For three days, I never left that bed.
I kept telling myself the pain would fade if I stayed perfectly still. Every sharp stab in my left leg, every wave of dizziness, every drop of blood that stained the sheets—I convinced myself it was nothing more than stress. I couldn’t bear to call anyone, especially not my husband.
My name is Emily Carter, and I had spent the last six years married to Nathan Carter, a self-made millionaire whose business empire demanded every waking hour of his life. The tabloids called us the perfect couple. They saw the expensive vacations, the charity galas, and the glamorous smiles. They never saw the silence inside our home.
Nathan had been away on a business trip when I fell.
I remembered standing on the second-floor landing after hearing a strange noise downstairs. Before I could reach the first step, my foot slipped on something slick. I crashed down several stairs, landing hard against the wooden railing. The pain exploded through my leg and lower stomach.
I reached for my phone, but it had shattered during the fall.
The nearest neighbor lived nearly half a mile away, and I couldn’t put weight on my leg. I crawled back upstairs, believing Nathan would return the next day.
But his trip was unexpectedly extended.
By the third morning, I had grown weak. Blood continued soaking through the towel wrapped around my thigh where a deep cut refused to stop bleeding. Worse still, I hadn’t felt the baby move in hours.
When the front door slammed downstairs, relief washed over me.
Nathan was finally home.
Instead of rushing upstairs, I heard him yelling my name. His voice echoed through the house, furious.
“Emily! Why haven’t you answered your phone? Do you have any idea what I’ve been dealing with?”
Heavy footsteps thundered toward the bedroom.
The door burst open so violently it slammed against the wall.
Nathan stormed inside, his face burning with anger. Without hesitation, he grabbed the blanket covering me and ripped it away.
“What have you done?!” he shouted.
Then he froze.
The mattress beneath me was soaked crimson.
His eyes dropped to my leg, where blood still trickled from the deep wound, then slowly lifted toward my pale face.
Every trace of anger disappeared.
His skin turned ghost white.
He whispered in horror, “Oh God… the baby…”
Before I could answer, his eyes locked onto something lying on the bedroom floor.
A single black leather glove.
Neither of us owned it.
Nathan immediately scooped me into his arms despite my protests. His hands trembled as he carried me downstairs and rushed me to the nearest emergency room. During the drive, he kept apologizing over and over.
“I’m so sorry, Emily. I should’ve come home sooner.”
I wanted to believe him, but the strange glove stayed fixed in my mind.
At the hospital, doctors surrounded me. They stabilized the bleeding, treated the deep cut in my thigh, and ordered an emergency ultrasound.
Nathan squeezed my hand so tightly that his knuckles turned white.
The room fell silent as the technician searched for a heartbeat.
Then came the sound.
A tiny, steady rhythm.
Our baby was alive.
Nathan broke down in tears. It was the first time I had ever seen him cry.
The doctor explained that I had suffered severe blood loss and a fractured ankle, but the pregnancy had survived by what she called “remarkable luck.” Another twelve hours without treatment might have changed everything.
While I recovered, a police officer asked routine questions about the accident.
I mentioned slipping on something slippery near the staircase.
Nathan frowned.
“There shouldn’t have been anything there.”
The officer visited our home later that afternoon.
Within hours, he returned with unsettling news.
The stairs hadn’t been wet because of spilled water.
Someone had poured cooking oil across several steps.
Even more disturbing, investigators found muddy footprints entering through the unlocked back door and leaving again less than twenty minutes later.
Nothing had been stolen.
Whoever entered hadn’t come to rob us.
They had come while I was alone.
Nathan insisted the security system had been activated before he left town.
But the system logs revealed someone had disabled it remotely using the master access code.
Only three people knew that code.
Nathan.
His longtime assistant, Rachel.
And Nathan’s younger brother, Daniel.
Police questioned everyone.
Rachel had been attending a corporate conference hundreds of miles away.
Daniel claimed he had spent the entire evening at a poker tournament.
His alibi seemed airtight.
Until detectives discovered surveillance footage from a nearby gas station.
Daniel’s truck had been recorded less than ten minutes from our neighborhood on the night I fell.
Nathan stared at the video in complete disbelief.
“My brother would never…”
He couldn’t finish the sentence.
Because deep inside, he already knew something was terribly wrong.