Seven Months Pregnant, None of the Triplets Were Mine
Mrs. Sterling, I still suggest fetal reduction.
The doctor placed the report on the desk, his face grave. The triplets are stable for now, but your body is already under extreme pressure. If you insist on carrying all three to term, the risk to you will be very high.
Before I could speak, Julian Sterling rejected it.
No reduction.
The doctor looked at him. Mr. Sterling, your wifes condition
I said no. Julians voice was calm, but there was no room for discussion. All three children must be born safely.
My fingers tightened around the edge of my dress.
For a second, my throat tightened. He must have loved the little ones so deeply that he could not bear to lose even one of them.
After a year of injections, failed transfers, bleeding, vomiting, and sleepless nights, I had finally given him the children we had both prayed for. More than once, I had almost collapsed in the fertility clinic. More than once, Julian had held my hand and told me that once the babies were born, everything would be worth it.
So when he refused the doctors suggestion without hesitation, I thought it was because he treasured them as much as I did.
The doctor frowned. Mr. Sterling, triplet pregnancy is not the same as an ordinary pregnancy. Mrs. Sterlings recent indicators are not good. We need to prioritize her safety too.
Julian finally turned to look at me.
His gaze softened, and he took my hand. Amelia has suffered so much for these babies. I wont let her suffering be wasted.
That sentence nearly broke me.
I lowered my head, afraid he would see the tears in my eyes. At that moment, I still believed I was carrying our children. I still believed the pain in my body had meaning.
After the checkup, the doctor asked Julian to stay behind to discuss the next treatment plan. I went to the VIP lounge to rest, but my stomach felt tight, and I could not sit still for long. One of the babies kicked hard under my ribs. I held the wall and walked slowly toward the nurses station to ask for warm water.
Before I reached the corner, I heard Julians name.
Julian, youre ruthless, a man said with a laugh. One wife, three babies, three mothers. You really solved everyones problem at once.
My steps stopped.
Another man joked, Does Amelia still think the triplets are hers?
Inside the room, someone laughed.
Then I heard Julians voice.
She doesnt need to know.
The blood in my body seemed to freeze.
I pressed one hand against the wall. For a moment, I thought I had misheard. Maybe they were talking about someone else. Maybe there was another Amelia, another wife, another pregnancy.
But the next sentence shattered that hope.
Vanessa is the real winner, someone said. Her baby gets the best position, right? After all, shes the one you actually care about.
Vanessa Lane.
Julians secretary. The woman who answered his private calls, followed him on every business trip, and wore a necklace I once saw in Julians drawer before it disappeared.
Another voice said, And Celestes embryo survived after all these years. Julian, you really are loyal to your dead first love.
Celeste Gray.
The name had followed me through my entire marriage like a ghost. Everyone in Julians circle knew he had loved Celeste first. Even after she died, her picture remained in his mothers house, and her birthday remained marked on Julians calendar.
Someone else added, Miranda Crosss family saved Sterling Biotech last year. Giving her a child is cheaper than giving her shares.
They all laughed.
My stomach cramped suddenly. I gripped the wall so hard my nails bent.
Vanessa. Celeste. Miranda.
Three babies. Three mothers.
And me?
I was the woman whose body had carried them.
A man lowered his voice. What if Amelia finds out?
Julian did not hesitate. She wont. Even if she does, she loves me too much to do anything before the babies are born.
The room went quiet for a second, then someone whistled. Confident.
Julian gave a low laugh. She waited three years to become Mrs. Sterling. She wont give that up.
My mouth filled with the taste of blood. Only then did I realize I had bitten my tongue.
A nurse came around the corner and saw me. Mrs. Sterling? Are you all right?
The voices inside the room stopped.
I forced myself to straighten. My face felt numb, but somehow I still managed to smile. Im fine. I just felt a little dizzy.
When Julian came out a few minutes later, he looked exactly the same as before. Calm. Gentle. Perfect.
He placed a hand on my back. Why did you walk around by yourself? Are the babies moving too much?
Not are you in pain. Not are you scared. Only the babies.
I looked at him and said softly, Theyre fine. The doctor said theyre stable.
Julians expression relaxed.
