
My Husband Implanted My Sister’s Baby Inside Me
Chapter 3
The Cyclone's skeletal frame cut against the gray October sky like a ribcage picked clean. Holden's hand rested on my lower back—light enough to look affectionate, firm enough to feel like a leash.
"Smile," he murmured, his breath warm against my ear. "The photographer's watching."
I tried. God, I tried. But the hormones had turned my body into a battlefield, and my face refused to cooperate. My cheeks felt wooden, my lips heavy. The nausea that had become my constant companion rolled through my stomach in waves.
"Lexi." His voice dropped lower, the warmth evaporating. "I said smile."
His fingers found my wrist, hidden from the cameras by the angle of our bodies. The pressure increased—not enough to bruise, but enough to send white-hot pain shooting up my arm. His thumb pressed directly into the tender spot where the IV had been yesterday.
"You're my wife," he whispered, his face still arranged in that perfect, adoring expression for the cameras. "You're happy. You're grateful. You're carrying our miracle. Now show them."
I smiled. Wide and bright and empty, the same smile I'd perfected in foster care when the social workers asked if everything was okay. The photographer's camera clicked rapid-fire, capturing our perfect moment against the backdrop of childhood nostalgia and cotton candy.
Holden's grip loosened. "There's my girl."
We rode the Wonder Wheel because he insisted, his arm around my shoulders as we climbed higher. The city spread below us, indifferent and vast. I wondered what would happen if I simply opened the door and stepped out. Would I feel relief in those final seconds? Or just more of this endless, suffocating gratitude?
"You're quiet today," Holden said, studying my face with that clinical intensity he usually reserved for quarterly reports.
"Just tired. The hormones."
"Dr. Vasquez said that's normal." He pulled me closer, and I felt the phone in his pocket vibrate. "Everything's progressing perfectly. Our baby is thriving."
Our baby. The words sat wrong in my mouth, like food gone bad.
The prenatal appointment was scheduled for Tuesday at two. Holden had blocked out his entire afternoon, but at one-thirty, his phone erupted with calls. A crisis at the Singapore office. Millions on the line. He kissed my forehead—a gesture that felt more like marking territory than affection.
"I'll be there as soon as I can," he promised. "Don't let them start without me."
But Dr. Vasquez was running behind, and the nurses ushered me into an exam room alone. The paper gown crinkled as I sat on the table, my feet dangling like a child's. Through the thin walls, I could hear everything—phones ringing, keyboards clicking, and voices.
Two nurses, just outside my door.
"Did you see the chart for room three?" The first voice was young, conspiratorial.
"The Murray case? God, yes. I feel so bad for her."
"Right? Carrying the Woods-Morris embryo and she has no idea. Can you imagine finding out you're basically an incubator for your sister's baby?"
The world tilted. The fluorescent lights above me blurred into white noise.
"Dr. Vasquez is terrified Murray will find out she knows. He made her sign an NDA thicker than the patient file."
"How much is he paying her to keep quiet?"
"Enough to retire. But honestly? I'd need therapy money on top of that. That poor woman in there, thinking she's finally getting her happy ending..."
Their voices faded down the hallway, taking my last shred of innocence with them.
I made it to the bathroom before I vomited. The retching was violent, primal, my body trying to expel the truth that had just poisoned everything. I gripped the toilet, my wedding ring clicking against the porcelain, and understood with perfect clarity: I was not a wife. I was not a mother. I was a vessel. A womb for rent. A problem Holden had solved with his usual efficiency.
The kidnapping. The photos. Arlo's betrayal. All of it orchestrated. All of it designed to break me down until I was grateful enough, desperate enough, to agree to anything.
I cleaned myself up with shaking hands. Rinsed my mouth. Reapplied lipstick with the precision of someone preparing for war. When I looked in the mirror, I saw a stranger—a woman who'd been hollowed out and filled with someone else's future.
Dr. Vasquez found me in the exam room, her smile brittle. "Mrs. Murray, I'm so sorry for the delay. Everything looks wonderful. The baby is developing perfectly."
The baby. Not my baby. Avayah's baby. Growing inside me like a parasite, feeding on my grief.
"That's wonderful," I said, and my voice didn't shake. "Holden will be so pleased."
I touched my wedding ring—that old nervous habit—but this time it meant something different. This time it was a promise. To myself. To the woman I used to be before gratitude became my prison.
I would survive this. I would smile and comply and play the devoted wife. And then, when the moment was right, I would burn his entire world to ash.
That night, Holden came home energized, the Singapore crisis resolved in his favor. He found me at the piano, playing Chopin's Nocturne in C-sharp minor. The notes fell like rain, melancholy and measured.
"You're playing again," he said, pleased. "I love hearing you play."
"It helps me think."
He kissed the top of my head and retreated to his study, leaving me alone with the music and my rage. I played for another hour, the sound covering the creak of floorboards as I memorized the layout of his office, the position of his files, the location of his safe.
The nocturne built to its crescendo, and I pressed the keys harder, each note a declaration of war he couldn't hear.
Not yet.
But soon.
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