My Husband Hid A Baby, A Will, And The Pills Slowly Poisoning Me-hamyt - Chainityai

My Husband Hid A Baby, A Will, And The Pills Slowly Poisoning Me-hamyt

The coffee was supposed to be a peace offering.

Seven years into my marriage, Marcus and I had become careful around each other. We were polite in the way exhausted people are polite when hope has made too many promises. Three rounds of IVF had hollowed me out. I had cried in clinic bathrooms, bruised my stomach with injections, and let my husband hold me afterward because I believed he was grieving with me.

That December evening was our anniversary. Marcus had booked dinner at Romano’s, the restaurant where he had proposed beneath a chandelier big enough to look like weather. I bought his favorite coffee and arrived thirty minutes early at his office, wanting to surprise him. I wanted to be spontaneous again. I wanted to be the woman he married before doctors, calendars, needles, and negative tests turned love into a schedule.

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Then I saw Rachel’s red BMW in the nearly empty parking garage.

Rachel was Marcus’s younger sister. She had been my safest person in the Hamilton family, or so I thought. Eleanor, their mother, had always looked at me like a substitute teacher who had wandered into a private board meeting. Rachel had rolled her eyes at that cruelty, taken me shopping, poured wine in my kitchen, and told me I was too good for them.

I believed her.

That was the first wound. Not the last.

The hallway outside Marcus’s office was quiet enough that my heels sounded too loud. His door was not closed all the way. Rachel laughed softly inside, not her bright laugh, but a nervous little break in the air.

“The arrangement is working perfectly,” Marcus said. “She trusts you completely.”

I stopped with my hand raised to knock.

Rachel answered, “She has been nothing but good to me, Marcus. Are you sure?”

“This is for the family legacy,” he said. “Mom has been clear. We can’t let everything Dad built go to outsiders.”

Outsiders.

The word landed in my body before my mind could explain it. After seven years of marriage, after holidays and hospital appointments and Eleanor’s recent lunches where she called me dear, I was still not family to them. I was an obstacle wearing a wedding ring.

Then Marcus whispered the sentence that saved my life.

“Stella can never know about the baby or Mom’s will.”

My phone hit the marble floor. I grabbed it and ducked into a supply closet as Marcus opened the door. His shoes stopped outside. I pressed one hand over my mouth and listened to my own heartbeat pound so hard I thought it would betray me.

“Too much at stake now to get careless,” he said.

When he returned to his office, I heard fragments. Dr. Brennan had been paid. Eleanor’s condition would worsen after the holidays. Rachel was not supposed to feel guilty. The timeline had to be perfect.

I left without the coffee.

At home, I texted Marcus that food poisoning had hit suddenly and I could not make dinner. He came home with chicken soup, crackers, ginger ale, and such practiced concern that I almost doubted what I had heard. He touched my forehead. He tucked me in. He told me he loved me.

Later, from the bathroom, he whispered into his phone, “No, she doesn’t suspect anything. I’ll handle it.”

I did not sleep.

By morning I had called James Morrison, a private investigator my college roommate once used during a divorce. We met at a coffee shop across town. I slid him a check with a hand that barely felt attached to me and told him to find whatever my husband was hiding.

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