se
he heavy, suffocating darkness, dragging me back to consciousnes
ils. I blinked against the bright fluorescent lights, realizing
I took. I looked down and saw my right leg encased in a thick, heavy
the freezing rain, and the sickening lurch of the Maybach sliding
blindly slammed both hands down onto my stomach. Ever since the orphanage fire took my parents,
tal gown. I couldn't feel any flutter, any warmth. My ey
A middle-aged man in a crisp white coat, carrying a
epped to the side of the bed, pulling a small penli
gers clamping down on his white sleeve like a
gravelly whisper. Tears pooled in my eye
on tightening with professional sympathy. He let out a
te. I squeezed my eyes shut, bracing my shattered
orced structure of the backseat and the side-curtain airbags absorbed the
paths down my pale cheeks as my grip on his sleeve went completely
, clinical warning. "You are exhibiting severe signs of a th
you require absolute bed rest. No stress, no physical exertion
up and wiped the tears from my face. When I looked back at him, the
ed, my voice steadying. "Who
smoothly. "Your husband is currently downstairs in the minor injuri
y bottom of a frozen lake. The last, pathetic, lingering illusion I
ould I call Mr. Howard now? I'm sure he will be thrilled
eam of my ribs. I fixed Dr. Evans with a sta
n in confusion. "Mrs. Howard, as your husband, he ha
ing as a paralegal in a cutthroat Wall Street law firm before my marriage hadn't
ability Act, my medical records are strictly confidential. If you breathe a single syllable about my pregnancy to Holde
den, venomous aura radiating from the battered woman in
s fingers move across the screen, navigating to the electronic medical
red on the screen did the rigid tension
my lower abdomen. I made a silent, ironclad promise to the tiny
pensive leather dress shoes echoed from the ha
le word to
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