The Day My Husband Signed My Baby’s Death Novel – Three weeks ago, the elevator dropped. I was thirty seven weeks pregnant, rushing to the company’s elevator holding two paper bags of food I had cooked because Owen skipped breakfast again. Garlic rice. Soy chicken. Then the elevator jolted and it fell. The bags flew from my hands. Hot sauce exploded against my dress. Heat. Pain. Screaming metal.
My body hit hard against the wall as I collapsed to the floor. I screamed Owen’s name. The elevator shuddered, stopped, dropped again, just a breath, just enough to steal the air from my lungs. Then everything went dark. When I woke up, pain was everywhere. A doctor told me a maintenance technician heard the alarm. He forced the doors open. He carried me out while I was slipping in and out of consciousness. But Owen? Owen wasn’t there.
They said they needed my husband’s consent to operate. There were risks. Time mattered. They called him. Again and again. Ninety-nine times but he didn’t answer. When he finally did, his voice was flat. Annoyed. “Laura, what now? I told you, I’m in a fucking damn meeting.” My throat closed. “Owen! I fell… I’m— I’m bleeding. I’m at the hospital. Please.” Footsteps. Laughter. “Owen, baby, hurry up,” a woman said. “We’ll be late! You know how I hate to be late.” Kelsey.
My twin sister. The one who came back six months ago with bruises and tears and a story too tragic to question. The one I let into my home. Into my marriage. Into my life. “She needs help, Owen,” I had said. “Please. You can’t turn your back on her.” He relented, letting her move in. I cooked for her, drove her to appointments, made space in my heart for her while my own life bled away. Three months ago, she said she was pregnant with her ex husband. She made me help her. I believed her. God, I believed her. I never saw it coming… that all her softness, her tears, her whispered thanks, were just venom in disguise.
The jealousy she’d carried for years, the hatred of my life, my happiness… she had been waiting, planning, and manipulating from the shadows. Tears blurred my vision. My hands went to my stomach, trying to protect the baby inside me, but it was too late. Because of the delay, my baby didn’t make it. I slipped into a coma and woke up days later, staring at the ceiling of a hospital room, and machines beeping beside me. That’s when I heard Owen’s voice outside my door. “Keep her sedated.” “Mr. Ashford,” the doctor’s sounds nervous. “It’s been days. It’s dangerous to keep her under this long.” “The transplant’s done, isn’t it?” Owen said. “Kelsey’s fine now.
She can rest. Laura doesn’t need to know anything.” My breath caught. My hands froze. The doctor hesitated. “You mean… she doesn’t know what you—” “I paid you to keep your mouth shut!” Owen snapped. “If you talk, you lose everything.” And that was it. The sound of my life ending for real. Days later, I saw them together in the recovery room. Owen brushing Kelsey’s hair. Kelsey smiling, hand on her stomach. “You did it,” she said softly. “Our baby’s safe.” Everything I lost. Those words didn’t just hurt but they shattered me. I stumbled to the bathroom, locked the door, and looked at my reflection. I didn’t recognize her. The woman staring back was pale, hollow, done.
The door opened behind me, and Kelsey stepped in, all soft smiles and venom. “Why are you hiding, sis?” she asked sweetly. “Don’t you want to see our baby?” I turned around slowly. “Get. Out.” She tilted her head. “You’re not being very nice. After everything I took from you, I thought you’d at least try to be grateful.” “You slept with him?! You killed my baby!” She smiled wider, “Killed? No, no. He was born alive. I have pictures.” She swiped her phone, and the screen lit up… a tiny baby boy with my eyes, sleeping peacefully in a hospital crib.
My heart stopped. “W-where is he?” Kelsey tilted her head, “Oh, you really don’t need him anymore, sis. Your baby… he didn’t make it.” I froze, not sure I heard her right. “Poor little nephew,” she continued, scrolling through another video. “Isn’t he a pretty boy? Look at him… all perfect… and now?” She paused the video, tilting her phone toward me. The frame showed the baby, lifeless, tossed into a trashcan like garbage. No, no, no! My stomach churned, bile rising. “Owen said it himself… Your baby was never his. You were cheating on him, weren’t you? The doctor just followed orders. He said your child wasn’t his, so…” She shrugged, tilting her head like it was nothing. “Now he’s gone. And all I have is the stem cells they harvested for me. He’s dead, sis. Completely dead. Isn’t that… poetic? Aw, my poor hert goes with him.” Something inside me shattered. My hands shot for her, but before I could reach her, she laughed, sharp and cold. “You! You monster!” I gasped, but the words were hollow. She didn’t flinch.
“Monster? No, I just did what had to be done. And Owen… well, he’s very pleased with me.” I slapped her hard and pulled her hair. She screamed for Owen. He came running, saw us, and before I could move, he grabbed me by the hair and threw me into the wall. My head cracked against the tiles and everything blurred. “You attacked a pregnant woman!” he shouted. “You don’t deserve to be a mother! That’s why your son died!” And then he carried her out, leaving me on the floor, bleeding. That’s when I knew. He never loved me. He never would. I picked up my phone with shaking hands. “Mr. Harris,” I told my lawyer, “Get the divorce papers ready. I want them signed in a week.” I ended the call with my lawyer and didn’t pause. My thumb moved on instinct and called Kleve Blackwood. My husband’s step uncle. Ten years older than me. The man Owen hated because Kleve saw things. Because Kleve never looked at me like I was disposable. It rang once. “Laura?” I closed my eyes. “You asked me once if I’d ever choose you instead of Owen, right?” “Yes.” “I’m choosing now. I’ll marry you.”