
The Heart He Chose Over Mine
Chapter 1
Chapter 1
The ceiling of the St. Jude Charity Clinic didn't just fall; it roared.
One second, Clara Hayes was walking down the sterile, fluorescent-lit corridor, her fingers nervously tracing the edges of the glossy ultrasound photograph hidden in her coat pocket. The next second, a deafening explosion from the adjacent construction site ripped through the clinic’s foundation. The world violently tilted. Drywall shattered into a blinding cloud of white dust, and a horrific, tearing sound echoed through the air just before the ceiling collapsed.
Clara was thrown to the linoleum floor. A heavy, agonizing weight slammed down across her lower abdomen and legs, pinning her instantly. The air was entirely choked with pulverized concrete, electrical smoke, and the metallic scent of ruptured pipes.
"Help!" Clara gasped, the word tearing at her dust-coated throat. She tried to push herself backward, but the immense steel support beam lying across her pelvis refused to yield. A sharp, blinding pain lanced through her stomach, so intense it made her vision swim with black spots.
"Julian!" Clara screamed, her voice cracking. "Someone! Please!"
A few feet away, a shadow moved in the thick, gray haze.
"God, my ears are ringing," a high, petulant voice complained.
Clara blinked rapidly, trying to clear her stinging eyes. Through the settling dust, she saw Serena Croft sitting on the floor. Serena was entirely unpinned. Aside from a tear in her expensive silk blouse and some soot on her cheek, she looked perfectly unharmed.
"Serena?" Clara choked out, coughing as smoke filled her lungs. "Are you hurt? Can you move?"
Serena looked down at her hands, wiping away a smudge of dirt with a look of profound disgust. "My designer dress is ruined. And it’s so hard to breathe in here. It smells like burning plastic."
"Serena, listen to me," Clara pleaded, her voice trembling as a warm, terrifying wetness began to pool beneath her thighs. Panic, cold and primal, seized her chest. "I'm trapped. I need you to stand up and try to push this beam. Just a few inches. Please."
Serena looked over at Clara, her eyes narrowing slightly. She didn't move an inch. "Are you crazy? My doctors specifically said I cannot do any heavy lifting. Do you want me to tear my chest open? I have a delicate condition, Clara. You know that."
"I am bleeding!" Clara yelled, the stoicism she usually maintained finally cracking under the sheer terror of what that blood meant. "Serena, please! I'm ten weeks pregnant. The baby... you have to help me!"
Serena’s expression remained entirely flat for a fraction of a second, a flicker of something cruel and calculating crossing her eyes. Then, she let out a dramatic, ragged gasp and clutched both hands over her chest. "Oh, God. My heart. The smoke is making my heart race."
"Serena, stop it," Clara begged, tears cutting tracks through the dust on her face. "You're fine. I can see you breathing normally. Please, just help me lift this!"
"I can't!" Serena wailed, her voice suddenly much louder, carrying through the ruined corridor. "Julian! Julian, help me!"
Footsteps crunched heavily over the shattered drywall. The smoke parted, and Julian Vance appeared. He looked like an angel of rescue, his pristine white doctor's coat stained with soot, his jaw set in the clinical, authoritative line that made him the most sought-after cardiothoracic surgeon in the city.
"Serena! Clara!" Julian shouted, his eyes scanning the debris.
"Julian! Over here!" Clara cried out, a massive wave of relief washing over her. She reached her hand out toward him. "Thank God. Julian, I'm trapped."
Julian rushed forward, dropping to his knees beside the steel beam. His eyes, usually so cold and composed, were wide with adrenaline. He placed his hands on the metal, testing the weight.
"The beam is incredibly heavy," Julian muttered, his mind instantly slipping into the obsessive, clinical mode that defined him. "It’s acting as a pressure dressing on your lower half, Clara. If I lift it without the proper equipment, you could hemorrhage instantly."
"I'm already bleeding, Julian," Clara sobbed, grabbing his wrist. Her fingers were slick with her own blood. "Look at me. Please. You have to get me out. I'm pregnant! I'm carrying our baby!"
Julian froze. He stared at her, his brows knitting together in confusion. "Pregnant? Clara, what are you talking about? We haven't even been trying."
"I was going to tell you today," Clara sobbed, her grip on his wrist tightening. "I have the ultrasound in my pocket. Julian, please, the baby is dying. You have to get this off me!"
Before Julian could process her words, a high-pitched, agonizing scream shattered the air.
"Julian!" Serena cried out, collapsing onto her side in the rubble, her body twitching as she gripped the fabric over her chest. "Julian, it hurts! It burns! Elise... Elise is struggling! Her heart is skipping beats!"
Julian’s head snapped toward Serena so fast his neck cracked. The utter panic that flooded his face was something Clara had never seen before. It wasn't the measured concern of a doctor; it was the raw, unhinged terror of a man watching his world end.
"Serena, look at me," Julian commanded, completely abandoning his hold on the beam above Clara. He scrambled over the debris to reach Serena, pressing two fingers hard against the carotid artery on her neck. "Your pulse is thready. You're experiencing premature ventricular contractions. The ambient smoke is inducing acute hypoxia."
