Daughters are useless anyway.
The wheels of Xavier’s luxury SUV screeched as he threw the car into a reckless turn, barreling down the tree-lined driveway to Dr. Martin’s secluded home. Gravel spewed out behind him, the engine’s roar shattering the morning’s calm. He skidded to a halt, and before the dust could even settle, he saw Dr. Martin, a silhouette against the porch light, his face etched with urgency.
“Bring her inside,” Dr. Martin barked, gesturing sharply towards the door. “It’s too late for the hospital. She’s lost too much blood.”
Xavier’s heart hammered as he carried Cathleen, her breaths shallow and ragged, her body limp in his arms. Inside, the smell of antiseptics hit him like a physical blow. He followed Dr. Martin to a room that seemed far too sterile and cold for anything warm or living.
“Wait outside,” Dr. Martin ordered, but Xavier’s response was immediate and fierce, his voice a growl of desperation.
“No, I’m staying with my wife.”
Dr. Martin’s eyes widened, taken aback by the intensity in Xavier’s gaze-a fire where there had once been ice. Last winter, when Cathleen had collapsed from exhaustion, Xavier had been indifferent, his concern frostbitten. Now, as if on cue, his dark past thawed into fear-soaked determination.
“Fine.” Dr. Martin relented with a reluctant nod, allowing Xavier to breach the threshold of the impromptu operating room.
“Xavier,” Dr. Martin began, his hands trembling slightly as they prepared instruments that gleamed too sharply under the overhead lights, “there is a high consumption of Diclofenac in her system-and the baby…” His voice trailed off, weighed down by what he left unsaid.
“Anything can happen,” he added, rubbing his temples with soiled fingers.
“What the fuck do you mean?” Xavier snapped, his words slicing through the thick tension. “My wife didn’t take anything. I made sure she couldn’t take anything prepared by anyone but me and my trusted chef.” His voice cracked-the facade of the untouchable man crumbling. “I bathed her every goddamn day and watched her like a hawk since she’s… new to this. Vulnerable.”
Dr. Martin’s grim expression spoke volumes. “The drug-it’s still rampant in her system. We need to deliver the baby now, and the odds-Christ, they’re not good. There’s only a 10% chance for the baby to survive.”
As the doctor’s words sank in, Xavier began to pace like a caged beast, every step a drumbeat of impending doom. The taste of bile and dread mingled on his tongue, and he fought back a surge of nausea. He wanted to cry. This was supposed to be a happy moment; he was going to be a father, and now both his baby and wife were in danger.
“Fuck!” His fists clenched, knuckles white, aching to smash something, anything. He wanted to cry, to scream, and to tear down the walls around him. How could Cathleen, his Cathleen, sharp-tongued and formidable, want to harm their child? It was inconceivable-a twisted nightmare he couldn’t wake up from.
“Save them,” he hissed, barely audible over the beeping monitors and his own ragged breathing. “Save them both, or so help me, God…”
Dr. Martin met Xavier’s tormented gaze, and in that moment, the line between healer and executioner blurred. “I’ll do everything in my power,” he promised, though they both knew the truth-the cruel grip of fate was unyielding, and this morning it held them all in its merciless grasp. “Sir, your wife is unconscious, and we need to do a C-section.” Xavier’s jaw clenched so tight that it threatened to shatter his teeth. The baby-his child-fought inside a hostile womb, drowning in poison and distress.Property of Nô)(velDr(a)ma.Org.
“I can’t fucking believe she’d do this,” he muttered under his breath, a rogue thought stabbing him with suspicion. That goddamn glass of orange juice. A convenient offering amid chaos.
“Martin, please, I’ll give you everything I have; just save my wife and kid.” Desperation laced each word-a prayer to a man he hoped played God well.
The doctor’s eyes once filled with determination, now mirrored the storm brewing in Xavier’s gut. “I can’t promise you that, Xavier. But I will do my best.”
The clock ticked away, five hours lost to the void of uncertainty, while Xavier paced outside, every second an eternity wrapped in agony. Each footfall resounded like a judge’s gavel, condemning him to a hell of his own making.
Cathleen awoke, the haze of painkillers clouding her vision. She felt light-too light-as if a part of her had been hollowed out. Her surroundings slowly came into focus-the familiar walls of her own room, not the cold, clinical confines of Dr. Martin’s patient room.
“Ma’am, you need to rest,” a worker murmured, but her words were a distant echo against the roar of Cathleen’s heartbeat.
Dora stormed in, her presence a tempest of entitlement. “Hey, get out. I need to talk to my daughter.” The command brooked no arguments; the worker scuttled away, leaving mother and stepdaughter alone in the thickening silence.
“Cathy, how are you feeling?” Dora’s voice cut through the fog of Cathleen’s disoriented thoughts, sharp as a scalpel. There was no warmth in it, only a cold curiosity that bordered on mockery.
“Where is my baby?” The words tumbled from Cathleen’s lips, raw and edged with a rising panic. Across the room, Xavier halted midstride, his silhouette framed by the doorway. The tray in his hands-a peace offering of green tea-might as well have been a shield against the impending storm.
“Really, Cathy?” Dora’s impatience laced her tone as she rolled her eyes, dismissing the gravity of the question. “You don’t know? How long have you been sleeping?”
“Tell me!” Cathleen’s demand was a whip crack in the tense air, her red-rimmed eyes blazing with a ferocity that would’ve sent any courtroom adversary cowering.
Dora exhaled a weary sigh, the sound heavy with feigned concern. “Well, your daughter was stillborn, and Xavier already buried her. It’s a good thing it wasn’t a son; daughters are useless anyway; they are no heirs.” The words struck like a blow, each one a nail in the coffin of Cathleen’s shattered world.
Time seemed to crawl as Cathleen’s eyes locked onto Xavier’s, searching the depths of his typically impenetrable gaze for some semblance of truth-or perhaps an accusation. But the man who stood there, the self-proclaimed sex god, now appeared hollow, a mere specter of the domineering figure he was known to be.
“Xavier?” she whispered, a plea wrapped in disbelief. Yet he remained motionless and silent, the bearer of unspeakable news he couldn’t bring himself to deliver.
The edges of Cathleen’s vision began to blur, her mind rebelling against reality. With a final glimpse at the man she could neither love nor hate completely, darkness rushed in, mercifully dragging her down into its depths.