تسجيل الدخولElena Rossi is the invisible wife. By day, she’s a surgical assistant at the Caine-Vitale Medical Institute, working under the cold, clinical gaze of her husband, renowned cardiac surgeon Dr. Tristan Caine. By night, she’s bound by a contract marriage designed to save his reputation—a loveless arrangement with one lethal rule: No children. Ever. While Tristan yearns for Elena’s manipulative stepsister, Elena harbors a shattering secret. A failed contraceptive has left her carrying Tristan’s twins. In his world of steel and perfection, these babies are a violation of the contract that could cost Elena everything—her home, her career, and her heart. As Elena prepares to choose her children over a man who barely sees her, a high-risk pregnancy and a shadow from her past force a final reckoning. Can a heart made of ice melt before he loses the family he never knew he wanted?
عرض المزيدElena's POV
The words hung in the air between us, impossible and terrifying.
"Congratulations, Dr. Rossi," Dr. Patel said, her smile warm and genuine. "You're pregnant."
I stared at her, my mind refusing to process what she'd just said. Pregnant. The word echoed in my head, bouncing off the walls of my skull like a ricocheting bullet. This couldn't be happening. I'd been so careful. The pills Tristan gave me every morning were supposed to prevent exactly this.
Dr. Patel turned the ultrasound screen toward me, her finger pointing at two small, flickering spots. "And from what I can see here, you're carrying twins. Fraternal, most likely. I'd estimate you're about eight weeks along."
Twins.
My hand flew to my mouth, and I tasted the salt of tears I hadn't realized were falling. Eight weeks. That meant it happened during that night two months ago, the night Tristan had come home late from the hospital, exhausted and vulnerable after losing a patient on the operating table. He'd reached for me in the darkness, and for once, there had been something almost tender in his touch.
Almost.
"Dr. Rossi?" Dr. Patel's voice cut through my spiral. "Are you alright? Is this welcome news?"
I couldn't answer. How could I explain that this pregnancy violated the very foundation of my marriage? That the man whose children I carried had made me sign a contract explicitly forbidding this exact situation?
"I've been taking the contraceptive pills," I finally managed, my voice barely above a whisper. "Every single day. I don't understand how this could happen."
Dr. Patel's expression shifted to something more clinical. "Were you consistent with the timing? Did you miss any doses? Certain medications can interfere with effectiveness."
I tried to remember. There had been that week when I'd had the flu. And the antibiotics Dr. Chen had prescribed. Oh god. The antibiotics.
"I was sick last month," I said, my hands trembling as I gripped the edge of the examination table. "I took antibiotics."
"That would do it." Dr. Patel nodded sympathetically. "Certain antibiotics can reduce the effectiveness of oral contraceptives. I'm surprised no one warned you to use backup protection."
No one had warned me because no one knew I was on the pill. Tristan insisted on complete secrecy about our marriage. As far as the hospital was concerned, I was just another surgical assistant, not the wife of their star cardiac surgeon.
Dr. Patel handed me tissues and waited while I wiped my eyes. "I need to be honest with you, Dr. Rossi. Given your medical history, this pregnancy is going to require careful monitoring. Your uterine condition puts you at higher risk for complications, especially with twins."
Of course. Even my body wanted to make this as difficult as possible.
"What kind of complications?" I asked, though part of me didn't want to know.
"Preterm labor, primarily. We'll need to watch you closely, especially in the third trimester. You'll need to take it easy, reduce stress, get plenty of rest." She looked at me seriously. "This isn't a pregnancy you can just push through, Elena. You'll need support."
Support. The word was almost funny. Tristan had made it crystal clear from the day we signed that contract that support wasn't part of our arrangement. Our marriage existed on paper and in the darkness of his bedroom. During daylight hours, I was invisible.
"I understand," I said, though I understood nothing. How was I supposed to hide a twin pregnancy while working beside Tristan in the operating room every day? How was I supposed to take it easy when my job required twelve-hour shifts on my feet?
Dr. Patel printed out the ultrasound images and handed them to me. "I want to see you back in two weeks. Start taking prenatal vitamins, increase your protein intake, and please, Elena, tell the father. You're going to need help with this."
I nodded mechanically, clutching the pictures to my chest. Two tiny beings, no bigger than kidney beans, already changing everything. Already making demands I couldn't fulfill.
The drive home was a blur of tears and panic. I kept glancing at the ultrasound pictures on my passenger seat, trying to make sense of this new reality. Tristan's children. Our children. The very thing our contract had been designed to prevent.
Clause Eight. I could recite it from memory. "The marriage shall remain childless for its duration. Both parties agree to take appropriate contraceptive measures. In the event of pregnancy, the contract becomes null and void, with all assets reverting to the primary holder."
In other words, if I was pregnant, I lost everything. The small salary Tristan paid me as his "assistant." The roof over my head in his penthouse. The health insurance that was currently covering this very appointment. Everything.