"I can't breathe," Serena whimpered, staring up at him with wide, fragile eyes. "Don't let me die, Julian. Don't let Elise die again."
"I won't," Julian whispered, his voice trembling with a pathological intensity. "I've got you."
"Julian!" Clara screamed, her voice tearing her vocal cords. "What are you doing? I am bleeding to death! Our child is dying!"
Julian stood up, scooping Serena effortlessly into his arms. Serena tucked her face into his neck, burying her smile against his collar.
Julian looked down at Clara, his expression completely devoid of a husband’s love. He looked at her the way a surgeon looks at a chart. "Clara, you are pinned, but you are stable for now. The beam is keeping you from bleeding out entirely. If Serena stays in this toxic air for another minute, her body will reject the transplant. I can't let Elise's heart stop again. I simply can't."
"No!" Clara shrieked, thrashing under the metal, causing a fresh, agonizing wave of blood to spill onto the floor. "Julian, don't you dare leave me here! I am your wife! I am pregnant!"
"I'll send the fire department right to this room," Julian said, his voice entirely detached. "Just hold on, Clara. Don't panic."
"Julian!"
He didn't look back. He carried Serena Croft through the smoke and disappeared into the ruins, leaving his wife pinned in the dark.
Clara lay there as the silence rushed back in to replace the chaos. The physical pain in her pelvis was nothing compared to the violent, tearing sensation in her womb. She felt the exact moment it happened. She felt the warmth leave her body. She felt the tiny, fragile life she had been fiercely protecting for ten weeks slip away into the cold dust.
She stopped screaming. She stopped crying. She just stared up at the broken ceiling, the smoke burning her eyes until they were completely dry.
Five years ago, Julian Vance had saved her life. He had cured her of a fatal bout of endocarditis when every other doctor had given up. She had married him because she believed she owed him her life. She believed she was unworthy of his unconditional love, content to just exist in the margins of his world.
But as she lay bleeding in the rubble, a profound, chilling clarity washed over her.
The debt was paid. Her baby had paid it in full.
It took the rescue workers forty-five minutes to reach her. When the firemen finally hoisted the beam off her body, Clara didn't make a sound. She let them strap her to the backboard, her eyes fixed blankly on the ceiling as they carried her out into the blinding sunlight.
Hours later, Clara lay in a sterile, painfully bright hospital room.
Dr. Evans, a kind-faced obstetrician, stood at the foot of her bed. He held a clipboard tight to his chest, his eyes full of deep, professional sorrow.
"Mrs. Vance," Dr. Evans said softly. "I am so incredibly sorry. The crush injury to your pelvis, combined with the severe hemorrhaging... there was simply nothing we could do. The trauma was too immense. We had to perform an emergency dilation and curettage to stop the bleeding and save your life."
Clara stared at the white blanket covering her legs. She felt entirely hollowed out, as if they had scraped away not just the pregnancy, but her soul.
"I understand," Clara said. Her voice was flat, devoid of any inflection.
"We can offer grief counseling," Dr. Evans offered, taking a step forward. "And I can call your husband. The nurses said he is in the cardiac ICU with another patient, but surely he will want to know—"
"No," Clara interrupted, her voice snapping like brittle ice. "Do not call him. He is busy."
Dr. Evans looked startled, but he nodded slowly. "I'll leave you to rest, Mrs. Vance. Press the call button if you need anything at all."
As the door clicked shut behind him, Clara’s cell phone, resting on the bedside table, began to vibrate. The screen lit up with Julian’s name.
Clara picked up the phone. She stared at the caller ID for a long, silent moment. She didn't feel anger. She didn't feel sadness. She felt a cold, absolute resolve hardening in her veins.
She pressed the button to ignore the call.
Then, her fingers moved mechanically across the screen, pulling up her contacts. She tapped the name *Marcus Thorne*.
The line rang twice before a deep, authoritative voice answered.
"Clara?" Marcus said, the background noise of a busy laboratory echoing behind him. "I just saw the international news about the St. Jude clinic collapse. Are you alright? Where are you?"
"I'm in the hospital, Marcus," Clara said, her voice a quiet, empty whisper.
"Good God," Marcus sighed heavily. "Are you badly hurt? Where is Julian? Don't tell me he left you alone in a hospital room."
"He had to prioritize a patient," Clara said smoothly.
"Let me guess," Marcus said, his tone turning blunt and furious. "The girl with the ghost heart. Clara, I have told you for a year that the man is a walking red flag. He is obsessed with a ghost, and he is letting you drown."
"I know," Clara said.
Marcus paused, sensing the absolute deadness in her tone. "Clara? What happened?"
"Is the position at the Geneva Medical Institute still open?" Clara asked, ignoring his question.
"Of course it is," Marcus said instantly. "I've kept the lead medical illustrator spot open specifically for you. The research team needs you, Clara. But you're in the hospital. You need time to recover."
"I don't need time," Clara said, her eyes drifting to the bloody, crumpled ultrasound photo the nurses had recovered from her coat and left on the table. She reached out and turned the photo face down. "I accept the position."
"I'll have the contract drafted tonight," Marcus said, his voice softening with supportive relief. "When can you be here?"
Clara looked at the blank, white wall. "I leave in seven days."
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