward, trying to reach my stomach, trying to shield the tiny, fragile life blooming inside me. *I'm sorry,* I thought, the darkness swallowing me whole. *I'm so sorry.*

***

I woke to the sound of rain lashing against a barred window.

The room was dark, lit only by the sickly amber glow of a streetlamp filtering through the heavy glass. The silence was absolute, heavy, and suffocating.

I lay perfectly still.

A deep, hollow ache radiated from my center. It wasn't the sharp, fiery pain of broken ribs or shattered glass. It was an echoing, cavernous void. The warmth was gone. The quiet, secret flutter of hope that had sustained me through the crash, through Julian's betrayal, through Jane's venom—it had been scraped out of me, leaving nothing but a vast, bleeding emptiness.

I didn't cry. My tear ducts felt scorched, dry as ash. I slowly brought my hand up, my fingers trembling as they drifted down to rest on my flat stomach. The hospital gown felt like a shroud.

I stared at the ceiling, my jaw locking so tightly my teeth ached.

Julian had done this. He had signed the paper. Jane had orchestrated it, but Julian had wielded the knife. Eighteen years of loyalty, of shared secrets and whispered promises in the dark, erased by a pastel cardigan and a manufactured tear.

I traced the faint, jagged scar on my left wrist, my nail digging into the ridge of tissue until a sharp sting grounded me.

I was alone. Truly, unequivocally alone. No parents. No husband. No child.

But I was alive. And as the cold seeped into my bones, replacing the grief with a hardening, icy resolve, I realized something else. I was free. The Elena who had loved Julian Harvey died on that operating table. The woman who remained in this bed was something entirely different.

I pushed myself up, gritting my teeth against the tearing pain in my lower abdomen. I swung my legs over the edge of the bed. My bare feet hit the cold linoleum. I needed to move.

Before the procedure, when the orderlies had stripped me of my clothes, I had managed to slip a small, prepaid burner phone—a paranoid purchase from months ago, hidden in the lining of my coat—into the pillowcase. I tore the thin fabric apart, my fingers closing around the cheap plastic.

I powered it on. The screen cast a harsh blue light across my pale, sunken face. I dialed a number I had memorized years ago, back when I was an investigative journalist, back before I traded my byline for the title of Mrs. Julian Harvey.

It rang three times.

"Yeah?" a groggy voice answered.

"Marcus," I rasped, my voice sounding like crushed glass.

There was a pause, the shifting of sheets on the other end. "Elena? Jesus Christ, where are you? The news is saying you've been committed—"

"I need you, Marcus," I interrupted, the tremor in my voice vanishing, replaced by a cold, flat command. "I'm at the Sterling Institute in upstate New York. They took my baby. If I stay here until morning, I won't survive. I need extraction. Now."

Marcus didn't ask questions. He knew me. He knew the tone. "Give me twenty minutes. I have the blueprints to that place from a piece I did on Medicare fraud two years ago. There's a service exit near the laundry wing. Can you walk?"

I looked down at the blood seeping through the thin cotton of my gown, staining the fabric a rusty brown. I gripped the edge of the mattress, forcing myself to stand fully upright despite the agony tearing through my pelvis.

"I can walk," I said.

"I'm on my way. Be ready."

I hung up. I stripped off the bloody hospital gown and pulled on the dark scrubs I found folded in the corner cabinet. Every movement was a battle, a physical manifestation of the war I was about to wage. I tied the drawstring tight, my eyes lifting to the small mirror above the sink.

I looked like a ghost. But ghosts, I realized, were dangerous. They had nothing left to lose, and eternity to exact their revenge.

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