At 10:03 P.M., the Hospital Call Turned His Divorce Into a Lie -gr-xurixuri

At 10:03 P.M., the Hospital Call Turned His Divorce Into a Lie

At 10:03 p.m., Luke Mercer learned that the woman he had abandoned was pregnant, dying, and still carrying his name in silence.

Ninety-three days earlier, he had signed the divorce papers with a steady hand and destroyed Elena Ross with a colder voice.

“I don’t love you anymore,” he had told her, while every bone in his body begged him to take it back.

She had stared at him as if he had struck her, but Elena had never begged anyone to stay.

“Then I hope your empire keeps you warm,” she whispered, placing her wedding ring on his desk.

Now she lay unconscious beneath hospital lights, one hand curled protectively over the small rise of her stomach.

Luke stood beside the bed, unable to breathe normally, while the monitor counted the seconds he had stolen from them.

Dr. Avery Bennett folded her arms, studying him with the disgust reserved for men who arrived too late.

“What happened to her?” Luke asked, his voice barely louder than the machines.

The doctor’s mouth tightened. “That is exactly what I was hoping you could explain, Mr. Mercer.”

Luke turned slowly. Marco Reyes, his driver and oldest security man, shifted behind him, sensing violence before it had a shape.

“She was found collapsed outside a pharmacy in Queens,” Dr. Bennett said. “No coat. No wallet. Severe exhaustion.”

Luke’s jaw locked. “Queens? She was supposed to be in Boston with her sister.”

“She listed no emergency contact,” the doctor replied. “But she kept your number written inside her phone case.”

That shattered something in him more brutally than accusation ever could. Elena had erased him publicly, but not completely.

“Why didn’t she call me?” he asked, though he already feared the answer.

Dr. Bennett looked toward Elena’s bruised wrist. “Perhaps because someone taught her that calling you was dangerous.”

Luke stepped closer to the bed. The bruise was not random. Four finger marks circled her wrist like evidence.

Marco saw it too. His face hardened. “Boss, that wasn’t from a fall.”

Luke bent over Elena, touching the sheet near her hand, not daring to touch her skin without permission.

“Elena,” he whispered, his voice breaking despite himself. “I’m here. I swear, I’m here.”

Her eyelids trembled, but she did not wake. The baby’s heartbeat moved through the monitor, furious and alive.

Dr. Bennett lowered her voice. “She has been starving slowly. Not by accident. Not from a difficult week.”

Luke’s eyes became flat. “Are you saying someone did this to her?”

“I’m saying pregnancy does not explain bruises, fear responses, or malnutrition in a woman with your resources.”

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