Chapter 6

I didn' t look back. The moment that hospital door clicked shut behind me, the last vestige of the woman I was with Emmett died. Jeremiah was immediately alerted. My lawyer-brother, with his precise mind and unwavering loyalty, had already filed the real divorce papers with the court. The flimsy document Emmett had tricked me into signing was meaningless. I was free, financially secure for Alexis, and ready to fight.

My priority was Alexis. I rushed to her room, my heart pounding with a mixture of dread and fierce protectiveness. The air outside felt sharp and cold against my skin, a stark contrast to the oppressive heat of my rage.

As I approached Alexis's room, I heard it. A low, guttural growl, then a muffled cry. My blood ran cold. I flung the door open.

Gordon. Elisa' s son. The bully. He was standing over Alexis's bed, his sneering face close to hers, his hand gripping her limp arm. Her monitor was beeping erratically. He was shaking her.

"Wake up, you little faker!" he hissed, his face twisted in a childish but chilling malice. "You think you can get away with this? My mom almost lost her baby because of your crazy mother!"

A red haze descended. All the suppressed fear, all the carefully controlled anger, erupted. "Get away from her!" I screamed, lunging forward. I shoved him with all my might, sending him stumbling back.

He yelped, startled. "Hey! What the hell, you psycho?!" He rubbed his arm, glaring at me. "I'll tell my mom! I'll tell Emmett!"

"Tell them what?" My voice was a low snarl, my eyes fixed on his terrified face. "Tell them you were trying to hurt her again? Tell them you finally admit everything?" My gaze swept the room, landing on a heavy ceramic vase filled with wilting flowers. My hand reached for it, gripped the cold porcelain.

Gordon' s eyes widened, a flicker of genuine fear crossing his face as he saw the vase. He backed away, stumbling over his own feet, a whimper escaping his lips. "You're crazy! Get away from me!"

Just then, Emmett and Elisa burst into the room, alerted by the commotion. Elisa, pale and fragile, clung to Emmett's arm.

"Gordon! What happened?!" Elisa cried, her eyes darting between her son and me, still clutching the vase.

Gordon, ever the manipulator, immediately burst into tears, pointing a trembling finger at me. "Mom! She attacked me! She tried to hit me with that vase! She's trying to hurt Alexis too! She's crazy!"

"That's a lie!" I screamed, my voice cracking. "He was shaking Alexis! He was trying to hurt her!"

Elisa, her face a mask of saccharine concern, turned to Emmett. "Oh, Emmett, darling, look at her. She's completely unhinged. She's lashing out because of the miscarriage. She blames us." She then turned her tear-filled eyes to me. "Adelia, I understand you're heartbroken, but this isn't the way. You can't just attack my son."

"Your son pushed Alexis!" I yelled, my voice raw with desperation. "He admitted it just now! He said she deserved it!"

Emmett' s eyes, cold and hard, landed on me. He didn't even bother to hide the contempt. "Enough, Adelia. You're making a scene. You're hysterical." He didn't question Gordon, didn't look at Alexis's still form. He just saw me, the problem.

Before I could say another word, his fist connected with my jaw. A blinding flash of white light, an explosion of pain, and I crumpled to the floor, my head hitting the tile with a sickening crack. My ears rang, my vision swam, and the metallic taste of blood filled my mouth. He had never hit me before. Not once. The shock was as profound as the pain.

"You pathetic, disgusting woman!" Emmett snarled, standing over me, his face contorted in a mask of pure rage. "You caused Elisa to lose our child, and now you attack her son? You are a menace! A danger to everyone around you!"

Elisa, stepping forward, placed a gentle hand on Emmett's arm, her voice a soft, venomous purr. "Emmett, darling, don't. She's not worth it. She's just... in so much pain. We need to be the bigger people." She glanced down at me, a triumphant smirk flashing in her eyes. It was gone in an instant, replaced by feigned pity. "Oh, Adelia, look at you. So lost. So broken. I almost feel sorry for you."

