When the CEO Laughed at His Bleeding Pregnant Wife, Her Father Arrived-kieutrinh

Avery Whitmore did not fall when Brooke Keating punched her in the hospital hallway.

That was the part the nurse would remember first.

Not Grant Whitmore’s laugh.

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Not Brooke’s hand snapping forward.

Not even the little red line that opened at the corner of Avery’s mouth.

The nurse would remember that Avery, eight months pregnant and barefoot on the polished floor outside OB triage, stayed standing.

The hallway smelled like antiseptic, old coffee, and wet coats from the waiting room downstairs.

The fluorescent lights made everyone look paler than they were.

Avery had come to Mercy General because her daughter had gone quiet inside her for too long that morning.

At 2:14 p.m., the hospital intake desk printed her plastic wristband.

At 2:17 p.m., the nurse told her they were going to take her upstairs for monitoring.

At 2:19 p.m., Brooke Keating hit her.

The sound was not loud.

It was clean.

A flat crack that made the air leave the hallway before anyone had time to pretend they had not seen it.

Avery took one slow step back and put both hands over her stomach.

Her baby did not move for three seconds.

Three seconds can be longer than a whole marriage when you are waiting for proof that your child is still with you.

Then the baby pressed once under her ribs.

Avery breathed.

Grant laughed.

He stood beneath the donor plaque that read WHITMORE WOMEN’S HEALTH WING, one hand in his charcoal suit pocket and the other resting on Brooke’s lower back.

Grant Whitmore knew how to look harmless.

That was one of his gifts.

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