
My Baby, My Strength, Our Future
The mangled car teetered on the cliff's edge, my leg crushed, gasoline fumes thick in the air. My husband, Holden, stood safe on the highway, directing the rescue – but not for me. He was saving her, the woman in the passenger seat, leaving me and our unborn child to the ocean below.
I woke trapped in the crushed Maybach, leg pinned. The cliff loomed; the driver's seat was empty.
Holden, safe outside, directed paramedics past me to Giana, his "most valuable asset," ordering her rescue first.
I watched him comfort Giana, oblivious, as the car slid. My baby barely viable. Holden offered a black card for silence; Giana gloated.
Ten years of devotion, a cruel lie. Rage fueled me: how could he abandon his wife and child?
I swore a venomous oath: never again an accessory. I flicked his card away, shielded my pregnancy, and promised my baby escape.
Chapters
Share
Chapter 2
Elise POV:
The steady, rhythmic beeping of a heart monitor sliced through the heavy, suffocating darkness, dragging me back to consciousness. I forced my heavy eyelids open, my vision blurry and unfocused.
The harsh, sterile scent of hospital antiseptic flooded my nostrils. I blinked against the bright fluorescent lights, realizing I was lying on a crisp, unfamiliar white bed in a private room.
A dull, tearing agony radiated from my ribs with every shallow breath I took. I looked down and saw my right leg encased in a thick, heavy plaster cast, elevated high above the mattress in a traction sling.
I sucked in a sharp, ragged breath. The memory of the cliffside, the freezing rain, and the sickening lurch of the Maybach sliding backward slammed into my brain with the force of a physical blow.
Panic crashed over me like a tidal wave. Ignoring the excruciating fire in my fractured ribs, I blindly slammed both hands down onto my stomach. Ever since the orphanage fire took my parents, I had clung to the life growing inside me as my only anchor, my only true blood tie in this world.
My stomach felt terrifyingly flat beneath the thin hospital gown. I couldn't feel any flutter, any warmth. My eyes instantly burned, a hot tear slipping down my temple.
The heavy wooden door to the VIP suite pushed open. A middle-aged man in a crisp white coat, carrying a digital tablet, walked in. His badge read Dr. Evans.
He paused when he saw my open eyes, then quickly stepped to the side of the bed, pulling a small penlight from his pocket to check my pupillary response.
I didn't let him. I threw my hand out, my fingers clamping down on his white sleeve like a vice, my nails digging hard into his forearm.
"My baby," I rasped, my voice a broken, gravelly whisper. Tears pooled in my eyes, threatening to spill over. "Tell me."
Dr. Evans froze. He lowered the penlight, his expression tightening with professional sympathy. He let out a long, heavy sigh and tapped the screen of his tablet.
The air in the room seemed to solidify into concrete. I squeezed my eyes shut, bracing my shattered heart for the absolute worst sentence of my life.
"You are incredibly lucky, Mrs. Howard," Dr. Evans said softly. "The reinforced structure of the backseat and the side-curtain airbags absorbed the brunt of the impact. By some absolute miracle, the fetus is still viable."
My eyes snapped open. A fresh wave of tears broke free, tracing hot paths down my pale cheeks as my grip on his sleeve went completely slack. I fell back against the pillows, utterly drained of energy.
"However," Dr. Evans continued, his tone shifting to a stern, clinical warning. "You are exhibiting severe signs of a threatened miscarriage. Your body has endured massive trauma."
He leaned closer, his eyes serious. "For the next few months, you require absolute bed rest. No stress, no physical exertion, and absolutely no emotional stimulation. Do you understand?"
I dragged a deep, shuddering breath into my aching lungs. I reached up and wiped the tears from my face. When I looked back at him, the vulnerable panic in my eyes had frozen over into cold, hard clarity.
"Who brought me here?" I asked, my voice steadying. "Who signed my admission papers?"
"The LAFD rescue helicopter airlifted you here," Dr. Evans replied smoothly. "Your husband is currently downstairs in the minor injuries ward, accompanying another lady who suffered a mild concussion."
The words hit my chest like a hollow thud. My heart sank to the very bottom of a frozen lake. The last, pathetic, lingering illusion I had about Holden Howard turned to dust in the sterile hospital air.
Dr. Evans pulled a sleek smartphone from his pocket. "Should I call Mr. Howard now? I'm sure he will be thrilled to hear you are awake and that the pregnancy is secure."
I shot up from the pillows, ignoring the scream of my ribs. I fixed Dr. Evans with a stare so icy it could have frozen mercury. "No."
The doctor blinked, his hand hovering over the screen in confusion. "Mrs. Howard, as your husband, he has a legal and moral right to know about your medical—"
"HIPAA," I cut him off, a bitter, mocking sneer twisting my lips. Years of grinding as a paralegal in a cutthroat Wall Street law firm before my marriage hadn't completely faded from my brain. I knew exactly how to wield the law as a shield.
I leaned forward, my voice dropping to a dangerous, lethal whisper. "Under the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, my medical records are strictly confidential. If you breathe a single syllable about my pregnancy to Holden Howard, I will personally see to it that this hospital is sued into the ground and your medical license is shredded."
Dr. Evans swallowed hard, visibly taken aback by the sudden, venomous aura radiating from the battered woman in the bed. He slowly slid the phone back into his pocket.
Without another word of protest, he picked up his tablet. I watched his fingers move across the screen, navigating to the electronic medical records system and placing a strict access lock on my obstetrics file.
Only when the little padlock icon turned red on the screen did the rigid tension in my shoulders finally begin to uncoil.
I slid my hand under the blanket, resting my palm gently against my lower abdomen. I made a silent, ironclad promise to the tiny life inside me: I was going to get us out of this gilded cage.
Suddenly, the sharp, authoritative clack of expensive leather dress shoes echoed from the hallway outside, moving rapidly toward my door.
"Not a single word to him, Doctor."
You may also like

