LOGINGesare walked into the hospital for a routine check up and walked out with a life shattering secret, she was fourteen weeks pregnant, which should have been impossible. When her ruthless stepmother throws her out, fate strikes again. A drunk driver leaves her broken and bleeding on the roadside. She wakes up in a hospital bed with a fractured leg and no idea that her nightmare is only the beginning. A devastating mistake during a routine exam changed everything. The child she carries is no accident, it is the only heir to billionaire powerhouse Dante Moretti. And whether she is ready or not, Gesare’s life is about to change in ways neither of them could have imagined. There are dangerous people after her, people who don't want the child she is carrying to be born and her only way of survival is Dante Moretti.
View MoreGesare
“Do the test again.” The thin sheet of paper trembles violently in my hands as I stare down at the results, two pink lines
“This can't be right,” I whisper, my voice rising into a desperate shout with a tremor. “I can't be pregnant, This has to be wrong.”
The nurse shifts uncomfortably beside the doctor as her eyes flicker between us before she clears her throat.
“I’m sorry, ma’am,” she says softly, almost apologetically. “But the results say otherwise, and blood don't lie, you are pregnant.”
“No.” I shake my head, the room spinning around me. “No, do it again, do the test again please.”
My fingers tighten around the crumpled piece of paper.
“Is this some kind of joke?” My voice trembles as panic begins clawing its way up my chest. “Am I being filmed for some stupid show or something? Because there is no way in hell I am pregnant.”
My throat burns as I struggle to hold back the tears gathering in my eyes.
“I have never even had sex in my life, so how can I be pregnant unless I am Mary the mother of Jesus.”
Silence falls over the small examination room.
The doctor and the nurse exchange a look, the kind of look people give when they think someone is either lying or losing their mind.
Then the doctor turns back to me.
“This must be very shocking for you, Miss Gesare,” he says gently, resting a reassuring hand on my shoulder. “But blood tests are extremely accurate. They don’t make mistakes, and you are fourteen weeks pregnant.” My stomach drops the more he talks because I know he does not believe me.
“We can guide you through whatever decision you want to make,” he continues calmly. “You should know that you have options.”
“You don’t believe me, do you?” The words slip out before I can stop them, I push the chair back and stand up abruptly.
“You don’t believe that I’m a virgin,” I say, my voice shaking now. “You don’t believe me when I say I have never had sex before.”
The doctor sighs softly.
“We want to believe you miss,” he says carefully. “But scientifically speaking, that would be impossible.”
“I need some air.” I say quietly, before either of them can stop me, I throw the results onto the desk and rush out of the room.
The hospital hallway feels too bright and too loud. My head feels heavy, like it’s stuffed with cotton, and tiny stars dance across my vision as I push through the glass doors and step outside.
The cold air hits my face, but it does nothing to calm the storm raging inside me, Pregnant.
How can I be pregnant? No man has ever touched me, no one has ever even kissed me.
And then it occurs to me that this was just the beginning, my stepmother will kill me when she finds out.
To her, a pregnancy isn’t just a scandal to our family, It’s another mouth to feed, another stain on her perfect family image.
And I am already the stain she tolerates the least.
The fear coils tightly in my stomach as I walk forward, my mind spinning so wildly that I barely notice where my feet are taking me
“WHAT THE HELL IS WRONG WITH YOU?!”
A loud male voice explodes through the chaos in my head and my whole body freezes up as tires screech violently as a sleek black car stops just inches away from me.
“I’m so sorry, sir,” I stammer quickly, my voice trembling as I step back. “I didn’t see”
“Oh please,” the man cuts me off sharply.
His voice full of irritation.
“Are you one of those people looking for a cheap payoff?” he snaps. “Throwing yourself in front of expensive cars instead of getting a real job like a normal human being?”
My face burns with humiliation, I can feel people staring at me, judging me.
I keep my eyes fixed firmly on the ground, unable to look at him. The only thing I see are his polished, expensive shoes standing on the asphalt.