That tiny reaction told me more than all the words I had just overheard.
That evening, I returned to the Sterling mansion and sat alone in the nursery. Three cribs stood beneath the window. Three sets of baby clothes lay folded in the drawers. Three tiny blankets waited for children I had once thought would call me Mom.
I did not smash anything. I did not scream. I did not ask Julian why he had done this to me.
I only sat there until the room turned dark.
At nine oclock, my phone rang.
It was the hospital.
The doctors voice sounded lower than it had in the morning. Mrs. Sterling, I need you to come back as soon as possible. It would be best if your husband came with you.
My fingers tightened around the phone. What happened?
He hesitated. The silence lasted long enough for my heartbeat to turn loud in my ears.
Some of your test results are very abnormal, he said. I dont want to frighten you over the phone, but there may be something serious about your condition.
Tell me.
Another pause.
Then the doctor said, Mrs. Sterling, there is a strong possibility that you have cancer.
I went back to the hospital alone the next morning.
Julian had already left before breakfast ended. Vanessa called him twice while he was at the table, and by the second call, he had stopped pretending to listen to me. Before leaving, he only reminded me not to go anywhere alone because the babies were too important now.
The babies.
That was all he saw when he looked at me.
At the hospital, the doctor closed the office door before he spoke. The report lay open on his desk, and the red-marked numbers on the page looked harsher in daylight.
Mrs. Sterling, we still need further pathology to confirm the final diagnosis, but the indicators are not optimistic. The suspected malignancy is serious, and your pregnancy is making your condition more complicated.
I looked at the report without touching it. If I continue carrying the triplets, what happens?
The doctors expression tightened. Your body is already under severe strain. If treatment is delayed until full-term delivery, you may miss the best window.
How long do I have to decide?
Days, he said. Not months.
The answer should have frightened me, but instead it made everything painfully clear.
The children were not mine. Julian knew they were not mine. Everyone around him knew. They had used my body, my love, and my desperation for a family, then waited for me to deliver three gifts to three other women.
Now even my illness refused to give them time.
The doctor softened his voice. You should bring your husband next time. This is not something you should face alone.
I almost laughed.
If Julian stood in this office, he would not ask whether I could survive. He would ask how long I could hold on.
Can I make the medical decision myself? I asked.
Legally, yes. But given the pregnancy and your family status, it may become complicated if your husband objects. He paused. You should have legal support.
I understand.
The doctor watched me for a moment, probably waiting for me to cry. I did not. I thanked him, took a copy of the report, and left through the side entrance.
By the time I returned to the mansion, Julians car was parked beneath the old magnolia tree.
At first, I thought he had come home early.
Then I saw the fogged windows.
The car moved once, slow and heavy, then again.
I stopped at the stairs.
Through the narrow gap in the rear window, Vanessas breathless laugh slipped into the cold air. It was soft, sticky, shameless. A second later, I heard Julians voice, low and hoarse in a way I had not heard from him in years.
I should have looked away.
Instead, I went upstairs and stood behind the second-floor curtain.
From that angle, I could see into the back seat.
Vanessa was sitting on Julians lap, her pale blouse half-unbuttoned, one strap slipping down her shoulder. Julians suit jacket had fallen to the floor of the car, his tie hung loose against his open collar, and his hands were locked around her waist, pulling her down against him in a rhythm that made the car shudder beneath the magnolia tree.
Her hair brushed his jaw. His mouth was on her neck.
The man who had barely touched me since I became pregnant was holding her as if he could not bear even an inch of distance between them.
Vanessa tilted her head back, smiling through uneven breaths. She looked awful yesterday. Are you sure she can last until my baby is born?
Julians hand tightened on her waist.
She will.
What if the doctor keeps pushing for reduction?
I wont allow it.
Vanessa gave a pleased little laugh and bent closer, her lips almost touching his. You really wont let anything happen to him?
No. Julians voice softened. Your child will be born safely. I promised you.
Then he kissed her.
Not carelessly. Not like a mistake made in a moment of weakness. He kissed her with patience, hunger, and familiarity, as if this had happened too many times to count.
Vanessas fingers slid into his hair. And after hes born?
