Follow
Chapters
Share
The Wife He Regrets Losing  Novel Cover

The Wife He Regrets Losing

I thought I had it all, love, a husband, a life I built for us. But Alex betrayed me in ways I never imagined. And then Cassy returned, the woman from his past, the girl he once loved, right before our marriage fell apart. I was still his wife when it happened, still trusting him, still believing in us. Yet our marriage crumbled, and I was left to pick up the pieces of a life he no longer seemed to care about. Then he discovered the truth, the real me, the woman I was meant to be all along. Suddenly, Alex wanted me back, fighting for the love he thought he lost. But can I trust him after everything? Or is this just another lie waiting to break me?
Chapters
Share

Chapter 6

Emma's POV

Uncle Richard's mansion did not feel like a mansion the way I had always imagined mansions felt. I had expected grandeur that kept you at arm's length, the kind of beauty that made you afraid to touch things.

Instead it felt like exhaling. High ceilings and warm lighting and the smell of something always cooking in the kitchen. Staff who greeted me by name and meant it. A room that was mine, entirely mine, with a bed so wide and soft that the first night I lay in it I didn't know what to do with all the space.

I slept for eleven hours.

I couldn't remember the last time I had done that.

The first week I mostly slept and ate and sat in the garden with a cup of tea I didn't always finish. Uncle Richard didn't push me to talk or plan or decide anything.

He simply made sure I was fed and comfortable and occasionally sat across from me in the garden reading his newspaper in companionable silence. It was the quietest and most healing kind of company. No demands. No criticism. No walking on eggshells waiting for a mood to shift.

I started sketching again on the fourth day.

It happened almost by accident. I had been sitting at the small writing desk in my room staring at nothing when my hand reached for a pencil without my brain giving it permission.

I opened my sketchbook to a blank page and just started drawing. Lines at first. Then shapes. Then something that began to look like a silhouette, broad shoulders, a structured collar, a hem that moved. I drew for two hours without stopping and when I finally put the pencil down my hand was stiff and my chest felt lighter than it had in years.

I stared at what I had made, It wasn't perfect. But it was mine.

Susan came on the sixth day with two bags of groceries, a bottle of sparkling water she insisted on treating like champagne, and enough energy to fill every room in the mansion simultaneously.

"You have colour in your face," she announced, dropping the bags on the kitchen counter and studying me with narrowed eyes. "That's new."

"Thank you, Susan," I said drily.

"I'm serious. Last time I saw you in that hospital bed I was genuinely worried." She started unpacking the groceries with the efficiency of someone who had decided she lived there.

"How are you sleeping?"

"Better."

"Eating?"

I hesitated a half second too long.

She pointed at me. "I knew it. Sit down. I'm making you something proper."

I sat at the kitchen island and watched her move around the space with complete confidence and thought for probably the thousandth time in our friendship that I did not deserve Susan Woods.

We talked for hours that afternoon. About the divorce papers, which Alex had still not signed according to my lawyer. About Christine, who had apparently been telling neighbours that Emma had abandoned her son for another man. About Cassy, who had been seen wearing a ring on a very particular finger at a very public dinner.

I listened to all of it with a strange detachment. Like hearing news about people from a life I had already finished living.

"You're not upset," Susan observed, watching my face carefully.

"No," I said. And I meant it.

She smiled slowly. "Good."

It was around the second week that I started feeling unwell.

At first I blamed the stress. My body had been through an enormous amount in a very short time and it made complete sense that it would need time to recalibrate. I was tired in a way that sleep didn't fully fix. Food that I normally loved smelled wrong to me. I would be perfectly fine one moment and then overwhelmingly nauseous the next.

I told myself it was grief. Trauma. The physical aftermath of everything I had survived.

I almost convinced myself. It was Susan who dismantled that particular piece of self-deception with her characteristic lack of ceremony.

She arrived on a Tuesday morning unannounced, which was entirely on brand for her, took one look at me pushing a plate of eggs away from me with visible distaste and set down her bag with the energy of someone who had already made a decision.

"How long has food been making you feel sick?" she asked.

"It's just stress"

"Emma."

"Susan, I am fine"

"How long?"

I closed my mouth. Counted backwards in my head. I felt something cold and significant move through me.

"A week or so," I said quietly.

She reached into her bag and placed a pregnancy strip on the kitchen counter between us without a word.

I stared at it. "That's not, I can't be.....Susan, I lost the baby. The doctors confirmed it. There is nothing"

"Emma." Her voice was firm but gentle. "Just take the test. For me."

I looked at her for a long moment. Then I picked up the test and walked to the bathroom.

Two lines.

I sat on the edge of the bathtub and stared at the result until the numbers on my phone timer blurred. Two lines. Clear and undeniable and completely impossible as far as I was concerned.

I walked back out to the kitchen and held the test up. Susan looked at it and pressed both hands over her mouth.

"Susan," I said, my voice very calm in the way voices get when the mind hasn't fully caught up yet. "I lost the baby. The doctors told me I lost the baby."

