
Wife Reclaims Her Power
Chapter 1
The antiseptic smell of the hospital burned my nostrils as they wheeled me down the corridor. My hands trembled as they rested on my swollen belly—seven months of hope, seven years of trying, all culminating in this moment of terror. The harsh fluorescent lights blurred above me, each one passing like the tick of a countdown clock.
"Mrs. Mitchell, we need to perform an emergency C-section immediately," the doctor's voice was steady but urgent. "Your blood pressure is dangerously high. We need to save you both."
I turned my head, searching for Richard's face among the medical staff surrounding me. He stood there in crisp blue scrubs, his expression unreadable, his eyes not meeting mine. Seven years of fertility treatments, countless injections, the roller coaster of hope and despair—and now this moment that should have united us seemed to be pulling us further apart.
"Richard," I whispered, reaching for his hand. "Our baby..."
His fingers briefly touched mine, cold and impersonal. "The doctors know what they're best, Sarah."
As we approached the double doors of the operating room, I caught a glimpse of Amanda Hayes slumped in a chair in the waiting area, an oxygen mask pressed to her face. Her mascara-streaked cheeks glistened with tears as she played the role of the tragic heroine to perfection. Richard's childhood friend. His constant companion. The woman whose leukemia diagnosis had somehow become the center of our lives.
The last thing I remembered before the anesthesia took hold was Richard's gaze finally meeting mine—not with love or concern, but with something that looked disturbingly like resignation.
* * *
I woke to emptiness. A physical hollowness that echoed the void forming in my chest. My hands instinctively moved to my stomach, finding it flatter, softer. Wrong.
"Mrs. Mitchell?" A nurse with kind eyes stood beside my bed. "I'm so sorry."
Two simple words that contained an ocean of grief. I didn't need to hear more. The absence of crying, the pitying glances, the careful way they monitored my reaction—it all told me what I couldn't bear to ask.
"We did everything we could," the doctor explained later, his voice a distant echo through my fog of grief. "The placental abruption was severe. We had to make a choice."
A choice. As if there had been one.
As they wheeled me back to my recovery room, my gaze fell on a leather folder on the bedside table, partially open. Through my tears, I recognized Richard's bold signature at the bottom of a document. Legal language swam before my eyes, but certain phrases stood out in stark relief: "transfer of thirty percent shareholding"... "Mitchell Industries"... "Amanda Hayes."
The pieces clicked together with sickening clarity. While I had been fighting for our child's life, Richard had been securing Amanda's future.
I must have made a sound because a nurse hurried to my side. "Mrs. Mitchell, you need to rest."
But rest was impossible now. I pushed myself up despite the pain lancing through my abdomen. "Where is my husband?"
I found him in the hallway, speaking in hushed tones with a doctor. His tailored suit had replaced the scrubs—he'd had time to change while I was losing our child.
"Richard," my voice was raw, barely recognizable even to myself.
He turned, his face composing itself into an appropriate mask of solemnity. "Sarah, you should be resting."
"I saw the papers." The words scraped my throat. "You're giving Amanda thirty percent of your company? Now? Today?"
Something hardened in his eyes. "She needs the security. The treatments are experimental, expensive."
"And our baby?" The question hung between us, sharp and accusing.
Richard's sigh was short, impatient. "That was just bad luck, Sarah. We can always try again." He checked his watch. "Amanda's life is irreplaceable."
Just bad luck. Seven years of hoping, months of carrying our child, the agony of loss—reduced to a stroke of misfortune, a footnote in the greater tragedy of Amanda Hayes.
I sank onto a nearby bench, my legs no longer able to support me. The hospital continued its business around us—doctors consulting charts, nurses hurrying past, families celebrating new life or mourning its loss. And I sat there, hollowed out, watching as the carefully constructed facade of my marriage crumbled into dust.
In that sterile hallway, with the ghost of my unborn child between us, I finally saw the truth: I had never been irreplaceable to Richard Mitchell. I had only ever been a convenience.
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