LOGINDoctor Olivia thought her marriage was built on love. After 6 years of trying she finally receives the miracle of pregnancy. Before she can share with her husband, Olivia discovers that Carter Velcro has another family and a 6 years old daughter. To the world she is the other woman despite being the legal wife. When she thinks divorce is the end, it spirals her life into a mess. The new director of the hospital turns out to be her high school bully, who suddenly takes a fancy towards her. When Olivia tries to gather herself, Carter Velcro wants her back. Trapped into the contract of giving him another child, Olivia finds out the biggest lie of all. Can she forgive Carter to let the love bloom again?
View More“You must be elated to share this good news with Carter.” The message from doctor Homer made my heart race. A desperate teardrop fell over the screen of my shining phone.
My whole married life flashed with happy moments. Combined with the painful ones when my husband and I tried endlessly to conceive.
I squirmed with a gleeful sound in my seat and immediately composed myself in the empty room. “I should tell Carter and the family about this good news.” I glanced at the phone and checked the time. A smile curled along my lips and I was unable to contain my emotions.
My husband should be reaching home in an hour or two. It was the right time to tell him. I slid the phone into the pocket of my white coat and rose from my chair, preparing for my usual rounds.
Wiping my tears off the cheeks brashly it felt worth all the gruesome efforts. “He will be over the top upon hearing about my pregnancy.” I had been married to Carter Velcro for six years.
Six steady, predictable years. Our marriage had never been loud, never turbulent. It was calm, mutual, built on agreements and patience. We had always been on the same page about children—later, after my career was secure. He had never pressured me. He had waited. Or so I believed.
I pressed a hand to my abdomen, barely there, barely real. “You will be a miracle baby,” I murmured with a soft chuckle.
The pungent scent of cleaning agents, injections, and medicines was prevalent when I did my usual round of the general ward. It made me slightly uncomfortable now that I am pregnant.
I was returning to my cabin when my phone vibrated. “What do I owe you, Homer?” I chuckled with a mischievous tone when I heard his voice. “It must be something urgent for you to call me at this hour.
Homer and I had been friends since college, bonded by sleepless nights and impossible exams. He only called when something mattered.
“A little girl. Six years old.”
Something inside me tightened.
“That’s too young,” I said immediately, my steps slowing. I wedged the phone between my shoulder and ear and began stuffing my things into my bag. “Give me five minutes. I’m on my way.”
***
The child sat quietly on a stool outside Homer’s office.
Seeing her unsettled me in a way I couldn’t explain. She was too small, her feet barely touching the floor, her hands folded neatly in her lap. A strange ache bloomed in my chest—protective, irrational, fierce.
Hormones, I told myself.
“Hello, dearie! I am doctor Jude and—” I reached for her hands, warm and fragile in mine. “I will be doing this little magic to make you better.” She stared at me blankly until I pulled out a candy.
Her face lit up. “Thank you!” She spoke in a polite tone with a giggle. “My name is Candice.” She unwrapped the candy. “It rhymes with candy, you know. Can you make me better?” She asked me and continued licking. “Mommy is a bit worried about me, Doctor Jude.”
Her voice melted my heart and I caressed her cheek. “I’ll do my best,” I whispered, brushing her cheek. “Where is your mommy?” Just then the door flung open and a woman stormed in with furious rage. “Don’t you dare touch my daughter!”
She pulled Candice away and snatched the lollipop from Candice and threw it in the bin nearby. “Do you want to poison my child pretending to be a doctor!?”
I looked at her, trying to find the reason for her unusually unhinged behavior. I froze, stunned, my hands still half-raised.
Before I could say anything, Doctor Homer walked in. “Mrs. Camilla, please calm down. My friend here is the specialist I told you about.”
I forced a polite smile, but her eyes never softened. She looked at me as if I were something dangerous. Something unwelcome.
I retreated behind the partition, giving her space to settle—though unease had already begun to coil in my stomach.
Then I heard it.
“Look, Mommy! Daddy brought me ice cream!”
My heart skipped.
“Mr. Velcro,” Homer said warmly. “We’ve got the specialist here. Candice is in good hands now.”
My hands went numb.
Velcro.
Slowly—too slowly—I parted the curtain.
There he was.
Carter Velcro.
My husband.
He was crouched in front of Candice, smiling as she hugged him, ice cream smeared on her lips. And beside him stood Camilla, her hand resting possessively on the child’s shoulder. A family portrait, complete and seamless.
The room tilted.
The air rushed out of my lungs as realization slammed into me, brutal and merciless.
Was I… the other woman?
I didn’t remember leaving the room—only the cold rush of night air as I stumbled into the parking lot. My steps were too fast, my thoughts too loud.
No. He wouldn’t. He couldn’t.
We were having a child together.
My hands trembled as I gripped my bag. He didn’t know yet. The thought pierced me like glass.
Inside the car, the silence screamed. Candice was six. Six years old.
I covered my mouth as tears spilled freely. Had he been lying to me all this time?
Camilla’s hysteria replayed in my mind.
She knew.
She knew exactly who I was.
Olivia Jude Velcro.
I texted Homer, asking for Camilla’s address under the pretense of a home examination.
“How could you do this to me, Carter?” I whispered, resting my forehead against the steering wheel.
Sometime during the night, exhaustion overtook grief.
***
The next day, I stood before the mansion address Homer had given me.