My head swam, but I looked up at Emmett, truly seeing him. The mask had finally fallen. There was no compassion, no humanity, no love left in his eyes for me. Only contempt and a chilling indifference. He was a monster, far worse than I had ever imagined.

My gaze drifted to Alexis, still and silent on the bed, her chest rising and falling imperceptibly. My world. My reason for living. A jolt of fierce, protective energy shot through me. I would not let him take her.

Her heart rate monitor blared, a sudden, frantic series of beeps shattering the tension. Alexis's breathing became shallow, ragged.

Emmett, startled by the sudden alarm, his face still flushed with anger, turned to Alexis. He walked slowly, deliberately, towards her bed. His eyes were cold, calculating.

A raw, primal fear gripped me. "Emmett! What are you doing?!" I cried, scrambling to my feet despite the throbbing pain. "Stay away from her!"

He ignored me, his hand reaching for the tangled tubes connected to Alexis. "This... this is costing too much," he muttered, his voice cold. "And she's causing too much trouble." His fingers hovered over her oxygen tube, the one keeping her breathing steady, keeping her alive.

"No! Emmett, no!" I shrieked, my voice tearing. I lunged forward, but my legs buckled. I fell to my knees, helpless, my body screaming in protest. "Please! Don't! She's your daughter! Your flesh and blood!"

He turned, his eyes piercing me with a chilling, dead gaze. "My daughter?" he scoffed, a cruel smirk twisting his lips. "She's a problem, Adelia. A constant, expensive problem. A reminder of your failure. And quite frankly, I'm not entirely convinced she even is my blood."

The words shattered the last fragile pieces of my heart. My own husband, questioning Alexis's parentage, just to justify his cruelty.

Alexis's breathing grew more labored, the monitor's alarm shrieking louder, a desperate cry for help. Her small body, so fragile, convulsed slightly.

I looked at Emmett, at his cold, unfeeling face, at Elisa, watching with a sickening, triumphant smirk. There was no appealing to their humanity. There was only one way.

"Please!" I sobbed, my voice broken, desperate. I crawled towards Emmett, dragging my aching body across the cold floor. "Please, I'll do anything! Anything you want! I'll never speak of it again! I'll disappear! Just... just don't hurt Alexis! Please, Emmett! I beg you!" I reached for his feet, grabbing his expensive shoes, my head bowed in total submission, my tears soaking his polished leather. The raw pain in my shoulder from my dislocated arm screamed at me, but I ignored it. I heard the fabric of my dress tear as my weight pulled on it.

"I'm sorry! I'm so, so sorry! I apologize for everything! Please, just let her live! She's just a child!" My voice was a desperate, guttural plea, stripped of all pride, all dignity. "Please!"

Chapter 7

My forehead pressed against the cold, polished leather of Emmett’s shoe. I was sobbing, a broken thing, begging the man who had vowed to cherish me to spare the life of our child. The humiliation was absolute, a bitter acid burning through my veins.

"Pathetic," Emmett sneered, kicking his foot slightly to dislodge my grip. "Look at you. The great 'Wish.' Just a desperate, groveling mess."

He turned back to the machines, his hand hovering over the dials again. "I accept your terms, Adelia. But remember this image. Remember your place. If you ever s

tep out of line, if you ever breathe a word of defiance, this machine turns off. Permanently."

He didn't pull the plug. He adjusted a setting, silencing the frantic alarm but leaving the flow of oxygen precariously low. It was a warning shot. A demonstration of god-like power over my world.

"Now, get out," he barked. "I need to comfort Elisa. She’s had a traumatic day."

I scrambled backward, clutching my throbbing, dislocated shoulder. I didn't look at Elisa, whose face was a mask of smug satisfaction, nor at Gordon, who was smi

rking behind his mother’s skirt. I looked only at Alexis, silently promising her that this was the last time she would be alone with these monsters.

