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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 2

The silver rattles continued to spin on the pristine marble, their cheerful tinkling an obscene soundtrack to my unraveling. Callahan didn’t look at the scattered gifts. He looked at me as if I were a stranger who had tracked mud onto the immaculate floor of his life.

"Callahan," I breathed, stepping toward him. He stood near the edge of the venue's grand staircase, a sweeping architectural marvel of glass and white stone. My fingers trembled as I reached out, desperate to anchor myself to the man I loved. "Please. Just listen to me."

"Not now, Isla," he hissed, his jaw tight. "You've embarrassed us enough."

"I'm pregnant," I tried to say, but my throat was so dry the words emerged as a broken rasp. I grabbed his forearm. The fabric of his tailored suit felt alien beneath my clammy palm. "I'm sick. Callahan, I'm dying."

But he didn't hear me over the collective gasp of Eloise’s social circle. He only felt my grip—a desperate, inappropriate clawing in front of his friends.

"Let go of me," he snapped, jerking his arm backward with violent, defensive force.

The momentum stole my footing. My worn sneakers slipped on the polished stone. Panic surged, primitive and sharp, and my fingers clamped down harder on his sleeve. I didn't mean to pull him with me, but gravity was a merciless judge.

The world tilted into a chaotic blur of crystal chandeliers and terrified screams. We went over the edge.

I twisted instinctively, my body curling inward to protect the secret life hidden deep in my abdomen. My shoulder slammed into the edge of a marble step, followed by the sickening crack of my ribs. I took the brunt of the fall, my spine absorbing the brutal impacts as we tumbled down the flight. Callahan's weight crushed the breath from my lungs until we finally hit the landing.

Silence stretched for a fraction of a second, absolute and ringing.

Then, the pain tore through me—a white-hot, agonizing rupture in my pelvis. A warm, heavy wetness began to pool beneath me, soaking through my sweatpants. The metallic scent of blood rose into the air, mixing with the expensive perfumes of the guests above.

I gasped for air, my vision swimming. Beside me, Callahan pushed himself up, his face pale, a small cut bleeding on his forehead. He looked down at me, his eyes widening in horror as they tracked the crimson stain expanding across the white marble.

"Isla..." he whispered, his anger finally fracturing into shock.

"Callahan!" Eloise’s shriek shattered the moment. "Oh my God, my baby! You're scaring him! He's crying!"

My husband—the man who had held my hand three months ago and sworn I was all he needed—tore his eyes away from my bleeding body. The hesitation lasted only a heartbeat before he scrambled to his feet and rushed back up the stairs toward Eloise and her wailing infant.

"Somebody call 911!" Sarah Mitchell screamed from somewhere above.

I lay there, my cheek pressed against the freezing stone, watching Callahan wrap his arms around Eloise, shielding her from the gruesome sight of his wife. My hand drifted to my stomach. The gnawing emptiness inside me was absolute. The baby was gone. My marriage was gone. I closed my eyes and let the darkness pull me under.

I woke to the smell of bleach and the steady, rhythmic chirp of a heart monitor. My own hospital. My own ward.

"Isla."

I turned my head. Every muscle screamed in protest. Rebecca Walsh sat beside my bed, her usually immaculate scrubs wrinkled, her eyes swollen and rimmed with red. She held my medical chart in her lap like it was a live grenade.

I didn't need her to say it. The hollow cavern in my pelvis spoke for itself.

"He's gone," I whispered. My voice sounded thin, like dry leaves scraping across pavement.

A tear spilled over Rebecca’s lashes. "I'm so sorry, Isla. The trauma from the fall... we couldn't stop the bleeding. You lost the baby."

I stared at the acoustic tiles on the ceiling. Counted the perforations. One. Two. Three. If I focused on the math, I wouldn't have to feel the gaping hole in my soul.

"David Chen was here," Rebecca continued, her voice trembling. "The scans they ran in the ER... Isla, the cancer. It's aggressive. It's spreading faster than we thought."

"Where is he?" I asked.

Rebecca hesitated, her knuckles turning white around the clipboard. "Callahan is in the waiting room. He... he came in a separate car. After Eloise settled down."

Of course he did.

The door opened, and Dr. Chen stepped inside, his face a mask of professional grief. He held a thick stack of paperwork. "Isla. We need to discuss port placement. If we start aggressive chemotherapy by tomorrow—"

"No."

The single syllable dropped into the room like a stone.

David paused. "Isla, I know you're grieving, but we don't have time to delay."

"I said no, David." I slowly pushed myself up against the pillows, ignoring the stabbing pain in my ribs. I looked at my colleague, then at Rebecca. "No chemo. No radiation. No ports."

"You can't just give up!" Rebecca choked out, standing up. "You're a doctor! You know what happens if we do nothing!"

"I know exactly what happens," I said, my voice eerily calm. The fire that had driven me to that party, the desperate need to fight for my marriage, for my child—it had bled out on the marble floor of the Grandview Estate. There was nothing left to save. "Bring me the forms, David."

"Isla, please—"

"Bring me the DNR," I commanded, the sharp edge of authority cutting through the room. "And the palliative care refusal. Now."

David’s jaw tightened, but he recognized the absolute deadness in my eyes. He slid the papers onto my tray table. My hand didn't shake as I picked up the pen and signed my own death warrant.

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