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Reborn to Revenge: Fighting My Devil Husband Novel Cover

Reborn to Revenge: Fighting My Devil Husband

"Lucien," I whispered, my voice cracking. "Please. I need to understand why. The doctor said—he warned me that if I have another procedure, I might never be able to..." The words caught in my throat like broken glass. "I might never be able to have children." He finally looked up from his phone, his ice-blue eyes meeting mine with an expression I couldn't read. "Ariadne," he said, his voice carrying that tone of barely contained impatience I'd grown to dread. "We've discussed this. The embryo's implantation is unstable. It poses significant health risks." "But why does this keep happening? Nine times, Lucien. Nine times I've lost our babies. There has to be something we can do differently, some treatment—" "Treatment?" His laugh was cold, cutting through the antiseptic air like a blade. "The treatment is to stop subjecting your body to these failed pregnancies. Your inability to maintain a stable pregnancy isn't just disappointing, Ariadne. It's dangerous. How is that not your responsibility as a mother?" The words hit me like a physical blow. I stared at him, my mouth opening and closing soundlessly. The man I'd planned to spend my life with, the father of the children I kept losing, was blaming me for our losses. For my body's failures.
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Chapter 1

The pre-operative room felt like a tomb, all sterile white walls and the sharp smell of disinfectant that made my stomach churn.

I sat on the edge of the examination table, my hospital gown rustling with every nervous movement, the paper beneath me crinkling like autumn leaves.

Nine times. This would be the ninth time.

My hands trembled as I pressed them against my still-flat abdomen, where another life had been growing. Another hope that would be extinguished today.

"Mrs. Ward, we're ready for you," the nurse said softly, her voice professionally gentle but distant. She avoided my eyes, just like the others had learned to do.

I looked past her to where Lucien stood near the window, his tall frame silhouetted against the Florida sunshine streaming through the blinds.

Even in this sterile hospital environment, he looked perfectly composed in his tailored navy suit, not a hair out of place. The man I'd loved since we were children, the man I'd dreamed of building a family with, stood there checking his phone as if this were just another appointment on his calendar.

"Lucien," I whispered, my voice cracking. "Please. I need to understand why. The doctor said—he warned me that if I have another procedure, I might never be able to..." The words caught in my throat like broken glass. "I might never be able to have children."

He finally looked up from his phone, his ice-blue eyes meeting mine with an expression I couldn't read.

There was no warmth there, no trace of the boy who used to bring me wildflowers from his mother's garden.

"Ariadne," he said, his voice carrying that tone of barely contained impatience I'd grown to dread. "We've discussed this. The embryo's implantation is unstable. It poses significant health risks."

"But why does this keep happening?" I pressed, desperation making my voice rise. "Nine times, Lucien. Nine times I've lost our babies. There has to be something we can do differently, some treatment—"

"Treatment?" His laugh was cold, cutting through the antiseptic air like a blade. "The treatment is to stop subjecting your body to these failed pregnancies. Your inability to maintain a stable pregnancy isn't just disappointing, Ariadne. It's dangerous. How is that not your responsibility as a mother?"

The words hit me like a physical blow. I stared at him, my mouth opening and closing soundlessly. The man I'd planned to spend my life with, the father of the children I kept losing, was blaming me for our losses. For my body's failures.

"I... I don't understand," I managed to whisper.

"Your maternal instincts, your body's basic function—all of it is defective," he continued, his tone growing more clinical, more detached. "Do you think I enjoy watching you put yourself through this over and over? Do you think I want to see you suffer?"

But there was no suffering in his eyes. No pain, no shared grief. Just cold calculation.

The nurse shifted uncomfortably beside me, her clipboard clutched against her chest. "Mr. Ward, perhaps—"

"Perhaps we should proceed," Lucien cut her off smoothly. "My wife is clearly in distress. The sooner we resolve this situation, the better for everyone involved."

I felt something inside me break, some last thread of resistance snapping under the weight of his indifference. The fight went out of me all at once, leaving me hollow and compliant. When the orderlies came to wheel me toward the operating room, I didn't protest. I couldn't. Lucien's words had stripped away my voice, my agency, my sense of self.

As they pushed my gurney down the hallway, I caught a glimpse of Lucien through the small window in the operating room door. He was already walking away, his phone pressed to his ear, probably taking a business call. He didn't look back.

The anesthesia mask descended over my face, and I breathed in the sweet, chemical smell that would steal away my consciousness. My last coherent thought was a prayer that somehow, this time would be different. That I'd wake up and still have a chance to be a mother.

