The Call That Exposed What His Family Did To His Pregnant Ex-Wife-heyily

At 10:03 p.m., Luke Mercer learned that a life can split without making a sound.

One moment he was standing alone in his Tribeca penthouse, looking at a city that had never felt less like home.

The next, a woman from St. Catherine’s Medical Center was saying his ex-wife’s name in a voice that made the floor seem to move under him.

Image

“Elena Ross was admitted twenty minutes ago,” she said.

Luke pressed the phone harder to his ear.

“She is unconscious,” the woman continued. “And she appears to be approximately sixteen weeks pregnant.”

Outside the glass, Manhattan glittered cold and clean.

Inside, Luke could hear only the thin buzz of the line and the blood beating in his ears.

Ninety-three days earlier, he had signed the divorce papers.

He had looked Elena in the eye and told her he did not love her anymore.

He had watched the woman who used to fall asleep with one foot tucked under his leg stand in the doorway of their apartment with tears in her eyes and hatred fighting pride on her face.

He had let her believe it.

That was the part he could not forgive himself for now.

Luke had told himself the lie was necessary.

The Mercer name came with money, enemies, private threats, old debts, and men who smiled while they sharpened knives behind conference-room doors.

His father had spent years reminding him that affection was leverage.

His lawyers had warned him that Elena was becoming a target.

Marco Reyes, who had protected Luke since before the marriage, had once found a photo of Elena tucked under the windshield wiper of Luke’s SUV with one sentence written across the back.

Make him choose.

So Luke chose badly.

He chose distance.

He chose to become cruel on purpose.

He chose to let Elena walk away thinking her husband had turned into a stranger overnight, because he believed a stranger could not be used against him.

Cruelty is easiest to justify when you call it protection.

By the time Marco pulled the SUV to the curb, Luke was already outside.

He wore no tie.

His coat was open.

His face had gone still in the way that made Marco stop asking questions.

St. Catherine’s smelled like bleach, stale coffee, and flowers that had been bought at a grocery store because someone had not known what else to bring.

A small American flag sat near the ICU desk beside a stack of forms.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *