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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 4

The morphine made the edges of the world softer, like someone had taken an eraser to the harsh lines of reality. I floated in that cotton-wool haze, watching Magnus refill my water glass with the careful precision of someone handling something precious and breakable.

"I destroyed him," I whispered.

Magnus paused, the pitcher hovering over the cup. "Who?"

"Dad." The word tasted like ash. "I destroyed Dad. And you. I threw you both away like you were nothing, like you didn't matter, and for what? For a man who couldn't even be bothered to visit me while I'm dying."

Magnus set down the pitcher and returned to the chair beside my bed. His scarred hands folded in his lap, patient and still.

"When Dad told me he wanted me to marry you instead," I continued, the words spilling out in a morphine-loosened confession, "I was so angry. I thought he was trying to control me, to treat me like property he could just hand over to his favorite charity case."

I saw Magnus flinch at that last phrase, and shame burned through the medication's fog.

"I didn't mean it like that," I choked out. "God, Magnus, I never thought of you that way. But I was twenty-two and stupid and so convinced that what Callahan and I had was this great, epic love that no one understood. So I cut you out. I said horrible things. I made Dad choose between us, and when he wouldn't give me his blessing, I eloped anyway."

The tears came again, hot and bitter. "Three weeks later, he was dead. Three weeks, Magnus. He died thinking I hated him. He died heartbroken and distracted and alone, and it's my fault. The car accident, the way he just... drifted into that intersection... he wasn't paying attention because I broke his heart."

My chest heaved with sobs that felt like they were tearing me apart from the inside. "And you. I told you to stay away from me. I said you were suffocating me, that your love was pathetic and unwanted. I watched you pack your bags and I didn't stop you because I thought I was choosing freedom. I thought I was choosing happiness."

I forced myself to meet his eyes, those dark, gentle eyes that had never looked at me with anything but devotion. "I'm so sorry, Magnus. I'm so desperately, horribly sorry. I ruined everything. I ruined us. I ruined Dad. And for what? For a man who left me bleeding on a marble floor while he comforted another woman's baby."

Magnus reached out slowly, giving me time to pull away if I wanted. When I didn't, his hand settled on my hair, stroking with the same tenderness he'd shown me when we were children and I'd scraped my knee.

"Isla," he said softly, "Stephen loved you until his last breath. So do I. That never changed. Not for one single moment."

"But I hurt you—"

"You were young. You were in love. You made choices that seemed right at the time." His thumb brushed away my tears. "And Stephen? He knew you loved him. He was stubborn and overprotective, but he understood. The accident wasn't your fault, Isla. It was just a terrible, random tragedy."

"I don't deserve your forgiveness," I whispered.

"You have it anyway," Magnus said simply. "You've always had it."

I closed my eyes, letting his words wash over me like a benediction I didn't earn but desperately needed.

---

Three days later, I woke to raised voices in the hallway outside my room. The medication had been adjusted, sharpening the world back into painful focus.

"—absolutely unacceptable that she's been here this long. I need her to sign some insurance documents." Callahan's voice, tight with irritation.

"You need to leave." Rebecca. I'd never heard her sound so coldly furious.

"Excuse me? I'm her husband. You can't bar me from—"

"Read this." A sharp sound, like paper hitting flesh. "Read every single page, you selfish, negligent bastard."

"What the hell is this?"

"It's your wife's medical file. The one you haven't bothered to ask about. Read it. Now."

Silence stretched, terrible and complete.

Then I heard it: a sound like all the air being punched from someone's lungs. A choked, strangled gasp.

"No," Callahan whispered. "No, this can't... stage IV? Six months ago? That's not... this has to be a mistake."

"Keep reading," Rebecca said, merciless.

More silence. Then a noise I'd never heard from my husband before: a broken, animalistic keen of pure anguish.

"The baby," he sobbed. "Oh God. Oh God, there was a baby. Emergency D&C following traumatic miscarriage. Isla, no, no, no—"

A heavy thud, like a body hitting the floor.

Through the narrow window in my door, I could see him: Callahan Bennett, on his knees in the fluorescent-lit corridor, my medical file scattered around him like damning evidence at a crime scene. His hands covered his face, his shoulders shaking with the force of his weeping.

I watched him shatter, and felt absolutely nothing at all.

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