“I’m sorry,” I mumble again, shame choking the words and before he can say anything else, I turn and run, I don't stop or look back I just keep running.
It doesn’t take long before the familiar gates of the house come into view, home or at least the closest thing I have ever had to one.
The moment I step inside, Moraa’s voice greets me.
“Where have you been, Gesare?”
My step sister leans lazily against the doorway, scrolling through her phone like she has all the time in the world.
“Mother wants her medicine.”
I nod quickly and rush toward the kitchen.
Within seconds I prepare the tray and carry it upstairs, careful not to spill the glass of water as I enter Kerubo’s room.
She is lounging on the bed, watching television like a queen on her throne.
“Where were you?” she asks coldly the moment she sees me.
“I went to the hospital, ma’am,” I mumble quietly, placing the glass of water beside her.
Her eyes narrow.
“I told you to go on your own time, not on mine.” she says her voice sharper now, “I let you stay here for free, I feed you, I clothe you. The least you could do is respect my time.”
“Yes, ma’am,” I whisper quickly. “It won’t happen again.”
I grab the tray and hurry out of the room before the tears in my eyes betray me.
The moment the door closes behind me, the tears spill over.
I wipe them away quickly and start heading back to my small room when Kerubo’s phone rings behind the door.
I don’t mean to listen but the I hear a single word,
Pregnant and my entire body freezes, could it be the hospital?
I had written Kerubo’s number down as my emergency contact, but I never thought they would actually call her.
Panic floods my chest as I quickly walk away and rush toward my room.
Minutes later, I hear footsteps, heavy ones.
Kerubo never comes to the servants’ quarters unless it was an emergency.
But through the small crack near the window, I see her approaching, Moraa walks beside her.
My hands begin to shake before they can knock, I slowly open the door.
Kerubo steps inside immediately, her nose wrinkling in disgust as she glances around my tiny room.
“The hospital just called,” she says coldly.
Her eyes land on me like knives.
“Imagine my shock when they informed me that my dirty housemaid is pregnant.”
“I can explain,” I say desperately, dropping to my knees. “There must be a mistake. Please believe me.”
“You know I cannot keep you here now, Gesare,” she continues, ignoring my pleas. “People will talk. I will become the gossip of this town.”
She gestures toward Moraa.
“And with my daughter about to marry one of the richest billionaires in the city, I cannot afford such disgrace tied to our name.”
“I am not pregnant!” I cry helplessly. “I swear I’m not. Please, I have nowhere else to go.”
Kerubo sighs dramatically.
“I’m sorry, Gesare. I was generous enough to take you in, and this is how you repay me.” Her voice hardens, “Pack your things and be out by noon.”
Then she turns and walks away but Moraa lingers behind.
“Moraa, please,” I beg her, my voice breaking. “I have nowhere else to go.”
She looks down at me, her eyes gleaming with cruel amusement.
“Well,” she says with a small shrug, “you are going to be a mother now, Gesare.” A wicked smile spreads across her face as she says that
“Time to learn how to survive on your own, it will be good practice for when you have your baby.” Then she leaves.
It doesn’t take long to pack because I don’t own much.
Kerubo never paid me for the years I spent working in her house, She always said I should be grateful she didn’t charge me rent for staying there and eating her food.
Nine years, Nine years of my life reduced to one small black bag.
I take one last look around the tiny storage room that had also served as my bedroom before I finally walk out, out of the only place I have called home all of my life.
The road stretches endlessly ahead of me.
My bag feels heavier with every step, even though it barely holds anything.
I have no money, no family and no idea where I am going but I just keep walking until I hear tires Screech then something slams into me.
The world spins violently before I hit the ground and my whole body is in pain.
“Oh my goodness, you hit her!”
“Is she breathing?”
“I think she is dead, she is not moving!”
The sounds grow distant as they fade until everything goes completely dark.