At the gate, I forced a smile. “Is Camilla Velcro home? I’m a friend—didn’t know she moved here last year.”
The guard frowned. “The Velcros have lived here for years. Their baby girl is already six.” His gaze sharpened. “Are you really their friend?”
My heart stuttered, but I held steady.
“How is Candice?”
His posture relaxed instantly. “Poor child’s always sick. God bless her. Ever since they got married, she’s been in and out of hospitals. Nearly six years now.”
The words crushed what little hope I had left.
I walked back to my car on unsteady legs, finally understanding the cruel brilliance of Carter’s betrayal.
He hadn’t just cheated.
He had married both of us.
In the same year.
And in doing so, he had made me look like the other woman.
I sank into the driver’s seat, numb.
My marriage—my six years, my trust, my unborn child—had all been built on a lie.
[Olivia’s pov]Nina had given up her spot beside my bed hours ago and collapsed into the armchair with her arms crossed, head tilted awkwardly against the cushion. Mallory had ended up on the small couch again, one arm hanging off the edge like she’d fallen asleep mid-sentence and simply never recovered.Even in sleep, they looked like they were still guarding me.The thought made something warm tug faintly in my chest.I sat propped against the pillows, my daughter asleep in the bassinet beside me.A soundless kind of miracle.I still couldn’t believe she existed. That she was here, that she was safe, that I was still here too.The door opened softly. I turned instinctively, expecting a nurse.Instead—“Hah.” Homer stepped in like he owned the place. “You bitch of a mother!” He joked. He paused in the doorway, hands on his hips, and scanned the room with exaggerated disapproval. Then his gaze landed on me. “Why are you crying again?”I blinked.My hand instinctively touched my chee
[Carter’s pov]I sat alone in the lounge, half-slouched in the leather armchair, a glass of whiskey loose in my hand.I tipped the glass back again.The burn hit hard, sliding down my throat like liquid punishment.I deserved it.The bottle was nearly empty.It didn't matter.Nothing was touching the ache hollowing out my chest. I hadn’t gone to the hospital. Not because I didn’t want to.I had spent three hours sitting in my car outside the private maternity entrance, gripping the steering wheel until my knuckles turned white.But Pierce had made himself very clear.If I came near Olivia, he’d have security remove me.And if somehow I got past him, Olivia herself would probably order them to throw me out.The thought twisted something ugly inside me. My daughter was born tonight. I hadn’t held her. Hadn’t seen her. Didn’t even know what she looked like.And every second that passed made the distance between us feel less temporary and more permanent.I downed the rest of the whiskey.
[Olivia’s pov]The hospital room was quiet in that strange, heavy way only hospitals could ever be.Muffled voices behind closed doors.I sat propped against the pillows, staring blankly at the rain-speckled window across from my bed. It was still dark outside.Not fully night anymore, but not yet morning either.Nina was asleep on the small sofa near the wall, curled awkwardly beneath the thin hospital blanket she had stolen from somewhere. One arm dangled over the edge, her hair falling across her face.Even in sleep, she looked exhausted.She had refused to leave. Mallory had tried convincing her to go home and rest. She’d nearly bitten Mallory’s head off.Mallory herself had gone to the nursing area twenty minutes ago to check on my daughter. A tiny person existed because of me. The thought should have made warmth bloom inside me.And part of it did.But another part hurt so deeply it almost eclipsed everything else.Because Carter hadn’t come.Not once.Not after the delivery.No
[Carter’s pov]The silence inside the hall was unbearable.Hours ago, this room had been alive.Crystal glasses clinking. Investors murmuring over champagne, camera shutters flashing. Now it was dead.And I sat alone on the edge of the stage. Exactly where she had looked at me with those shattered eyes and told me she hated me. “I hate you, Carter!” The words hadn’t stopped echoing since.I leaned forward, elbows braced against my knees, staring blankly at the floor below.The deal signing with Ronan had been postponed indefinitely.Of course it had.No one wanted to sign multimillion-dollar gemstone agreements after witnessing the public destruction of the Velcro family.Not when reporters had practically trampled each other trying to capture footage of Olivia collapsing.Not when my stepfather had stood in front of the world and declared my marriage a lie.Not when I had responded by punching him hard enough to send him sprawling across his own precious stage.My fist still hurt.
[Olivia’s pov]Camilla’s laugh was soft.“You really don’t know, do you?” she said, tilting her head as if I were a child who had missed the point.My grip on the papers tightened again, though my fingers already felt numb.Camilla’s lips curved.“Your husband didn’t just sign divorce papers,” she
[Olivia’s pov]Sahl entered first.Dressed sharply, composed in a way that looked almost rehearsed. And beside him was Camilla.Perfectly poised. The expression was unreadable, but her eyes… her eyes were sharp enough to cut through everything in the room.A murmur swept through the crowd.Confusio
[Carter’s pov]For the first time all day, I could breathe.Not fully.Not deeply.But enough to feel like my chest wasn’t caving in.Ronan stood across from my desk, calm and composed, while the merger proposal sat between us like a lifeline neither of us had expected to revisit.The irony wasn’t
[Olivia’s pov]A sharp, deep contraction tore through my body so suddenly I couldn’t even inhale properly. My breath hitched violently.No—Not now.Not here.My hand flew to my stomach instantly, fingers digging into my dress as another wave followed, harder than the first. It stole the strength






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