Follow
Chapters
Share
My Husband Made Me Forget Our Dead Baby Novel Cover

My Husband Made Me Forget Our Dead Baby

The knock comes at 9:47 a.m., three minutes after Atticus's car pulls out of the parking garage. I know the timing because I've been standing at the kitchen window with my coffee going cold in my hands, watching the street below like I've been doing every morning for the past two weeks. Watching for something I can't name. Waiting for proof of something I don't want to be true. The deliveryman doesn't wait for a signature. By the time I reach the door, he's already halfway down the hall, and there's a plain brown box sitting on my doormat like an accusation. No return address. No label except my name—Meredith Stone—written in black marker, the letters neat and deliberate. I carry it inside. Set it on the kitchen counter.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The knock comes at 9:47 a.m., three minutes after Atticus's car pulls out of the parking garage.

I know the timing because I've been standing at the kitchen window with my coffee going cold in my hands, watching the street below like I've been doing every morning for the past two weeks. Watching for something I can't name. Waiting for proof of something I don't want to be true.

The deliveryman doesn't wait for a signature. By the time I reach the door, he's already halfway down the hall, and there's a plain brown box sitting on my doormat like an accusation.

No return address. No label except my name—Meredith Stone—written in black marker, the letters neat and deliberate.

I carry it inside. Set it on the kitchen counter. Stare at it for a full minute before my hands stop shaking enough to find the scissors.

The tape splits with a sound that's too loud in the silent apartment.

Inside, nestled in a bed of white tissue paper, is a baby doll.

Plastic. Pale. The kind with eyes that close when you lay it down.

Across its chest, spreading from the center outward like a bloom, is a stain. Dark. Rust-brown. Dried into the cheap fabric of its onesie in a way that makes my stomach lurch.

Blood.

Not real blood—it can't be real blood—but the simulation is good enough that my hands go numb and the scissors clatter onto the counter.

Beneath the doll, folded with care that feels obscene, is a sweater.

Pale yellow. Hand-knitted. The stitches slightly uneven in the way that comes from arthritic fingers working slowly, lovingly, through each row.

I know this sweater.

My mother made it.

She started it two months ago, sitting in her hospital bed with the yarn basket perched on her lap, her hands moving through the motions even when the tremor made it hard. She told me it was for the grandchild she was praying for. Told me she'd picked yellow because she didn't know yet if it would be a boy or a girl, and wasn't that the beauty of it? Not knowing, but hoping anyway.

I haven't told her I'm pregnant.

I haven't told anyone except Atticus.

The room tilts. I grip the edge of the counter, force air into my lungs, try to make the pieces fit into something that isn't this.

Someone went into my mother's hospital room. Someone took the sweater she made with her failing hands. Someone put it in a box with a blood-stained doll and sent it to me.

My phone is in my hand before I remember reaching for it.

She answers on the third ring, her voice soft and tired in the way it's been since the last surgery. "Meredith, sweetheart. Is everything all right?"

"Mom." My voice cracks. I swallow, try again. "Mom, the sweater. The yellow one you were making."

Silence.

Not the comfortable kind. The kind that stretches too long, that means she's choosing her words.

"What about it, honey?"

"Where is it?"

Another pause. Shorter. Sharper.

"Oh, I—I think one of the nurses must have misplaced it when they were tidying up. You know how it is here. Things get moved around." Her tone is light, but there's something underneath it. Something careful. "Don't worry about it, sweetheart. I'll make another one."

"Mom—"

"Really, Meredith. It's fine. You have enough on your mind."

She ends the call before I can push further.

I stand there with the phone pressed to my ear, listening to the dial tone, staring at the doll on my counter.

She's lying.

She never lies to me.

Which means someone got to her. Someone scared her enough that she won't tell me the truth.

My phone buzzes.

A text. From Londyn.

*Are you okay? I've been worried about you.*

I exhale. Londyn. My best friend. The only person who knows how bad things have gotten between Atticus and me. The only person I've told about the distance, the silences, the way he looks at his phone when he thinks I'm not watching.

I type back with trembling fingers.

*Someone sent me a package. A doll covered in blood. And my mom's sweater.*

The reply comes immediately.

*Jesus, Mer. That's not random. Someone's trying to scare you.*

*I know.*

*Listen to me. You need to go to the hospital. Adelaide has a maternity checkup today. I saw it on her Instagram story this morning. If Atticus is there—if he's with her—you need to see it for yourself.*

My breath stops.

Adelaide.

Adelaide Medina. Atticus's ex. The woman he swears is just a colleague now, just someone he works with on research projects, nothing more.

The woman whose name he says too carefully, like he's afraid of how it sounds in his mouth.

*What time?* I type.

*Now. Go now.*

I don't change out of my jeans and sweater. I don't fix my hair. I grab my keys and I go.

The hospital is a fifteen-minute drive that I make in nine.

I park in the garage, take the elevator to the third floor, follow the signs to the maternity wing. My heart is a fist in my chest, beating so hard I can feel it in my throat.

I round the corner into the waiting area and stop.

Atticus is standing outside a closed clinic door.

Tall. Still. His hands in his pockets, his shoulders tense in the way they get when he's thinking too hard about something he won't say out loud.

I step back. Press myself against the wall where he won't see me.

A voice drifts through the door—warm, familiar, unmistakably Adelaide's—saying something I can't make out.

A nurse walks past, glances at Atticus, smiles.

"Everything's looking great," she says brightly. "The baby's healthy. She's lucky to have you here."

Atticus nods. Says something too quiet for me to hear.