Julian answered against her mouth. Hell be yours.
And Amelia?
There was a pause.
Then Julian said, Shell be taken care of.
Vanessa laughed again, lower this time. You make her sound like a servant retiring after finishing a job.
Julian did not deny it.
The car moved again beneath the magnolia tree.
I let the curtain fall from my hand.
So that was why he had refused the doctor so firmly. Not because he loved the little ones as our children. Not because he could not bear to lose a single life connected to me.
He had been protecting Vanessas child.
Downstairs, my husband was making love to the woman whose baby he had placed inside my body. Upstairs, I stood with the doctors cancer report folded in my coat pocket, finally understanding that if I died, Julian would only care whether I lasted long enough to deliver.
I did not go downstairs. I did not knock on the car window. I did not throw the report in Julians face and ask if my life had ever meant anything to him.
That kind of scene belonged to a woman who still wanted an answer.
I no longer did.
I went back to the bedroom, locked the door, and took out the phone I had not used in months.
My brother, Luca Hart, had warned me before the wedding that Julian Sterling was not a man who loved without calculation. I had accused him of being cruel. I had said he did not understand Julian. I had cut him off for three years because I chose my husband over my family.
Now I finally understood who had loved me enough to tell the truth.
The call connected almost immediately.
Luca did not speak first.
I looked at the closed curtain, at the faint shadow of Julians car beyond it, and said only one sentence.
Luca, Ive decided. Im coming home.
Luca wanted to bring me home that night.
I refused.
Not because I could not leave. Luca Hart was the current head of Hart Capital. If I asked, he could have sent a helicopter to the Sterling mansion, put me in it, and dared Julian to stop him.
But leaving was not enough.
If I walked out with nothing but a cancer report and overheard words, Julian would still have the clinic records, the consent forms, the custody drafts, and every lawyer Sterling money could buy. By morning, he could turn me from a victim into a jealous, unstable wife who destroyed three children that were never legally mine.
I needed proof.
I needed his signature.
I needed the documents that would make sure when I left, he could chase me, hate me, sue me, or regret me, but he could not drag me back into his version of the story.
So I asked Luca for seven days.
He went silent for a long time. When he spoke again, his voice was colder than I remembered. Seven days. Not one more.
By dawn, he had arranged a private lawyer, a medical team outside Julians network, a safe place to stay, and a driver who had never worked for the Sterling family. He also reminded me of something I had spent three years trying to forget.
Before I was Mrs. Sterling, I was Amelia Hart.
The Harts had built hospitals, medical foundations, and investment funds long before Sterling Biotech existed. My parents had died in a medical charity plane crash when I was twenty-two, and after that, Luca became both brother and father, too protective, too cold, too certain that he knew what was best for me. I had mistaken his fear for control. Julian had mistaken my loneliness for weakness.
So I became the wife Julian thought I was.
At breakfast, I drank the pregnancy tonic Julians mother had sent, even though the smell made my stomach turn. When Julian asked if the babies had moved well in the night, I lowered my eyes and said yes. When Vanessa arrived with work documents and stood too close to him, I pretended not to notice.
Vanessa looked at my stomach with a softness that almost seemed maternal.
Mrs. Sterling, you look tired, she said. Triplets must be difficult.
Julian glanced at me. Amelia is strong.
Vanessa smiled. Of course. I only admire her.
I held the spoon and smiled back.
She admired me the way a thief admired a locked box that was already in her hands.
After lunch, I told Julian I wanted to organize the nursery while I still had energy. He seemed pleased. Anything connected to the babies made him easier to handle.
Dont tire yourself, he said. If you need anything, ask Vanessa to arrange it.
Vanessas smile deepened.
I said softly, All right.
That afternoon, while the housekeeper sorted baby clothes downstairs and Julian took a video call in the garden room, I entered his study.
The password had changed.
Our wedding date no longer worked. My birthday no longer worked. The day our first embryo transfer succeeded no longer worked.
I stood outside the locked door for a few seconds, then entered Vanessas birthday.
The lock clicked open.
There was no fresh pain anymore. Some humiliations were so complete that they stopped feeling like wounds and became evidence.
