He Chose His Mistress. Then the Doctor’s Call Destroyed Everything-mdue - Chainityai

He Chose His Mistress. Then the Doctor’s Call Destroyed Everything-mdue

The last thing Audrey Hale heard before her head struck the marble stairs was her mother-in-law saying, “Now maybe you’ll learn your place.”

It was not shouted.

That was what made it worse.

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Victoria Hale said it with the calm confidence of a woman who had spent years believing the house, the money, and even the people inside it belonged to her.

The foyer smelled of lemon polish and white lilies.

The chandelier above the staircase threw warm light across the marble, making everything look expensive and clean and impossible to accuse.

Audrey remembered one hand reaching for the banister.

She remembered the hard shove between her shoulder blades.

She remembered a flash of Victoria’s cream cardigan at the top of the stairs.

Then gravity took the rest.

Her body struck one step, then another, then another.

The sound was not like the movies.

It was dull and fast and terribly ordinary.

Somewhere in the house, the grandfather clock kept ticking.

Audrey had not yet told anyone she was pregnant.

She had been saving it for the right moment.

Eight weeks.

Small enough to still feel secret.

Large enough that she had already started touching her stomach when no one was looking.

She woke under white hospital lights with a bandage pulling at her eyebrow and a pain so deep it felt less like an injury than a hollowed place inside her.

A monitor beeped beside the bed.

Tape tugged at her IV.

Her lips were dry, and the room smelled like disinfectant, plastic tubing, and coffee left too long in a paper cup.

For a few seconds, she did not know where she was.

Then the memories came back in fragments.

The stairs.

The shove.

Victoria’s voice.

Dr. Alexander Reed stood near the foot of the bed with her chart held against his chest.

He was not a dramatic man.

Audrey had always liked that about him.

He said bad things plainly because plainness was sometimes the last mercy a person could give.

“Audrey,” he said, “I’m sorry.”

Her hand moved to her stomach.

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