At 10:03 p.m., ninety-three days after signing the divorce papers and telling Elena Ross he didn’t love her anymore, Luke Mercer received the phone call that divided his life into two separate versions.
Before.
And after.
The apartment was silent except for the faint buzz of Manhattan traffic far below the glass walls of his penthouse.
A basketball game played muted on the television.
The ice in his whiskey had already melted.
Luke had been standing in the kitchen staring at emails he hadn’t read when his phone lit up with a number he didn’t recognize.
Normally, he ignored unknown calls after ten.
That night, for reasons he couldn’t explain, he answered.
“Mr. Mercer?”
The woman’s voice carried the clipped urgency unique to hospitals.
“This is St. Catherine’s Medical Center. Your ex-wife was admitted approximately twenty minutes ago. She’s unconscious. And she appears to be about sixteen weeks pregnant.”
Luke forgot how to breathe.
The city lights outside suddenly looked colder.
Further away.
For three months, he had trained himself not to think about Elena.
Not her laugh.
Not the smell of vanilla lotion she always used after showers.
Not the way she tucked one foot under herself while reading on the couch.
Most importantly, not the expression on her face the day he destroyed their marriage with words he could never take back.
I don’t love you anymore.
The sentence had nearly killed him to say.
But he said it anyway.
Because at the time, Luke believed cruelty was the only thing that could save her.
Now the hospital was telling him she was unconscious.
Pregnant.
Alone.
His chest tightened so hard it physically hurt.
“Mr. Mercer?” the woman repeated.
“I’m coming.”
The line disconnected.
Luke stood motionless for another second.
Then the old instincts returned.
Fast.
Cold.
Efficient.
By the time Marco Reyes pulled the SUV around front, Luke already had his coat on.
Marco took one look at his face and immediately knew something was wrong.
“What happened?”
“Elena’s in the hospital.”
Marco frowned.
“Jesus.”
“She’s pregnant.”
That made Marco go quiet.
Because Marco knew the timeline.
He knew exactly how long Luke had been divorced.
Neither man spoke during the drive downtown.
Rain streaked across the windshield while New York glowed wet and silver around them.
Luke stared out the passenger window, replaying the last real conversation he’d had with Elena.
She had stood in their townhouse kitchen wearing one of his old college sweatshirts.
Crying.
Begging him to explain what had changed.
“What did I do wrong?” she had whispered.
Nothing.
She had done absolutely nothing wrong.
But Luke couldn’t tell her the truth.
Couldn’t tell her federal investigators were circling Mercer Holdings.
Couldn’t tell her certain financial records tied his family to men dangerous enough to make witnesses disappear.
Couldn’t tell her his younger brother Nathan had begged him to cut Elena loose before things exploded.
“You need to protect her,” Nathan had insisted.
“She becomes leverage if this gets ugly.”
Luke believed him.
That was the mistake that poisoned everything.
The SUV pulled under the emergency entrance awning.
Luke barely waited for the car to stop before stepping out.
St. Catherine’s smelled like bleach, stale coffee, and flowers dying too slowly in plastic vases.
The fluorescent lights were harsh enough to make everyone look exhausted.
Marco stayed half a step behind him as they crossed the emergency floor.
Old habits remained hardwired into both men.
Especially Luke.
Years of handling brutal negotiations, dangerous clients, and ugly business disputes had left permanent marks on him.
At the ICU desk, a nurse looked up.
“I’m here for Elena Ross.”
“Are you family?”
Luke hesitated.
The correct answer was no.
The legal answer was no.
But the truth felt different.
“I’m her husband.”
The nurse glanced at the chart.
“It says ex-husband.”
Luke stared at her steadily.
“Room number.”
The woman swallowed.
“Three forty-seven.”
The hallway felt too bright.
Too quiet.
Luke pushed the door open.
And everything inside him stopped.
Elena looked painfully thin lying in the hospital bed.
Like life itself had been draining out of her slowly for months.
An IV line entered each arm.
Bruises darkened one wrist.
Her cheekbones stood out sharply against pale skin.
