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My Husband Ignored My Miscarriage to Hold Her Infant Novel Cover

My Husband Ignored My Miscarriage to Hold Her Infant

The fluorescent lights in Dr. David Chen's office hummed with a frequency that made my teeth ache. Or maybe that was just the nausea—the constant, gnawing companion I'd been dismissing as stress for weeks. I sat across from David, a colleague I'd consulted with dozens of times about other people's tragedies, and watched his mouth form words that didn't seem real. "Stage IV stomach cancer, Isla." The rain drummed against the window behind him, each drop a tiny fist pounding against glass. Seattle's perpetual gray had seeped into this room, into my bones, into the space between David's careful, clinical tone and the roaring silence in my head. "And you're pregnant. Approximately six weeks along." My hand moved to my stomach before I could stop it. The gesture felt foreign, like watching someone else's body betray them. Six weeks.
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Chapter 1

The fluorescent lights in Dr. David Chen's office hummed with a frequency that made my teeth ache. Or maybe that was just the nausea—the constant, gnawing companion I'd been dismissing as stress for weeks. I sat across from David, a colleague I'd consulted with dozens of times about other people's tragedies, and watched his mouth form words that didn't seem real.

"Stage IV stomach cancer, Isla."

The rain drummed against the window behind him, each drop a tiny fist pounding against glass. Seattle's perpetual gray had seeped into this room, into my bones, into the space between David's careful, clinical tone and the roaring silence in my head.

"And you're pregnant. Approximately six weeks along."

My hand moved to my stomach before I could stop it. The gesture felt foreign, like watching someone else's body betray them. Six weeks. Stage IV. The words existed in separate universes that had just collided with the force of a freight train.

"Isla, do you understand what I'm telling you?"

I understood. God, I understood with the crystalline clarity of every oncology rotation I'd ever completed, every terminal patient I'd ever comforted with lies about fighting and hope. I was the doctor who delivered bad news with compassionate efficiency. I was not supposed to be the woman whose hands trembled as she gripped the armrests of the patient chair.

"How long?" My voice came out steady. Professional. A small victory.

David's pause told me everything. "Without aggressive treatment, perhaps six months. With treatment—" He stopped, his eyes dropping to the file that contained my death sentence in neat, typed rows. "The pregnancy complicates things significantly."

I needed Callahan. The thought arrived with desperate urgency, shoving aside the medical statistics trying to calculate my expiration date. My husband would know what to say, how to hold me, how to make the world stop tilting on its axis. I fumbled for my phone, my fingers clumsy and cold.

The call went straight to voicemail. His voice—warm, familiar, alive—instructed me to leave a message.

I tried again. Voicemail.

Again. Voicemail.

"Isla?" David leaned forward, concern creasing his features. "Is there someone I can call for you? You shouldn't be alone right now."

But I was alone. Sitting in this office that smelled of antiseptic and old coffee, carrying death in my stomach alongside something that might have been hope in a different life. The irony tasted like copper on my tongue.

Then I remembered. The baby supplies. Callahan's text from this morning, punctuated with irritation: *Don't forget to pick up the custom gift basket for Eloise's party. 3 PM sharp. Don't be late.*

Eloise's Sip and See celebration. Three months since I'd delivered her baby in the same hospital where I was now receiving my death sentence. Three months since Callahan had held my hand in the delivery room and sworn he never wanted children, that I was enough, that we were enough.

I stood, my scrubs still damp from the earlier rain, my oversized cardigan hanging off my shoulders like a shroud.

"I have to go," I said.

David stood too, reaching for my arm. "Isla, please. Let me call someone. You're in shock."

Shock. Yes. That explained the numbness, the way my body moved through space like a puppet with cut strings. I pulled away gently, professionally, and walked out of his office with the same measured steps I used during rounds.

The gift shop where I'd ordered Eloise's supplies sat on the ground floor. The clerk smiled brightly as she handed over an elaborate basket wrapped in cream silk and dotted with tiny silver rattles. It probably cost more than my wedding bouquet had.

The drive to the venue passed in a blur of gray streets and red taillights. My phone sat silent in the cup holder. No returned calls. No concern. Just the rain and my reflection in the rearview mirror—a ghost in rumpled loungewear, dark circles carved beneath her eyes.

The Grandview Estate rose before me, all glass and warm light spilling onto manicured lawns. Through the windows, I could see the party in full swing. Balloons. Laughter. A sea of well-dressed guests holding champagne flutes and cooing over a baby who wasn't mine.

And there, at the center of it all, stood Callahan.

He was laughing, his head thrown back in genuine joy, one arm around Eloise's shoulders as she held her infant. Someone—Sarah Mitchell, one of Eloise's society friends—was taking photos, directing them to move closer, to smile wider. They looked perfect together. A family portrait I would never be part of.

I pushed through the entrance, the basket clutched against my chest like armor. My sneakers squeaked on the marble floor. Conversations faltered as heads turned, taking in my inappropriate attire, my wild hair, my desperation.

"Callahan," I called out, my voice cracking on his name.

He turned, and for one heartbeat, I thought I saw concern flicker across his face. Then his eyes traveled down my body—the rumpled scrubs, the oversized cardigan, the complete absence of party-appropriate glamour—and his expression hardened.

"Isla, what the hell are you wearing?"

Eloise's hand flew to her mouth, her eyes wide with manufactured shock. "Oh my God, is everything okay?"

The guests drew closer, a circle of judgment tightening around us. Sarah Mitchell's phone was still raised, probably recording this spectacular social failure.

I needed to tell him. About the cancer. About the baby. About the fact that our world had just ended in a sterile office while he was here, celebrating someone else's life.

"Callahan, I need to talk to you. Now. It's—"

"You're trying to ruin this, aren't you?" His voice cut through mine like a scalpel. "You couldn't just do this one thing right. You had to show up looking like you just rolled out of bed and make a scene."

The basket slipped from my hands. Silver rattles scattered across the pristine marble, their tinkling sound obscenely cheerful.

And I realized, with the same clinical clarity that had diagnosed a thousand patients, that I was already dead to him.

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