Lucas lawyer had told me exactly what to look for: clinic files, embryo contracts, custody arrangements, anything tying Julian, Sterling Biotech, and the fertility center together.
Julian kept his public documents in the desk drawers. The real files were stored on the computer under a folder named Project Continuity.
I opened it.
The first file was the embryo transfer record.
Embryo A: intended mother, Vanessa Lane.
Embryo B: intended mother, Celeste Gray.
Embryo C: intended mother, Miranda Cross.
Julian Sterling was listed as the paternal genetic contributor for all three.
My name appeared on a separate line.
Gestational carrier.
I stared at those two words for a long moment.
A year of injections. A year of failed transfers. A year of Julian telling me not to give up, because our family was waiting for us.
There had never been an our.
There had only been his plan.
I photographed every page with the phone Luca had sent me. Then I opened the next folder.
Post-Birth Transfer Arrangement.
The babies had not even been born, but their futures had already been divided.
Baby A would be transferred to Vanessa Lane through a private guardianship structure. Baby B would be registered under the Gray family foundation as Celeste Grays preserved genetic heir. Baby C would be tied to Miranda Cross through a family medical trust connected to Sterling Biotechs investment agreement.
My name did not appear in any of the custody drafts. Not as mother. Not as guardian. Not even as the woman who had carried them.
I sent the files to Lucas lawyer.
The reply came quickly.
Enough to destroy him. Now get his signature.
I looked at the three embryo records on the screen. Vanessa Lane. Celeste Gray. Miranda Cross.
Three women. Three children. My body.
Then I typed another message.
Prepare four packages for me. One for Vanessa, one for Miranda, one for Helena Gray, and one for Julian.
The lawyer replied, What do you want inside?
I stared at the words gestational carrier printed beside my name.
Then I typed back: Everything they gave me. I want each mother to receive her own dead child.
For a long moment, there was no reply.
Then the lawyer sent only one word.
Understood.
I cleared the computer history, closed the folder, and left the study exactly as I had found it.
That evening, Julian came to the nursery and found me folding a white blanket. For a moment, he looked almost satisfied, as if my obedience had confirmed his judgment of me.
Youve been calmer today, he said.
I thought about what you said. I smoothed the blanket carefully. Ive suffered so much already. I should at least make sure everything is ready.
His expression softened.
He thought I meant the babies.
I meant my escape.
The nursery had three cribs, three mobiles, and three drawers filled with clothes I had washed by hand.
I had once thought this room was the proof that my pain would have an ending. Every blanket, every bottle, every tiny pair of socks had been chosen during the months when I still believed the triplets were mine.
Now I opened the drawers with cold hands and found what Julian had hidden beneath my preparations.
The first sealed packet was tucked under a stack of newborn clothes.
Baby A Vanessa Lane.
The second packet was hidden beneath the blankets in the middle crib.
Baby B Celeste Gray.
The third was placed behind the diapers in the last drawer.
Baby C Miranda Cross.
Each packet contained a birth plan, preliminary custody papers, and a hospital bracelet marked with a private transfer code. The arrangements were neat, legal-looking, and cruel in the way only rich peoples cruelty could be: clean enough to pretend it was not violence.
I put the packets back exactly where I had found them.
When Julian entered the nursery, I was sitting on the carpet with my head lowered.
Amelia? His steps quickened. Whats wrong?
I wiped my face before turning around, but I let him see that I had been crying.
His first glance went to my stomach.
Are you in pain? Are the babies moving strangely?
There it was again.
The babies first. The babies always.
I shook my head. No. I just suddenly felt scared. The due date is getting closer, and the doctor keeps saying triplets are dangerous.
Julian relaxed.
He sat beside me, though carefully, as if afraid the carpet might wrinkle his suit. Dont scare yourself. Youve done very well. Hold on a little longer. Once the babies are born, everything will be worth it.
I almost asked him, worth it for whom?
For Vanessa, who waited for her son? For Miranda, whose family had bought a place in Julians bloodline? For the Gray family, who wanted Celestes dead love story continued through my body?
Instead, I lowered my eyes and nodded.
Julian placed his hand on my stomach. Were they active today?