"Emma"

"I was in the hospital. They confirmed it. How is this possible?"

Susan grabbed her car keys from the counter. "We are going to the doctor right now."

The obstetrician, Dr. Anita Boateng, was a composed woman with kind eyes and the manner of someone who had delivered difficult news and miraculous news in equal measure and had learned to hold both with steadiness.

She reviewed my previous hospital records, asked me several careful questions, and then guided me onto the examination table for a scan.

I lay there staring at the ceiling while the cold gel was applied, my heart doing something loud and unsteady in my chest. Susan sat in the chair beside me gripping my hand.

Dr. Boateng was quiet for a long moment as she moved the scanner slowly. Her brow furrowed slightly. Then her expression shifted into something I couldn't immediately read.

"Mrs. Carter," she said carefully, "I need to ask you something. Were you given a detailed scan during your hospital stay or was the loss confirmed another way?"

"They did a scan," I said. "They told me the pregnancy was no longer viable."

She nodded slowly. "I see." She turned the screen toward me. "Mrs. Carter, what the previous scan missed is what we sometimes call a vanishing twin.

You were carrying twins. You lost one, which is what the earlier scan detected. But the second baby," she paused and pointed gently at the screen, "was positioned in a way that made it very difficult to see. It was essentially hiding behind its sibling."

The room went completely silent. I heard Susan make a sound beside me that was somewhere between a gasp and a sob.

I stared at the screen. At the small, unmistakable flutter of a heartbeat that was somehow still there. Still going. Still holding on through everything my body had endured.

"That's" My voice broke. I tried again. "That is a baby."

"That is your baby," Dr. Boateng said gently. "And based on what I can see, a remarkably resilient one."

I didn't speak in the car on the way back.

Susan drove with one hand on the wheel and one hand over mine on the centre console and didn't try to fill the silence and I loved her fiercely for that.

I sat with the scan photo in my lap, a small black and white image of something impossibly tiny that had somehow survived the rain, the hospital, the grief and the leaving. I thought about the night I had cried for the baby I thought I had lost completely. I thought about how I had grieved alone, quietly, without a single person in the Mercer house knowing or caring.

And yet this tiny stubborn life had stayed.

Had hidden itself away like it was waiting for the right moment. Waiting until I was somewhere safe and ready.

I pressed the scan photo gently against my chest.

"You held on," I whispered. "You held on for both of us."

I told Uncle Richard that evening over dinner. I placed the scan photo on the table beside his plate without a word and watched his face as he picked it up and looked at it. He was quiet for a long moment.

Then he set the photo down carefully, removed his glasses, and pressed his fingers to his eyes in the way people do when they are trying to hold something in.

"Emma," he said, his voice lower and rougher than usual.

"I know," I said softly.

He reached across the table and covered my hand with his. "You and this child will always have a home here. Always. Whatever comes next, you will not face it alone."

I nodded. I couldn't speak.

"This baby," he said, looking at the photo once more, "clearly has your spirit. Stubborn and extraordinary from the very beginning."

I laughed then, wet and unexpected, and it felt like the first real laugh in months.

That night I stood at the window of my room as the city skyline glittered below. I rested my hand on my stomach, still flat, still holding a secret that felt like a miracle.

I thought about everything ahead. The divorce not yet finalized. The career I was rebuilding. The identity I was still stepping into. And now this, a life I thought I had lost that had quietly refused to go.

"This time," I whispered, to myself, to the stubborn little soul that had hidden and waited and held on, "things will be different."

I believed it with everything I had.

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Search for “KRHN” on moboreader to read the full book.
Copy the code and search in the NovelShort app to continue reading.
KRHN
copy
Open the Official Website