I pulled into the parking garage of the building we shared, but I couldn't make myself get out of the car. My hands drifted to my stomach, still flat beneath my scrubs. How long did I have before it started showing? Two months? Three?
My phone buzzed. A text from Linda, Tristan's actual personal assistant and the only person at Caine-Vitale Medical Institute who knew about our arrangement.
"Dr. Caine wants you in his office at 6 AM tomorrow. Don't be late."
I stared at the message, my heart racing. Tomorrow I would have to face him, knowing what I knew. Carrying the secret that would destroy everything.
My phone buzzed again. This time, it was a message that made my blood run cold.
"Can't wait to see you Thursday, baby. I've missed you so much. Your Serena."
I recognized the number. It was Tristan's phone. He must have left it somewhere, and I was still listed as his emergency contact, which meant I received copies of certain messages.
Serena. My stepsister. The brilliant neurosurgeon who had everything I'd ever wanted, including the man I'd foolishly fallen in love with.
The man whose twins I was now carrying.
I leaned my head against the steering wheel and finally let myself sob. Eight weeks pregnant with forbidden twins, married to a man who loved someone else, and facing a future that terrified me more than any diagnosis I'd ever received.
Tomorrow, I would have to pretend everything was fine. Tomorrow, I would stand beside Tristan in the OR and hand him instruments with steady hands while my entire world crumbled inside me.
But tonight, alone in this car, I let myself break.
September arrived with the specific quality of September in a family with children, the quality of a month that was a threshold whether you wanted it to be or not.The preschool had been selected the previous spring with the approach Tristan brought to selections that mattered, the criteria identified and the research conducted and the visits made and the questions asked until the picture was complete enough to make the decision with confidence. I had visited twice and had my own views, which overlapped with his in the significant areas and diverged in the smaller ones, and we had talked about the divergences and arrived at the same school through different routes of reasoning, which was how we made most decisions now.The school was good.It was the kind of school that understood that three and four year olds were people with interior lives rather than vessels for curriculum, and organized itself around that understanding.The twins had done a transition visit in August, a morning wh
The move into the house happened in the spring, as planned.The renovation had taken four months and two weeks, which was two weeks longer than Adunola had initially projected and which she had flagged three weeks before the overrun with the specific directness of someone who believed that accurate information delivered early was better than accurate information delivered late. She had been right about the bones of the house and right about the work being about revelation rather than transformation, and the two extra weeks had been for the plumbing in the back bathroom which had concealed a problem that the initial assessment had not found.Tristan had not been surprised by the hidden plumbing problem.He had been, he said, statistically prepared for it.We moved in on a Saturday in April with the specific organized chaos of moving with three children, two of whom had opinions about the process and one of whom was carried through the door in the carrier with the same focused attention
Tristan's POVThe renovation on the house had started in October.I had hired a contractor in the specific way I hired anyone for a task that mattered, by identifying the criteria that constituted doing the job correctly, researching who met those criteria, and selecting based on evidence rather than proximity or convenience. The contractor was a woman named Adunola who had been doing residential work in the city for fourteen years and who had looked at the house on the first visit with the same systematic attention I brought to it and had produced a renovation plan that addressed the actual problems rather than the cosmetic ones.She said: the bones are good. The work is about revealing what is there rather than changing what is there.I had agreed with this characterization.The renovation would take four months. The family would move in the spring, which aligned with the end of the academic year for the twins' care program and the specific window in Elena's publishing schedule that
The looking took six months.This was longer than I had expected and exactly as long as Tristan had predicted, which he had said on the first Saturday of the search when we came home from the third house and I had said I thought we would find something quickly and he had said: six months, minimum, based on the specific requirements.I had said: what specific requirements.He had listed them.The list had seventeen items.I had looked at the list and thought about the nap schedule and understood that this was simply how he approached things that mattered, with the specificity that produced good outcomes rather than fast ones, and I had accepted the six months as the accurate estimate.The requirements were divided into non-negotiables and strong preferences, which was a distinction he had drawn in the first week and which I had found useful because it allowed us to have a framework for the inevitable moments when a house had some things and not others and we needed to determine what th
Marco's POVI called Elena from my car in the studio parking lot because I needed to be somewhere I could speak plainly without managing the volume of my voice.She picked up before the second ring.I told her I had received the photographs. I told her not to sign anything or return the folder to S
Elena's POVThe scheduling notice came through HR on a Wednesday, the same official format as the first one, the same careful bureaucratic language about conflict resolution procedures and the importance of completing the program requirements in a timely manner. A joint session this time. Both part
Elena's POVMy father called on a Wednesday morning while I was at the drafting table working on a cross-section of the inner ear.I saw his name on the screen and felt the familiar bracing sensation his calls always produced in me. Not dread exactly. More the specific preparation required for a con
Elena's POVThe hearing room was on the second floor of the administrative wing, a space used for board meetings and formal reviews, rectangular and deliberately neutral. A long table at the front for the panel. Two chairs facing them, separated by enough distance to make the arrangement feel adver












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