I limped into the hallway, collapsing onto a plastic chair, my vision blurring. I needed a phone. I needed Jeremiah. My hands, slick with sweat and blood, fumbled in my pocket.

"Jeremiah," I whispered the moment he answered, my voice a jagged shard. "Now. It has to be now."

"I'm already in the elevator, Adelia," his voice was calm, steel-infused. "Security is with me. And the paramedics."

The elevator doors at the end of the corridor dinged softly. Jeremiah stepped out, flanked by two burly men in dark suits and a team of private EMTs pushing a gurney. He didn't look like the playful brother I grew up with; he looked like a predator. He strode toward me, his eyes taking in my bruised jaw, my hanging arm, the blood on my dress. His jaw tightened, a muscle feathering in his cheek.

"Did he do this?" Jeremiah asked, his voice terrifyingly quiet.

"He hit me," I managed. "And... he threatened the life support. He touched the machines, Jeremiah."

Jeremiah nodded once to the security guards. "Secure the room. No one enters or leaves until the transport is complete. If Mr. Hawkins resists, detain him for assault."

We moved into the room like a tactical unit. Emmett and Elisa were standing by the window, laughing softly. When the door burst open, Emmett spun around, his f

ace flushing with indignation.

"Who the hell are you?" Emmett demanded, stepping forward. "This is a private room! Get out!"

Jeremiah ignored him, signaling the EMTs to move toward Alexis. "We are transferring the patient, Alexis Murray, to a private facility under the care of her legal guardian."

"I am her legal guardian!" Emmett roared, moving to block the bed. "And I say she stays right here!"

Jeremiah stepped between Emmett and the bed. He was shorter than Emmett but broader, radiating a dangerous, contained energy. He held up a document. "Actually, as of forty minutes ago, when the emergency protective order was granted by Judge Halloway—based on evidence of medical negligence and physical threats—you are not to come within five hundred feet of Alexis Murray or Adelia Murray."

Emmett laughed, a harsh, incredulous sound. "A protective order? On what grounds? The ravings of a hysterical woman?"

"On the grounds of the video evidence," Jeremiah said smoothly.

Emmett froze. "What video?"

Jeremiah pointed to the corner of the room, to a small, blinking red light on a stuffed bear sitting on the shelf—a gift I had brought weeks ago. A nanny cam. "I inst

alled it last week, Emmett. The cloud upload is quite fast. We have you shaking her. We have you threatening to cut her oxygen. We have Gordon admitting to the assault. And we have you striking my sister."

The color drained from Emmett’s face so fast he looked like a corpse. Elisa let out a strangled gasp, pulling Gordon behind her.

"You... you can't..." Emmett stammered.

"I can, and I did," Jeremiah said. "The police are on their way to take a statement regarding the domestic assault. But right now, my priority is getting my family away from you filth."

The EMTs were efficient. In seconds, Alexis was transferred to the transport gurney, her monitors switching to portable battery packs. I walked beside her, my good hand resting on her ankle.

As we reached the door, Emmett found his voice again, desperate and venomous. "You think this is over, Adelia? You signed those papers! You signed the NDA! You signed the divorce agreement! I own everything! The house, the art, the money! You'll be destitute! You won't be able to afford a band-aid, let alone a private facility!"

I stopped. The pain in my shoulder was screaming, but a cold, hard strength flooded my spine. I turned slowly.

"I signed the papers you gave me, Emmett," I said, my voice dead calm. "But you were so eager to get back to your mistress, so eager to humiliate me, you didn't check which papers you signed."

Emmett frowned, confusion warring with his arrogance. "What are you talking about?"

"Jeremiah is a very good lawyer," I said. "And you are a very careless man."

I didn't wait for his reaction. I turned and walked out, leaving him in the silence of the empty room, the echo of his own destruction hovering in the air.

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