The nurse disappears down the hall.

I stand there, frozen, my pulse roaring in my ears.

The baby's healthy.

She's lucky to have you here.

I turn and walk back toward the elevator before my legs give out.

You may also like

Betrayed Deaf Wife's Rebirth Novel Cover
8.8
The crystal chandelier cast dancing shadows across the marble floor as I moved through the celebration party, champagne flutes clinking around me like wind chimes. Three years. Three years of silence, and now every conversation, every whispered secret, every careless laugh reached my ears with startling clarity. "Jessica, you look radiant tonight," Mrs. Henderson from Douglas's company smiled warmly, her voice a melody I'd forgotten existed. "How wonderful that your hearing has returned." I touched the pearl earrings Douglas had given me this morning—another one of his thoughtful gestures that I'd treasured in my silent world. "Thank you. It's... overwhelming, actually. I'd forgotten how loud the world could be." Across the room, Douglas commanded attention as always, his tailored navy suit impeccable, his laugh booming over the crowd.
Broken By The Heir, Claimed By Power Novel Cover
9.5
I spent two years navigating the stratified air of Spencer Kensington’s world, thinking I was the woman he loved. I even ate instant ramen for months to afford a vintage camera lens for our anniversary. When I got a mysterious text about "Operation Blue Moon," I thought it was our private signal for a proposal. Instead, I walked into a limestone fortress to find the Kensington and Van Der Woodsen Engagement Party in full swing. Spencer wasn't there for a romantic dinner; he was standing under a crystal chandelier, announcing his "business merger" with a blonde heiress. When I confronted him in a service hallway, he didn't apologize. He offered to buy me a brownstone and keep me as his "side project" while his mother, Victoria, watched from the balcony like a queen. "Vanessa is just furniture," he said, his voice full of a terrifying sincerity. "But you're the one I love. I can give you a life of ease." When I refused to be his dirty little secret, the retaliation was instant and brutal. By the next morning, I was fired from my reporting job, my father’s nursing home funding was pulled, and I returned home to find my apartment condemned by the city. My entire life was piled in wet boxes on a rain-soaked sidewalk. I couldn't understand how one family could have the power to erase a person’s existence in a single night. How could the man who kissed me yesterday watch his mother leave me homeless and penniless today? Standing in the rain next to my ruined belongings, a black SUV pulled up and Mayor Julian Sterling stepped out. He didn't offer me pity; he offered me a deal. "The Kensingtons are panicked," he said, his eyes cold and calculating. "And panicked people make mistakes. You have a reason to watch them burn. I want to see what you know." I took his hand, knowing he was just as dangerous as the people I was fighting, but I was done being the victim. This wasn't just a breakup anymore; it was a war.
Drunk and Married to My Best Friend's Brother Novel Cover
7.8
Kylie Miller had been a quintessential good girl for over twenty years. Her only two outrageous actions were agreeing to her best friend Mina Hall's request to pursue her twin brother, and getting drunk and hiring a "male prostitute", which resulted in them having sex. When she sobered up, not only had she inexplicably married the "male prostitute", but she had also let him move in. Mina was furious, convinced that Kylie had fallen into a trap. However, Kylie looked at the bank card balance her husband had given her. The balance was so high she could hardly believe it. Kylie wondered-were male prostitutes all this driven these days? He not only traveled all over the country on business trips, but also had to attend shareholder meetings. Even in his busy schedule, he wouldn't forget to ask her for sex. Wait a minute, at the late family gathering, why was her husband so familiar with Mina?
Falling for a CEO from another world Novel Cover
7.1
"When she no longer believed in promises or happy endings, love crossed entire worlds to show her that magic still existed." Laura C. Unexpected designs... Or simply capricious games of fate. A human who thinks she has lost all reason to live plunges into a world of fantasies and fangs that make her be born again. A story full of passion, fantasy, vampires, and other species that will make you shudder... Read with me and let your imagination reach wherever Valentin will take you.
He Held The Sun, Then Lost It Novel Cover
7.0
Five years. Four hundred million dollars. And the wedding dress was never mine. I found out on a Tuesday—a C-list actress draped in my custom Vera Wang, hanging off my fiancé's arm. Six months of French lace. Six meters of Italian silk. Every stitch a promise I had made to myself: someone finally chose me for me. He locked the doors of that boutique. Froze my cards. Threatened my friends. Told the world I was just a delusional former assistant who didn't know her place. The internet called me crazy, a liar, a desperate woman who couldn't take a hint. His name trended everywhere. My accounts got suspended before I could say a word. What he never knew: his empire ran on my capital. His patents were mine. His executive assistant had been feeding me evidence for months—emails, recordings, a paper trail of fraud stretching back years. I dialed the encrypted phone. A voice said, "I've waited five years." "Then wait three more days," I said. "I'm going to tear his head off."
I heard the iris blooming Novel Cover
9.6
Everyone in Ashford said I’d taken the marriage contract my sister Joyce had cast aside. After all, Stephen was the moon in the sky, and I was the dust beneath his feet. His light was meant for my sister, whose own brilliance rivaled the sun. I wasn’t even worthy of its glow. For eleven years, I loved Stephen. From that breathless glimpse in our youth to later becoming his fiancée in name only, I was like the most devout believer chasing after a god. But my god’s heart belonged to another. Only when Joyce was left in a coma after a car accident did the Grant family—to fulfill the engagement—let this dubious honor fall to me: Nova, the unremarkable adopted daughter. I thought this was the culmination of eleven years of foolish devotion. Little did I know, it was only the beginning of my descent into hell.