Revenge Of The Forsaken Pregnant Wife

Charlotte Dean POV:

My fingers trembled so violently I could barely hold the cheap burner phone. On the cracked screen, a single contact stared back at me: Antony Dean. The name felt heavy, foreign, like a word from a language I didn't speak. It was the only thing my mother had left me, scrawled on the back of a faded photograph, a desperate breadcrumb from a life I never knew.

Taking a deep, ragged breath that did nothing to calm the frantic hammering in my chest, I pressed the call button.

The silence was broken by the slow, rhythmic ring. *Beep… beep…* Each tone was a hammer blow against my heart. I counted them. One. Two. Three. He wasn’t going to answer. Of course he wouldn't. Why would a stranger answer a blocked number? My hope, a tiny, fragile thing, began to wither. I was about to hang up, to surrender to the cold certainty of my fate, when the ringing stopped.

A click. Then, a voice. It was deep, calm, and steady, a voice weathered by time and authority. "Hello?"

My throat closed up. Air wouldn't go in or out. I opened my mouth, but only a choked little gasp escaped. Twenty years of loneliness, of being the unwanted child in a house that was never a home, of the terror of the last few months—it all surged up, stealing my voice.

The man on the other end didn't hang up. There was a pause, a moment of perceptive silence. He wasn't impatient. He didn't dismiss it as a prank call. Instead, his voice softened, losing its hard edge. "I'm here. Take your time."

That unexpected kindness was my undoing. A sob tore from my throat, and hot tears streamed down my face, silent and desperate. His patience was a gift I hadn't received in a lifetime. It gave me the strength to try. I squeezed my eyes shut, forcing the words past the lump of fear in my throat. My voice was a raw, broken whisper. "Are you… Antony Dean?"

There was a fractional hesitation on the line, then the calm was gone, replaced by a sharp, focused intensity. "I am. Who is this?"

I swallowed, the name feeling like sandpaper on my tongue. "My mother… was Catherine Miller."

The sound that came through the phone was not a word. It was a short, sharp intake of breath, a gasp of pure shock, as if he’d been physically struck. It was followed by a profound, deathly silence. The connection was still there, but the world had gone quiet.

My heart sank into a cold, dark pit. I had been wrong. This was it. The final rejection. The last door slamming in my face.

But then his voice returned, and it was utterly transformed. The calm composure was shattered, replaced by a raw, violent tremor he was trying and failing to suppress. It was a voice tectonic with rage and something that sounded terrifyingly like pain. "Where are you? Tell me where you are!"

The sheer force of his emotion stunned me. It wasn't the reaction of a stranger. This was something primal. For the first time, faced with this towering rage, I felt a flicker of safety, not fear.

I stammered out the name of the hospital, the floor, the VIP room number Eleanor had locked me in. "New York-Presbyterian. The VIP wing. Room 702."

He didn't ask why. He didn't ask what happened, who had put me here, or what was wrong. He cut through all of it with a tone of absolute, unbreakable conviction, a voice thick with two decades of regret and a sudden, fierce protectiveness. "Charlotte. My daughter. Stay right there. Don't move. Dad is coming to bring you home."

*Dad.*

The word broke me. It shattered the last of my defenses, the walls I had built around my heart for twenty years. I clutched the phone to my ear and wept, not the quiet, hidden tears of my childhood, but a great, gasping, silent storm of grief and relief. The cold back of my adoptive father, Robert, flashed in my mind, a permanent fixture as he walked away from me. My adoptive mother’s perpetually disappointed eyes.

*Home.* No one had ever promised to take me home.

On the other end of the line, I could hear him barking orders, his voice now like shards of ice. "Scramble the jet. Get the New York team to Presbyterian Hospital, NOW! I want the entire building locked down in ten minutes!"

The commands ceased, and his voice, when it came back to me, was impossibly gentle again. "I'm on my way. Don't be scared. No one can hurt you anymore."

"Okay," I whispered, my voice trembling. I ended the call, my finger slipping on the screen.

I hugged the cheap plastic phone to my chest like it was a lifeline, the only solid thing in a world that had dissolved into chaos. In the suffocating darkness of my despair, a light had just been switched on. It was blinding.

Leaning back against the stiff hospital pillows, I felt utterly drained, yet a strange calm settled over me. I could hear my own heartbeat, a frantic rhythm slowing to something steady. The only other sound was the faint whisper of wind against the window.

Then, another sound. Footsteps in the hallway. Purposeful. Coming closer.

My blood ran cold. I watched, frozen, as the silver handle of my hospital room door began to turn, slowly, silently.

Eleanor Sullivan’s voice, as cold and sterile as the room itself, sliced through the wood. "Charlotte, time's up."

The lock clicked.

The fragile peace in my chest evaporated. I jerked my head up, the hope that had just ignited in my soul colliding with the hell that was about to open its doors. I gripped the phone, my knuckles white. My father was coming.

But my monster was already here.

The door swung open. Eleanor stood there, dressed in a perfectly tailored black suit, an elegant angel of death. A contemptuous smile played on her lips.

"Let's go. Don't make this difficult."

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