But when I did wake up, the world had changed forever.

The recovery room was dim, lit only by the soft glow of monitors and the afternoon light filtering through heavy curtains. My mouth felt cotton-dry, my head thick and fuzzy from the anesthesia. It took several moments for the sounds around me to make sense—the steady beep of machines, the whisper of ventilation, the soft squeak of shoes on linoleum.

"She's coming around," someone said quietly.

I tried to speak, but only a croak emerged. A nurse appeared beside me, her face kind but tired. She wasn't the same one from before the procedure.

"Take it easy, Mrs. Ward. The surgery went well. You're in recovery now."

Surgery. Right. The ninth procedure. I tried to push myself up, but my body felt leaden, unresponsive.

"My baby," I whispered. "Is my baby—"

The nurse's expression shifted, becoming carefully neutral. "Mrs. Ward, I think it's best if the doctor speaks with you about the procedure. Let me get Dr. Finch."

Dr. Alistair Finch. The chief physician who had overseen all my previous procedures. I'd grown to dread his visits, his clinical detachment, the way he spoke about my body and my pregnancies like they were failed experiments.

He appeared a few minutes later, his silver hair perfectly styled, his white coat pristine. Behind his wire-rimmed glasses, his eyes held no warmth, no compassion.

"Mrs. Ward," he said, pulling up a chair beside my bed. "I'm afraid I have some difficult news to share with you."

My heart began to race, the monitors beside me reflecting my rising panic.

"The procedure was successful in removing the non-viable pregnancy," he continued in that same detached tone. "However, there were complications. Significant scarring, damage to the uterine wall. I'm afraid your reproductive capacity has been permanently compromised."

The words seemed to echo in the small room, bouncing off the walls and hitting me again and again. Permanently compromised. No more babies. No more hope.

"What... what are you saying?" I managed to ask, though I already knew.

"You will not be able to conceive again, Mrs. Ward. I'm sorry."

Sorry. He said it like he was apologizing for running late to an appointment.

The grief hit me like a tsunami, overwhelming and absolute. Not just this baby—all the babies I would never have. The family I would never build. The dreams that had just died on this sterile table.

The room began to spin, darkness creeping in at the edges of my vision. I heard Dr. Finch calling for assistance, felt hands steadying me as I swayed, but it all seemed to be happening from very far away.

Then the blackness claimed me, and I fell into unconsciousness with the taste of shattered dreams bitter on my tongue.

Somewhere in the darkness between waking and sleeping, voices drifted through the fog of medication and grief. At first, they seemed like part of a dream, distant and unreal.

"...lucky to be alive, really," Dr. Finch's voice, clinical and cold.

"Doctor, how can you say that?" A woman's voice, younger, distressed. "Nine procedures... surely there was another way?"

"Another way?" Dr. Finch's laugh was dry, humorless. "My dear Clara, you don't understand the situation. Mr. Ward's instructions were very specific from the beginning."

"Instructions?"

"He never wanted these pregnancies to succeed. Each procedure was designed to weaken her further, to ensure that eventually..." A pause. "Well, let's just say he was hoping she wouldn't be quite so resilient."

The words filtered through my drugged consciousness like poison, each syllable burning as it registered.

"You mean..." The nurse's voice was horrified. "You mean he wanted her to bleed out?"

"Mr. Ward has always despised his wife for occupying the position that rightfully belongs to his true love. The marriage was arranged, you see. A business transaction. But she was supposed to be temporary." Dr. Finch's voice was matter-of-fact, as if he were discussing the weather. "He's been quite generous with his donations to this hospital. We all understand the situation."

"But she's a person! She's someone's daughter!"

"She's an obstacle," Dr. Finch corrected. "And obstacles are meant to be removed. Though I must admit, she's proven remarkably difficult to eliminate. Her constitution is stronger than we anticipated."

The conversation faded as footsteps moved away, leaving me alone with the devastating truth echoing in my mind. Lucien hadn't been trying to save me or preserve my health. He'd been trying to kill me. Slowly, methodically, using my own desperate desire for motherhood as the weapon.

I lay there in the darkness, my body too weak to move, my mind reeling with the magnitude of his betrayal. Every tender word, every gentle touch, every promise of love—all of it had been a lie. I was nothing more than an inconvenience to be disposed of, a problem to be solved.

And I'd been so naive, so trusting, that I'd walked willingly into his trap nine times over.

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