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The Sperm Donation That He Regretted Novel Cover

The Sperm Donation That He Regretted

Selene Gardo’s world shatters when she discovers her husband, mafia Don Romano Caliendo, donated sperm to his childhood friend, Teresa. While Selene hides her own pregnancy, Romano prioritizes the dying Teresa, even providing her a luxury home. After a cold confrontation over a social media comment, Selene realizes her husband’s devotion lies elsewhere. To protect her unborn baby from his neglect, she resolves to flee Brindleport forever.
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Chapter 2

Teresa's face paled, but she was quicker to react.

She grabbed Romano's arm and said in a trembling voice, "Romano… my stomach hurts…"

His attention was instantly pulled back to her.

"What's wrong? Where does it hurt?"

He supported her anxiously and shouted toward the nurses' station, "Someone! Help! We have a pregnant woman in distress over here!"

Teresa leaned into his chest, shaking her head weakly. "It's okay… I think I've just been standing too long… Romano, just help me over to the bench…"

Behind his back, I saw Teresa sitting down and flashing me a smirk of pure provocation.

However, Romano was blind to it.

I spoke up. "Romano, you believe her. But let me ask you this. If I told you I was pregnant, would you stay here with me?"

The hallway fell dead silent.

Romano froze.

Before he could speak, Teresa cut in. "Selene, I know you're desperate because you've never been able to conceive, but I'm carrying the Caliendo family's heir.

"There's no need to lie out of jealousy. You couldn't get pregnant for five years. Are you really claiming you conceived the exact same time I did?"

Romano's face darkened with disapproval at Teresa's words. "Selene, I know your body. Getting pregnant isn't that easy for you. Stop pretending."

Right then, Teresa let out a sharp gasp, then doubled over and clutched her stomach, keeping me from getting a word in.

"Romano… it hurts so much… the baby… Is something happening to the baby?"

Romano turned to her immediately.

"Selene," he murmured, "I know you're angry. Just go home. Once I get Teresa settled, I'll come explain everything."

Teresa leaned against his shoulder, stealing a glance at me. In her eyes, there was no pain—only triumph.

My voice was shaking now. "Romano, if you walk away with her right now, you're never going to see me again."

His back stiffened for a split second.

However, it was only a second.

"Stop being dramatic, Selene. I'll find you after I take care of Teresa."

With that, he carried Teresa toward the elevator.

"Romano!" I screamed after him.

The elevator doors slid shut.

I was left standing in the hallway alone, and finally, the tears began to fall.

It didn't take long for Teresa to update her Twitter.

It was a selfie of her leaning into Romano's arms in the elevator. The caption read, "Baby, it's okay. Papa will protect us."

As if she knew I'd be watching, a direct message popped up immediately after. "Selene, are you really pregnant?"

I didn't reply.

A second message followed. "So what if you are? Do you think Romano will believe you? I told him you're just making it up to compete with me for affection, and he already bought it."

Then came a third. "By the way, guess where Romano is sleeping tonight? On a hospital cot, or in that cold, empty house of yours?"

I stopped reading and muted all notifications.

True to her word, Romano didn't come home that night.

The next morning, I hadn't even opened my bedroom door before I heard Teresa's laughter drifting up from the dining room.

I walked downstairs to find her holding a piece of toast, smiling as she tried to feed it to Romano.

He gently dodged her hand and looked up at me. "Teresa's pregnancy is unstable, and I'm not comfortable with her living alone. I've moved her in so she can rest here. You don't mind, do you?"

He was asking if I minded after moving her in? What was the point?

I sat down across from them and replied calmly, "I don't mind."

Romano looked surprised by my easy compliance. However, in front of Teresa, he maintained the dignity expected of a Don.

He nodded curtly. "I'm glad you're being reasonable. You're older than Teresa. You should look out for her. Make sure you keep an eye on her daily needs and well-being…"