Elouise Herring POV:
The nurse' s words hung in the air, mocking me. "You' re pregnant. Or, you were." My world, already shattered, splintered into a million more pieces. A child. Our child. A tiny life, conceived in love, now lost in the wreckage of his betrayal. The pain in my abdomen intensified, a searing reminder of what Axel had taken from me, what he had done.
I stared at the sterile white ceiling, a dark, horrifying realization dawning. This child, this innocent life, had been a secret. A fragile hope I hadn't dared to voice, not in the escalating chaos of our marriage. And now, it was gone. Just like everything else.
"I... I want it over," I choked out, the words raw and painful. "I want to terminate the pregnancy."
The nurse blinked, her eyes wide with surprise. "Elouise, are you sure? We can still..."
"I'm sure," I cut her off, my voice trembling with a chilling resolve. There was no future for this child, not with a man like Axel. Not with the life he had built around me. I would not bring a child into this toxic nightmare. This was not a life. This was an ending.
Before she could respond, the door burst open. Axel. He stormed in, his eyes blazing, a fury I had rarely seen directed at me. Bryn was right behind him, her face a mask of feigned concern, a subtle hint of triumph in her eyes.
"Elouise! What is this I hear?" Axel demanded, his voice a furious roar. "How could you be so reckless? Bryn told me you pushed her, that you caused the chandelier to fall! My God, Elouise, what kind of monster are you?"
My breath hitched. Push her? Cause the chandelier to fall? The sheer audacity of her lie, the blind fury in his eyes, rendered me speechless. My body, already weak, felt a fresh wave of nausea. The pain in my abdomen pulsed, a sickening rhythm.
"I didn't push her," I whispered, my voice barely audible. "I was nowhere near her."
Axel scoffed, dismissing my words with a wave of his hand. "Don't lie, Elouise. Bryn saw you. Everyone saw you. You were jealous, weren't you? Jealous of her success, jealous of our closeness!" He stepped closer, his face contorted with rage. "You tried to hurt her! My God, you could have killed her!"
He grabbed my arm, his fingers digging into my fresh wound, sending a jolt of pain through me. "Get up. We're leaving. You're not staying here another minute, fabricating lies about 'pregnancy' to gain sympathy."
"Axel, stop!" I cried out, trying to pull away, the pain in my arm and abdomen searing. "You're hurting me! And I'm not lying about..."
"Silence!" he roared, cutting me off. "I've heard enough of your pathetic excuses. You're coming home with me. Now." He dragged me out of the bed, my feet barely touching the ground. He didn't wait for a discharge order, didn't care about the IV still in my arm. He just pulled.
I stumbled, my body screaming in protest. My vision swam. The pain in my abdomen intensified, a sharp, twisting agony. Fear, cold and absolute, gripped me. I knew, with a terrifying certainty, that something was terribly wrong.
He shoved me into his car, Bryn already waiting in the passenger seat, a smug smile on her face. The ride was a blur of throbbing pain and silent terror. Axel drove like a maniac, his anger a palpable force in the confined space.
He didn't take me home. He drove to an isolated, abandoned warehouse, far from the city lights. An old, derelict building, its windows shattered, its walls crumbling. The cold, damp air chilled me to the bone.
"This is where you'll learn your lesson, Elouise," he growled, dragging me inside. The echo of his voice was amplified in the cavernous space. "No more games. No more lies."
He pushed me against a cold, grimy wall, his hands gripping my shoulders, shaking me. "Tell me you're sorry, Elouise. Tell me you regret trying to hurt Bryn. Tell me you know your place!"
My body was wracked with pain, a dull ache throbbing in my head, a sharp, twisting agony in my abdomen. My vision swam again. I could feel a warm wetness between my legs.
"I... I can't," I gasped, the words barely a whisper. "I'm... I'm bleeding, Axel. Please."
His eyes, still blazing with fury, flickered down. He saw the dark stain spreading on my hospital gown. For a split second, a flicker of something human crossed his face-panic, perhaps, or a fleeting fear.
"Bleeding?" he muttered, his voice uncertain. "What... what are you talking about?"
"I'm pregnant," I choked out, the words ripped from my throat by a fresh wave of pain. "I'm pregnant, Axel. And I think I'm losing the baby."
His eyes widened, the rage slowly draining from his face, replaced by a dawning horror. He released me, taking a step back. "Pregnant? No... no, you're lying. You're trying to manipulate me."
Bryn, who had silently followed us, stepped forward, her face a mask of righteous indignation. "She's lying, Axel! She told the nurse she wanted to terminate it! She's just trying to get your attention, to make you feel guilty!"
Axel's gaze snapped to Bryn, then back to me, uncertainty warring with his ingrained belief in her innocence. "Is that true, Elouise? Did you say you wanted to terminate?"
My vision blurred again, the pain overwhelming. I could only shake my head, tears streaming down my face. The warm wetness was now a torrent.
"See, Axel? She's just trying to play you!" Bryn' s voice was triumphant. "It's a trick! Don't fall for it!"
Axel hesitated, his eyes darting between my bleeding, crumpled form and Bryn's confident, reassuring smile. His face hardened. He chose.
"She's right," he said, his voice flat, devoid of emotion. "You disgust me, Elouise. Get up. We're leaving. And you will stop this pathetic charade." He grabbed Bryn's hand, pulling her toward the exit.
"No," I whispered, the word a desperate plea. "Axel, please. Our baby."
But he didn't stop. He dragged Bryn out, his back to me, the heavy warehouse door slamming shut, plunging me into absolute darkness and deafening silence. The cold, wet concrete floor was stained with my blood, with the life that was slipping away.
I was alone. Utterly, tragically alone. The pain, physical and emotional, consumed me. There was no rescue. No hope. Just the agonizing scream of a life unlived, a future stolen. In that moment, I let go. Let go of the love, the anger, the hope. Let go of everything. This was the end. My end.