Yes.
Any bleeding?
No.
Did the doctor mention their weight?
Theyre stable.
Only then did his fingers loosen.
I watched his face while he asked those questions. He looked serious, even worried, but not for me. He was checking on valuable property before delivery.
That made the next part easier.
The hospital called again, I said softly. Because the pregnancy is high-risk, they need updated insurance and medical authorization forms. Some require your signature as my spouse.
Julian frowned. Give them to Vanessa. Shell handle it.
They said the hospital needs the original signatures before my next appointment. I paused, then added, The doctor said if something happens suddenly, they may not be able to act fast without them.
His expression changed slightly.
Something happening to me did not frighten him. Something happening before the babies were safely born did.
Where are the forms? he asked.
I reached for the folder on the small table beside the rocking chair.
Lucas lawyer had arranged the stack carefully. The first few pages were harmless hospital forms. The pages after that were written in dense legal language, buried between insurance clauses and medical-risk terms.
Prenatal risk acknowledgment.
Emergency treatment consent.
Spousal authorization for medical autonomy.
Evidence preservation authorization.
Asset separation terms.
Divorce agreement.
Julian took the folder from me. Before he reached the middle of the stack, his phone lit up.
Vanessa.
His face softened immediately.
He answered with one hand and signed with the other.
Yes, I saw the message, he said into the phone. Dont worry.
His pen moved across the pages.
Julian Sterling.
Again.
Julian Sterling.
Again.
He did not read. He did not ask. He did not imagine that the woman sitting beside him with swollen ankles, pale lips, and a trembling voice had already stopped loving him.
The pen barely paused over the pages Lucas lawyer had hidden between the insurance forms. If Julian had slowed down for even ten seconds, he would have seen the words divorce agreement printed above the signature line.
But Vanessa said something through the phone, soft enough that I could not hear it, and Julians attention left the room entirely.
When the last page was signed, he capped the pen and placed the folder back on the table.
Submit them tomorrow, he said. And dont think too much. Stress is bad for the babies.
The babies.
Even after signing away his marriage, he still did not look at me long enough to see the truth.
He stood and left the nursery, Vanessas voice still faintly leaking from the phone.
Only after the door closed did I open the folder again.
His signature sat at the bottom of the divorce agreement, dark and clean.
For three years, Julian had believed I would never leave him.
For seven months, he had believed I would protect the triplets at any cost.
And just now, without reading a single word, he had signed away the wife he thought would never escape.
The next evening, Sterling Biotechs private celebration banquet appeared all over the group chat.
Julian had not invited me. He had not even mentioned it. In his mind, I was too pregnant to attend, too weak to ask questions, and too obedient to go anywhere without permission.
That was fine.
By the time the first photos appeared, I was already checked into a private hospital under a different name.
The banquet was held in a luxury hotel owned by the Sterling family. Publicly, it was a celebration of Sterling Biotechs newest medical partnership. The photos showed crystal lights, white flowers, champagne towers, and investors smiling beneath the company logo.
Vanessa stood beside Julian in a pale gold dress.
Miranda Cross appeared in the next photo, holding a glass of champagne as if Sterling Biotech already belonged partly to her. Not far from them stood Helena Gray, Celestes aunt and the representative of the Gray family foundation. She wore black pearls and a cold smile.
Three women connected to three babies.
And Julian stood among them like a man receiving congratulations.
A nurse entered my room to check my blood pressure. She glanced at my phone, then quickly looked away.
You can still wait for further confirmation, she said gently. But waiting carries risk.
I know.
The procedure is dangerous at this stage.
I know that too.
My voice was calmer than hers.
The latest test results had worsened faster than expected. The doctor could not promise that immediate treatment would save me, but his warning was clear: if I forced my body to carry the triplets any longer, I might lose the chance to fight at all.
Julian wanted me to last until delivery.
I wanted to live.
At eight forty-three, a video appeared in the group chat.
It was taken inside a private VIP room behind the banquet hall. The public speeches were over. The respectable guests had left. Julians closest friends sat around a long table with champagne, cards, and desserts scattered between them.
Someone laughed. Since tonight is such a good day, lets make it more exciting. Which baby comes out first?