8.6
In my past life, the Cerberus strain leaked, turning the world into a blood-soaked hell of rotting flesh and mutated monsters.
I thought my boyfriend Declan and my best friend Hailee would have my back as we fled the quarantine zone.
Instead, when the surging crowd of the infected cornered us, they didn't hesitate.
They shoved me backward into the horde just to buy themselves three seconds to run.
As I fell into the mud, I saw them fleeing without a single backward glance.
"She's dead weight anyway!" Hailee screamed.
"Just keep running, she'll distract them!" Declan yelled back.
I was torn apart, feeling the agonizing tear of rotting teeth sinking into my neck and the hot spray of my own blood.
Before the apocalypse, my greedy uncle had locked away my ten-million-dollar trust fund, leaving me with nothing but a fake boyfriend who only wanted me for my money.
Until my last breath, I couldn't understand how the people I loved most could trade my life for a head start.
Why did I blindly trust them? Why didn't I see through their perfectly choreographed lies?
Opening my eyes again, the stench of decaying flesh vanished, replaced by the sterile smell of my college dorm room.
Hailee and Declan were standing over my bed, faking tears of concern over my meningitis fever.
I was back exactly seven days before the world ended, and my spatial vault ability had come back with me.
This time, I'm extorting my uncle for every cent, hoarding the city's supplies, and leaving them all to rot.

8.3
Betrayed at the altar. Replaced by her own sister.
On what should have been the happiest day of her life, Amara loses everything-her fiancé, her dignity, and her future.
But that same night, a dangerous man steps out of the shadows with an offer she can't refuse.
Marriage. Power. Revenge.
Now bound to a ruthless CEO, Amara is ready to destroy everyone who betrayed her.
There's just one problem...
Her new husband knows more about her past than he should.
And the closer she gets to revenge-
the more she realizes she may have married the man who ruined her in the first place.