You may also like

Every Vow But One Novel Cover
9.1
Leo Vance builds things that last. Bridges. Buildings. A quiet, unspoken life with the woman he loves. What he has never been able to build is the courage to name what they are. On the morning of his wedding to botanical illustrator Elara Ashford, Leo stands in a chapel in a suit he cannot bring himself to fully button, and realizes something that stops him cold - he has already been married to her. Not in any courtroom or ceremony, but in every moment that actually counted. The night she held his hand at his mother's funeral and said nothing, because nothing was the right thing to say. The years they ate ramen so he could chase a dream she believed in before he did. The night she stood in the doorway during their worst fight and looked him in the eye and refused to let him run. He has said I do a thousand times in a thousand unspoken ways. So why does saying it out loud feel like the beginning of the end? What Leo doesn't know is that Elara has been sitting with her own impossible question for three weeks - ever since she found a note in his jacket pocket that made her wonder whether the man she is about to marry proposed because he chose her, or because someone told him he was about to lose her. What neither of them knows is that the woman he was secretly engaged to four years ago just walked into the venue. His best man is in love with his bride. His estranged father is standing outside in a rented suit, unable to go in. And the wedding videographer has been filming everything - with two cameras. By the time the officiant asks who gives this woman, nothing about this wedding will have gone according to the blueprint. But then again, the most important things Leo has ever built never did. Every Vow But One is a lux serialized romance about the terrifying distance between loving someone completely and choosing them on purpose and what it can cost when you finally close the gap.
Falling for the hot alpha hockey star  Novel Cover
7.2
Skylar thought she had it all until Liam, her boyfriend, betrayed her. She was broken and furious until she met Ryder,the gruff captain of the hockey team and feared alpha of a ruthless biker gang. She planned to use him for revenge. But Ryder's dangerous gaze made her question everything. When her family gave her a risky mission tied to Ryder's pack, secrets long hidden were revealed pulling her deeper into a world she barely understood. Now she's caught between two worlds and one question haunts her: Was she using him... or was he claiming her?
Fame or Revenge.  Novel Cover
9.1
"I can't stop myself. You consume me Olivia, all of you!" Only daughter of powerful business mogul and drug lord, Olivia Murray wants a family of her own. Her world is shaken after she finds her husband-to-be, Asher in bed with one of his employees a week before their wedding. Feeling betrayed, she cancels the entire wedding ceremony against her family's wishes, leaving her father disappointed by the disgrace she's brought to the family. Olivia has a new plan on getting revenge as she meets a mysterious guy who also has a vendetta against Asher. Their worlds become intertwined as they work to bring him down while navigating their attraction to each other. Olivia finds herself falling in love no matter how hard she tries not to. She is torn apart when she finally discovers who this mysterious guy truly is and his mission to take down her entire family. Olivia is left with one choice to make, choosing between her family or the man she's fallen deeply in love with. Leonard Devine, a skilled undercover agent gets assigned to work on the O'Neill's family's case to expose their illegal dealings with arms and drugs. His mission leads him to the Murray family and the only heir, Olivia. Striking a deal with her under a false identity to help her get revenge on her ex-fiance, Leonard finds himself falling in love with her as they enter a fake marriage. The lines of his mission begin to blur as he becomes entangled in his love affair with Olivia. They must decide whether to trust each other as they navigate the treacherous world of secrets and lies. Will their love stand the test of betrayals? Especially when he finds out he has been played and Olivia isn't who he thought she is.
Luna Reclaims Her Power Novel Cover
8.7
Betrayed by her mate and stripped of her status, Luna faces a brutal exile that should have been her end. Instead, she awakens an ancient, dormant power that defies the laws of her pack. No longer a victim, she embarks on a relentless quest for justice and survival. As she masters her new abilities, Luna prepares to confront those who wronged her, reclaiming her destiny and rewriting the future of the werewolf realm through blood and fire.
Oh No! I Sent My Sex Tape To My Bad Boy Stepbrother Novel Cover
7.8
Growing up as the maid's daughter in the glittering, suffocating Collins mansion, Nora Macie has perfected the art of being invisible. Enter Asher Collins. Rich, ruthless, and infuriatingly untouchable, unfortunately for Nora, her stepbrother has always had the power to ruin her with a single word. The moment a private video she never intended anyone to see is accidentally sent straight to Asher Collins. Except Asher doesn't expose her. He becomes curious... and dangerously invested. He will remake her. Not just into someone noticed, but into someone unforgettable, someone who commands attention the moment she walks into a room. Suddenly, the boys who never knew her name are watching her. Through it all, Asher remains in control... or at least he should be. Because the closer Nora gets to becoming everything he designed, the harder it becomes for him to remember that she was never meant to be his. * His fingers lifted, brushing lightly along the side of her throat. "I think you've been lying to yourself," he said. "Because your body already knows what it wants." Her breath faltered. "I swear, I'll kill you if you don't back the hell up." And then, without giving her the chance to retreat, he closed the final inch between them. "I would much rather you kiss me."
Rejected by the Alpha, Claimed by his brother Novel Cover
9.0
Warning This story contains mature content, including strong language, violence, and sexually explicit scenes. Reader discretion is advised. "I'd f***k you so hard, my so called brother would be so marvelled", he said, his voice laced with mockery and sarcasm. "Besides, you are mine", he added. "I was never yours, Ryker", I screamed as I wriggled on the chair where my hands were tied together. "He'll come for me", I added. "Were you always like this", he said, his finger raising my jaw, making me look into his eyes for a moment. "I'm afraid he won't be able to find us this time around, little Wolf". ******************************** Aria gets rejected by her mate, the Alpha, because she was a weak Omega. Broken and rejected, she escapes to the city where she catches the eye of Kian Blake, An Alpha CEO who happened to be her mate's step-brother. As her love with Kian blossoms, her long-buried power awakens, revealing a hidden secret that was enough to cast a spotlight on her. As news spread about her existence, war breeds between the brother who cast her aside and the one willing to fight for her. One who is willing to fight for her and the one who is willing to take her as his captive. She was once nothing but a weak Omega, now she's the prize in a battle between two Alphas. The Victory is uncertain....until she finds out the brother she trusted wasn't exactly transparent with her Now she's left alone, to trust the one who blatantly rejected her, or the one who pulled her close while holding a secret that could break her.... None is ready to let her go....