Another person immediately said, I bet on Celestes. Come on, Julian waited this many years to keep her bloodline. Fate has to favor her.
Miranda smiled in the video. Fate is unreliable. Money is not. Ill bet fifty million on mine.
The room burst into laughter.
Vanessa leaned against Julians shoulder and said lazily, Then Ill bet on my son. Julian always gives me the best.
Everyone began teasing them.
Julian did not push her away.
He lifted his glass and said, One hundred million. Vanessas child will be first.
I watched the video from the hospital bed with one hand resting on the curve of my stomach.
Someone joked that my belly looked terrifyingly large. Another said it was lucky I was quiet and obedient, because any other woman might have caused trouble by now. A man whose face I barely remembered laughed and called me Sterling Biotechs most successful incubator.
Vanessa pretended to scold him, but her eyes were smiling.
She only needs to last a little longer, she said. After that, everyone gets what they want.
Julians answer was steady.
She will.
The video ended in laughter.
For a while, I stared at the dark screen. I did not feel surprised anymore. I only felt strangely distant, as if I were watching people discuss the fate of a woman who had already died.
Then I downloaded the video before anyone could delete it and sent it directly to Lucas lawyer.
Use this as evidence.
The reply came less than a minute later.
Received. Everything is ready.
I turned off the phone and placed it beside the bed.
A few minutes later, the nurse knocked and came in.
Mrs. Hart, she said softly, the operating room is ready.
I looked down at my stomach for the last time.
Lets go.
The procedure began shortly after nine.
The pain was worse than I had imagined, but I did not beg them to stop. There were white lights above me, gloved hands, the doctors low instructions, and the nurse wiping sweat from my face. At one point, I tasted blood in my mouth and realized I had bitten down too hard.
I thought of Julian raising his glass.
I thought of Vanessa smiling against his shoulder.
I thought of the word gestational carrier printed beside my name.
When I opened my eyes again, the room was dim.
My stomach was no longer heavy.
The emptiness was so sudden that I could not move for several seconds. Then the pain returned, deep and raw, and with it came the memory of what I had chosen.
A nurse checked my blood pressure and adjusted the IV drip. Her movements were quiet and professional.
The procedure is over, she said. You need to rest.
I stared at the ceiling for a long moment.
I did not ask where the triplets were. I did not ask to see anything.
There was nothing left for me to see.
Before midnight, Lucas lawyer arrived with the four packages I had ordered him to prepare.
They were not ordinary gift boxes.
Three of them contained sealed medical preservation containers, each one marked with an embryo number, a hospital code, and the name of the woman who had claimed that child before it was even born.
Vanessa Lane.
Miranda Cross.
Celeste Gray.
Inside each container was the dead fetus that belonged to them.
Along with it, I placed the embryo ownership record, the custody draft, and the fetal death certificate.
Julians package was different.
His contained the divorce agreement he had signed with his own hand, my cancer report, the medical authorization form, and copies of all three death certificates.
The lawyer asked quietly, Are you sure you want them delivered to the banquet?
I looked at the frozen video on my phone: Julian raising his glass, Vanessa leaning against his shoulder, everyone laughing as they bet on which baby would be born first.
Yes, I said. Let them receive their children while theyre still celebrating.
Then I picked up the pen and wrote the senders name on every package myself.
Amelia Hart.
Not Sterling.
At the banquet, Julian was making the final toast when the VIP room door opened.
The hotel manager stepped inside first, anxious and apologetic. Behind him was a courier carrying four sealed packages.
The laughter around the table faded, but not completely. No one was afraid yet. They had not learned to be afraid of me.
Sorry to interrupt, the manager said. There are urgent deliveries requiring signatures.
Julian lowered his glass.
The courier checked the labels one by one.
Miss Vanessa Lane. Miss Miranda Cross. Mrs. Helena Gray. And Mr. Julian Sterling.
Vanessas smile froze.
Miranda frowned.
Helena Gray slowly set down her champagne glass.
Julian stared at the package placed in front of him. For the first time that night, the ease on his face disappeared.
The senders name was written clearly on the label.
Amelia Hart.
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