
When His Mistress Demanded My Fourth Miscarriage, I Revolted
When His Mistress Demanded My Fourth Miscarriage, I Revolted Chapter 1
The rain fell softly on Woodlawn Cemetery, each droplet like a tear from heaven. I stood motionless before Michael's headstone, my fingers tracing the cold, wet marble. Two years. Two years since I lost my brother, my protector, my best friend.
"I miss you," I whispered, my voice barely audible above the gentle patter of rain. "Every single day."
The memorial flowers in my hands—delicate silk creations in Michael's favorite blues and whites—felt heavy with meaning. I'd spent hours crafting each petal, each leaf, channeling my grief into something beautiful, just as Sarah had taught me during those dark days after his death.
I knelt in the wet grass, not feeling the cold seep through my jeans—another quirk of my condition. Congenital insensitivity to pain. A blessing and a curse. I couldn't feel physical discomfort, but emotional pain? That cut deeper than any knife could.
"Nathan's been my rock," I told Michael, arranging the flowers carefully at the base of his headstone. "I don't know how I would have survived these past two years without him. The miscarriages, losing you... he's held me together."
My fingers lingered on a blue silk flower. "The doctors still don't know why I keep losing them at exactly four months. Three babies, Michael. Three little lives I couldn't protect."
The wind picked up, sending a chill through the cemetery that even I could sense. Something about this place always made me feel closer to sensation, as if Michael's presence somehow awakened my dormant nerve endings.
"I have to believe there's a reason for all this suffering," I said, rising slowly to my feet. "That's what Nathan keeps telling me."
I pressed my fingers to my lips, then to the top of Michael's headstone. "Until next time, big brother."
The drive home was a blur of green forest and gray skies. Seattle in November—perpetually caught between rain and more rain. I switched on the radio, hoping to drown out my thoughts, but they persisted, loud and relentless.
Michael's laugh. The phone call telling me they'd found his body in Lake Tahoe. The funeral. The first miscarriage, then the second, then the third—each one at precisely sixteen weeks. Nathan holding me through each loss, whispering that we'd try again, that we'd get through this together.
Tears blurred my vision as the windshield wipers fought a losing battle against the intensifying downpour. I blinked rapidly, trying to clear my sight, but the grief was overwhelming—a tsunami crashing over me without warning.
"Michael," I choked out, my hands tightening on the steering wheel. "I need you."
The car drifted. I felt it happening, as if from a distance—the slight pull to the right, the rumble of tires on the shoulder. I jerked the wheel left, overcompensating. Headlights flashed in my peripheral vision. A horn blared. I swerved again.
Then came the impact—a violent jolt as metal met metal. The guardrail. I'd hit the guardrail.
Time slowed. The airbag deployed in a cloud of white powder. Glass shattered. The car spun, once, twice, before coming to rest against the barrier.
Silence fell, broken only by the hiss of the radiator and the relentless drumming of rain on the crumpled roof.
I blinked, dazed but conscious. No pain—never pain—but I tasted blood where I'd bitten my lip. Moving carefully, I assessed the damage. The car was totaled, but I seemed largely intact. A miracle, the paramedics would later call it.
Three hours and numerous tests later, I sat on the edge of a hospital bed at Seattle General, diagnosed with a mild concussion and superficial cuts. The doctor had seemed perplexed by my calm demeanor, not understanding that physical trauma registered differently for me.
"Your personal effects, Mrs. Cross," a nurse said, handing me a clear plastic bag containing my purse, phone, and—unexpectedly—my car's dash cam.
"Thank you," I murmured, surprised the device had survived the impact.
Late that night, alone in my hospital room with the lights dimmed, curiosity got the better of me. I connected the dash cam to my phone, wondering if it had captured my moment of distraction, my failure.
The video was corrupted, showing only static, but the audio played with perfect clarity. I heard my own voice first, talking to Michael at the cemetery. Then silence as I drove. My quiet weeping.
And then, unexpectedly, another recording—from days earlier. Nathan's voice, clear and cold in a way I'd never heard before.
"She still has no idea," he was saying to someone. "Visits her brother's grave like a ritual. If she knew I was the one who arranged his little 'swimming accident' at Tahoe..."
A laugh—David Miller, Nathan's friend. "And she still doesn't suspect anything about the miscarriages?"
"Not a clue," Nathan replied. "The drug is undetectable in standard tests. Four months in, I administer a higher dose, she loses the baby, and Elena gets what she needs for the experimental treatments. It's perfect."
"And your wife just thinks it's bad luck?"
"Lily trusts me completely," Nathan said, his voice suddenly gentle, almost pitying. "That's what makes this so easy."
The recording continued, but I couldn't hear it over the roaring in my ears. My world—already fragile—shattered completely, leaving me alone in the darkness with a truth too monstrous to comprehend.
When His Mistress Demanded My Fourth Miscarriage, I Revolted of Contents
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