
My Husband Exposed The Alpha Who Poisoned My Womb
Chapter 2
The silence was the loudest thing in the room. It wasn't the peaceful quiet of a library or a sleeping house; it was a heavy, suffocating void that pressed against my eardrums. I woke up staring at the sterile white ceiling tiles of the private hospital suite, my hand instinctively drifting to my stomach.
It was flat. It was empty. The little spark of life—the second heartbeat I had just begun to cherish—was gone.
"Marilyn?"
River’s voice was a rough, broken sound. I turned my head slowly. My powerful, billionaire husband looked like he had aged a decade in a single afternoon. His eyes, usually a warm hazel or fierce gold, were rimmed with red. He was holding my hand so tightly I thought he might crush my fingers, but I didn't pull away. I needed the pain to know I was still alive.
"It’s gone, isn't it?" I whispered, though I already knew. My inner wolf, Luna, was curled in a tight, whimpering ball in the back of my mind, mourning the pup we would never hold.
Dr. Chen, standing near the monitors, gave a solemn nod. "I am so sorry, Marilyn. The trauma to the abdomen... the placental detachment was immediate."
A sob ripped from my throat, raw and jagged. River buried his face in my palm, his shoulders shaking. A low, keening sound vibrated in his chest—a wolf mourning its young.
"I will kill them," River growled against my skin, the vibration traveling up my arm. He lifted his head, and the gold in his eyes flared with terrifying intensity. "Freya. Her guards. I will tear their packs apart brick by brick. I will leave them with nothing."
"No," I rasped, my voice gaining a sliver of steel despite the agony. "Not just revenge, River. I want justice. I want everyone to know what they did. I want them to rot in a cell, stripped of their titles, stripped of their dignity."
The door opened quietly, and Marcus Stone, River’s Beta and lead counsel, stepped in. He looked grim, clutching a tablet like a weapon.
"We have the footage," Marcus said, his voice tight. "And we have something else. We subpoenaed Trenton's phone records immediately after the livestream started."
He handed the tablet to River, but he angled it so I could see. It was a text thread between Trenton and Freya, time-stamped just minutes before she stormed the clinic.
*Trenton: She’s at the clinic now. She’s keeping MY baby to blackmail me into taking her back. If she has that kid, she’ll destroy us. You have to stop her, Freya.*
"He lied," I breathed, horror chilling my blood. "He knew it wasn't his. He hasn't touched me in a year. He weaponized her jealousy to kill my child."
"He’s the intellectual author of the assault," Marcus confirmed. "Freya was the bullet, but Trenton pulled the trigger."
Before the shock could fully settle, Dr. Chen stepped forward again. She looked pale, her hands trembling slightly as she held a folder. "There is... something else. While we were running panels to manage your recovery, I requested your old medical files from your previous pack’s doctor to check for blood type compatibility."
She hesitated, looking from River to me. "Marilyn, I found anomalies in your prescription history. The prenatal vitamins you were taking during your marriage to Trenton... they weren't vitamins."
"What do you mean?" River stood up, his presence suddenly filling the room with a dangerous pressure.
"I had the lab run a spectrum analysis on the residue noted in your old blood work," Dr. Chen said, her voice shaking. "They were laced with trace amounts of Wolfsbane and a synthetic contraceptive. It wasn't a natural biological incompatibility, Marilyn. You didn't 'lose' those babies. You were poisoned."
The world tilted on its axis. The years of guilt, the nights I spent hating my own body for being too weak to carry a pup, the shame Trenton had heaped on me—it was all a lie. He had been murdering our children to keep me weak, to keep me controllable.
"He killed them," I whispered, the realization colder than ice. "He killed them all."
River roared. It was a sound of pure, unadulterated fury that shattered the water pitcher on the bedside table. His Lycan aura exploded outward, so potent that Marcus and Dr. Chen instinctively bared their necks.
"Marcus," River snarled, his voice distorted by his shifting vocal cords. "Watch her. I have a meeting."
"River, wait," I called out, but he was already storming out the door.
An hour later, Marcus set up a secure feed on the wall-mounted television. "He wanted you to see this," Marcus said gently. "He went to the corporate office. Victoria Wilson is there."
On the screen, I saw River’s sleek, modern office. Sitting across from him was an older man in an expensive suit—Freya’s father. He looked arrogant, sliding a check across the obsidian desk.
"Ten million dollars," Victoria Wilson said, his voice tinny through the speakers. "And a standard NDA. We call it an unfortunate accident. My daughter is emotional; she made a mistake. But we can make this go away. You’re a businessman, Mr. Hudson. You understand liability."
River stared at the check. He didn't blink. He didn't breathe. Then, a dark, terrifying laugh escaped his lips.
"Ten million?" River asked softly. He reached out, picked up the check, and held it up to the light. "You think the life of my son is worth ten million dollars?"
"It’s a generous offer," Victoria scoffed. "The girl is damaged goods anyway. Trenton told me about her history of miscarriages. You should be thanking me for sparing you the burden of a weak breeder."
On the screen, River moved so fast he was a blur. One moment he was seated; the next, he was leaning over the desk, his hand wrapped around Victoria’s throat, lifting the older Alpha off the ground like a ragdoll.
"She is not damaged," River’s voice was a low rumble of thunder. "She was poisoned by the man your daughter is trying to protect. And that child was a Lycan heir."
Victoria’s eyes bulged, his legs kicking uselessly in the air.
River released him, letting him drop to the floor gasping. He took the check and shredded it slowly, letting the pieces rain down on the cowering man.
"Keep your money, Victoria. You're going to need it for the lawyers," River said, adjusting his cuffs with lethal calm. "I don't want your settlement. I want your legacy. By the time I am done with you, the Wilson name will be nothing but a cautionary tale told to pups around a campfire."
River looked directly into the security camera, his golden eyes burning through the screen, connecting with mine. "Get out of my building before I decide to forget the law and handle this the old way."
As the screen went black, I leaned back against the pillows, tears streaming down my face. But they weren't tears of despair anymore. They were tears of validation. For the first time in my life, someone was fighting for me.
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