Kumba. For a moment after she finishes talking, I don’t move, I just sit there, leaning back against the headboard, watching her.Because everything she said lines up but also I don't really know what to say to her, not after everything I accused her of last night. I run a hand over my face, exhaling slowly, my thoughts still tangled up, still refusing to settle into anything solid.l, I know I should say something or say something but before I can form the exact words a loud knock echoes through the room.It's sharp, urgent and aggressive it makes Gesare flinches slightly and I notice that.We both turn toward the door instinctively as another knock follows, harder this time.“What now?” I mutter under my breath, irritation already creeping in.Gesare stands up, hesitating for a second before walking towards the door.“I didn’t order anything else,” she says, more to herself than to me.There is another voice now, Muffled and it sound like she is arguing.“I said you can’t just”Th
Kumba.The coffee helps, but not enough to kill the headache completely, my head feels is heavy and all I want to rely do is lie back down, but I can't. I sit there for a while after she corrects me, just watching her. I watch her quietly, studying her in a way I haven’t allowed myself to before. She looks more composed and put together this morning, but there is something underneath that, like she is holding herself together by sheer will.I set my cup down slowly and carefully because I need to do this right, last night I was under the influence of alcohol, I was confused and angry and all I did was accuse her of a bunch of things, today I just wanted to take to her calmly, maybe that will get me the information I needed. I shift slightly, turning towards her and she doesn’t move or look at me at all, she was still keeping her distance. “You can come sit down, I am pretty sure you are tired,” I say quietly, she hesitates for just for a second before she walks towards me and sit
Gesare.I didn't sleep at all, I mean how could I even get any sleep with a billionaire passed out on my cheap hotel bed. Maybe for a few minutes here and there I did close my eyes, but nothing that counts.The entire night sits heavy in my chest, replaying over and over again like something my mind refuses to let go of. Every word he said. Every accusation he made before when he came here. But the question that echoed in my mind was him questioning everything I told him about myself, how could he think someone can lie about stuff like that. I close my eyes briefly, pressing my lips together as I sit on the edge of the chair across from the bed, it was the only other furniture in the hotel room.Kumba is still lying on the bed, in the same exact spot where he passed out last night. Half on his side, one arm thrown across the mattress, breathing slow and deep like none of it ever happened.My gaze lingers on him longer than I want it to, taking in the view of his perfect manly body
Diane. The hospital corridor feels too bright.I sit there, but I don’t feel like I’m sitting. My body is still, but everything inside me is pacing, spiraling, refusing to settle.The smell of antiseptic clings to the air, sharp and cold, and every now and then a nurse passes by, their footsteps echoing in a way that makes the silence feel even heavier.Beside me is my sonKumba, he is restless.He hasn’t sat down properly since we got here. Even now, he is half standing and half leaning against the wall, his hands running through his hair over and over again like he’s trying to undo something that’s already been done and I watch him for a moment. Then the frustration rises again.“You left her alone,” I say, my voice low but sharp enough to cut through the silence.He stills slightly.“Mom”“You left her Kumba ,” I repeat, louder this time, the words fueled by fear more than anger, but they come out harsh anyway. “Alone in your house in her condition.”His jaw tightens.“I told you I
I closed my eyes, Of course she did.Only my mother would think she had the right to make decisions about my future without my consent."She arranged an insemination procedure for your fiancée, Moraa."My jaw clenched so hard it hurt at the mention of my fiances name. Rage flooded through me. But
"That's not possible and you know that." I say laughing, "So just tell me what's really going on." Three years ago, after my recovery, I had ordered every specimen I had stored destroyed. I had signed the papers myself. I did not want any kids and I made sure I destroyed any chances of that happen
She had been my doctor through every brutal stage of my cancer treatment. If she was asking me to come to the hospital in person, it wasn't for small talk."What is this about?" I asked as I drove."I can't discuss it over the phone, Kumba. Please just come in." she said before she hung up.The ent
Then I feel Kumba's arm around my shoulders.The hospital bed beneath me.The ache in my body.The baby.Moraa.My eyes open slowly.The room is brighter now.Morning sunlight spills through the windows.And Kumba is still beside me.I must have fallen asleep against him sometime during the night b






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