But even unconscious, one hand rested protectively over the small curve of her stomach.
Protecting the baby.
His child.
Luke felt something violent twist through his chest.
Three months earlier, Elena had walked out of their home furious but strong.
Now she looked breakable.
Fragile enough to disappear under the white hospital sheets.
Marco quietly stepped back toward the hallway, giving Luke space.
For several seconds, Luke simply stared.
The machines beeped steadily around her.
Then the door opened again.
“Mr. Mercer?”
A doctor entered holding a chart.
Mid-fifties.
Gray at the temples.
No patience for drama in her expression.
“Yes.”
“I’m Dr. Avery Bennett.”
She glanced toward Elena’s monitor.
“Your ex-wife is suffering from severe dehydration, iron-deficiency anemia, malnutrition, and exhaustion. She’s had very limited prenatal care.”
Luke’s stomach dropped.
“The baby?”
“The heartbeat is still strong.”
Still.
Not healthy.
Not stable.
Still.
“But your ex-wife is in dangerous condition,” Dr. Bennett continued.
Luke nodded once.
Every sentence hit him like metal.
“What happened to her?”
The doctor hesitated.
That hesitation frightened him more than the words.
“She mentioned significant emotional stress before she lost consciousness,” Dr. Bennett said carefully. “There are also indications someone may have interfered with her access to finances and insurance coverage.”
Luke looked up slowly.
“What?”
Dr. Bennett opened the chart.
“According to intake records, her insurance policy was terminated several weeks ago. She delayed treatment because she believed she couldn’t afford medical care.”
Marco’s eyes shifted immediately toward Luke.
Because both men understood something instantly.
Only a handful of people had access to Mercer family financial systems.
Nathan Mercer was one of them.
Luke’s younger brother had practically handled the divorce himself.
Nathan had found the lawyers.
Nathan had insisted on separating Elena financially as quickly as possible.
Nathan had repeatedly assured Luke everything would be handled cleanly.
And Luke had trusted him.
Dr. Bennett continued quietly.
“She also told intake staff she’d been staying in temporary housing.”
Luke frowned.
“What kind of temporary housing?”
The doctor’s face tightened.
“A motel in Queens.”
The room went silent.
Luke actually thought he misheard her.
“Elena was living in a motel?”
“For approximately six weeks.”
Marco muttered a curse under his breath.
Luke stared at Elena in disbelief.
His wife.
The woman who once organized charity galas for hospitals.
The woman who baked cookies for neighborhood kids every Christmas.
The woman who donated winter coats anonymously because she hated attention.
Living in a motel.
Pregnant.
Alone.
And he never knew.
A terrible realization began spreading through him slowly.
Like ice water.
Every ignored phone call.
Every unanswered message.
Every voicemail he deleted without listening.
He had convinced himself distance kept her safe.
But what if distance had only made her vulnerable?
Luke stepped closer to the bed.
Elena’s hand looked so small against the blanket.
Carefully, he took it.
Cold.
Too cold.
Marco watched his boss carefully from near the doorway.
Because he recognized the dangerous stillness settling over Luke.
The kind that usually appeared moments before something irreversible happened.
Dr. Bennett lowered her voice.
“There’s something else.”
Luke looked up.
“Your ex-wife became extremely distressed when hospital staff asked about emergency contacts. She repeatedly said someone in your family wanted to take the baby away from her.”
Luke’s eyes hardened instantly.
“What exactly did she say?”
The doctor glanced at her notes.
“She kept repeating, ‘Nathan said nobody would believe me.’”
The room became very quiet.
Luke released Elena’s hand slowly.
Then he reached into his coat pocket and pulled out his phone.
One unread text message sat at the top of his screen.
From Nathan.
Two hours old.
Call me when you can. Situation handled.
Luke stared at those three words.
Situation handled.
Suddenly he couldn’t feel his heartbeat anymore.
Marco stepped closer.
“Boss…”
Luke pressed the call button.
The line rang once.
Twice.
Then Nathan answered with a nervous laugh.
“Luke… why are you calling me from the hospital?”