9.2
She loved him until she lost herself.
Now, behind locked doors and shattered glass, she must learn to breathe again.
When she first met Lloyd, he was magnetic and intoxicating. The kind of man who turned every head when he entered a room, who spoke in promises sweet enough to taste. With him, she felt chosen, cherished, and safe.
But safety was an illusion, and love became a weapon.
And slowly, piece by piece, he dismantled her until nothing of the woman she once was remained.
Now institutionalized after a breakdown, she begins to piece together the brutal truth of what really happened in the shadows of their love story. Memories sting like open wounds: the manipulation disguised as tenderness, the apologies that blurred into threats, the desperate hope that tomorrow he'd be the man she fell for again.
Yet beneath the grief and the shame, a quiet rebellion stirs, a vow to reclaim her voice, her freedom, and her life. Because this is not just a story of how she fell apart. It is a story of how she rises.
Haunting, raw, and achingly intimate, Boys like him peels back the glittering mask of a toxic love affair to reveal the kind of darkness that hides in plain sight, and the unbreakable strength it takes to escape it.

9.7
Sienna woke up in a hospital room, her body screaming from a severe car accident. Through the glass, a man paced with violent rage, a dark shadow she felt absolutely nothing for.
Her friend Julia burst in, eyes bloodshot, dropping a bomb: "He didn't even try to help you." Dante, Sienna's fiancé, had protected another woman, Valeria, in the crash, leaving Sienna to burn alive.
Her past life unspooled – seven years sacrificed, an architecture degree abandoned, all to serve Dante. Her phone was a shrine to him: his photos, his "taboos," and even "Valeria's preferences," with no trace of Sienna herself.
But amnesia brought no heartbreak, only a cold, calculating fury. She felt disgust for the "idiot" she'd been, stripped of dignity. The memory loss was a release, a blank slate.
With chilling resolve, Sienna deleted every trace of Dante. Ripping out her IV, she declared, "The wedding proceeds." Not for love, but as a weapon: "I need to take back everything that belongs to me before I disappear."

8.7
I was dying in a cold hospital bed, listening to the monitor count down my final seconds.
As a ghost, I watched my own funeral. My popular friends and wealthy family soon moved on, but one person stayed.
Cas Riley. The invisible outcast from the back of my history class.
He brought a white rose to my grave every single day, withering away until he collapsed on the frozen ground, dying of a broken heart for a girl who barely knew his name.
Opening my eyes again, the hospital smell was gone. I was reborn back in my high school classroom.
I immediately tracked him down, only to witness the brutal hell he was trapped in.
He was humiliated by a cruel foreman for pennies, violently slapped by his uncle over his sick mother's medical money, and forced into bloody street fights.
He was starving, covered in bruises, and completely alone.
When I tried to buy him medicine and step into his life to protect him, he violently pushed me away in the pouring rain.
"Stay out of my life! To protect you, I have to fight, and when I fight, I lose everything!"
He wasn't rejecting me out of hate. He was terrified that his dark, violent reality would drag me down with him.
Standing soaked in the rain, my resolve hardened like steel.
Gentle kindness wasn't going to save him from this hell.
To protect the boy who died for me, I had to become ruthless enough to tear down his entire rotten world and build him a new one.

8.1
I died on an apocalyptic battlefield, only to wake up pinned down by a lead-lined blanket of my own fat.
A violent download of memories hit me. I had transmigrated into the body of an exiled, sadistic noblewoman who was three million coins in debt.
The original owner was an absolute monster. She had purchased beastman guards just to torture them for fun. In the corner of the filthy room, a golden retriever boy cowered, his back shredded by her barbed whip. In the basement, a snake guard was frozen and scarred from constant electro-shocks. When the white tiger guard returned from hard labor, he looked at me with pure, murderous hatred, ready to tear me apart to protect the others. Even the local elites kicked down my door to mock my pathetic life and try to steal my men.
I was a decorated commander who bled for humanity. Why was I trapped in this ruined vessel, bearing the sins of a degenerate abuser?
It was all a setup by her sweet-faced cousin, Debera, who stole her royal life and sent her to this outer-rim hellhole to rot.
I gritted my teeth and plunged a military-grade gene repair serum into my arm, letting the agony burn away the black filth and weakness.
"The crazy woman you knew before is dead."
I tossed a medical kit to the trembling guards, loaded my old electromagnetic pistol, and headed for the deadly Demon Hunting Zone to start my revenge.