Total pages in book: 52
Estimated words: 48585 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 243(@200wpm)___ 194(@250wpm)___ 162(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 48585 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 243(@200wpm)___ 194(@250wpm)___ 162(@300wpm)
“I’ll be fine on my own,” I smile politely at the guard. “You can wait in the car, thank you.”
He nods and returns to the driver’s seat of the waiting vehicle parked right out in front of the entrance. I take a deep breath and step inside to check in.
The doctor is a kind older man with wise eyes and deep wrinkles on his forehead. He looks like he’s delivered a lot of babies throughout his career, and he has a comfortable bedside manner that puts me instantly at ease.
“Looks like everything is progressing nicely,” he says. “You should start seeing a little baby bump coming along soon, and you might have felt a bit more tired than usual. Any nausea or lightheadedness?”
“No,” I shake my head.
He looks over the medical history form that I filled out at the registration desk and nods silently a few times to himself. “You look like a very healthy young woman, so just keep yourself away from any major stress, stay hydrated, and this should be a nice, uneventful pregnancy.”
I can’t help but let out a little snort of sarcastic amusement at the thought of keeping things “low stress”. He looks up at me with a questioning expression, and I quickly brush off my reaction. “So, when will I be able to feel the baby move?”
“Not for a little while still,” he says, forgetting about my snort. “Unless you have a real athlete in there, it can take a few months.”
“Months?”
“Don’t worry,” he laughs good-naturedly as he pats the top of my shoulder. “I’m sure you’ll be feeling those pesky little kicks in no time. I’ll send in the nurse with your paperwork and a prenatal vitamin prescription, and then you’re free to go.”
“Thank you, Doctor.”
After he leaves, I get dressed and think about being a mother, and about Luciano being a father and my partner. I close my eyes for a second, place my hand over my stomach, and picture Luc standing at the altar. Maybe one day, that vision will come true.
But just as I’m about to open my eyes and leave the room, the door bursts open and the one person who I would never expect to see comes rushing inside.
“Dad?” I ask as my father runs into the room. “What are you doing here? How did you even get in here? How did you know I was here?”
“Valentina, you need to come with me right now!” he says in a hushed, panicked voice.
“What? Why?”
He grabs my arm and pulls me toward the door, but something doesn’t feel right.
“Dad, what’s going on?”
His voice is quiet, which means nothing since he never raises his voice. My father has always exerted a sort of quiet authority, even in times where overt aggression might be more warranted.
“You aren’t safe here, Valentina. You need to come with me now out the back door.”
In a moment of quick indecision, I go with my father. I can already tell that in hindsight, I’ll regret this decision. I should be listening to my instincts, which are screaming at me in my head, warning me that something isn’t right about all of this. It doesn’t add up that my father is here, that he even knew where I was after not having reached out to me at all until now. The guilt-ridden look in his eyes should have been my first clue not to follow him.
The nurse looks flustered and confused in the hallway as we race past her. But it isn’t until my father has his hand on the back door of the building that I start to really question what is going on. By that point, it’s already too late.
It’s as if it all happens at once, time stands still, and I can simultaneously picture the bodyguard waiting in his car out front, the nurse realizing that I left without checking out, and the display of moral weakness and internal desperation on my father’s part. He pushes open the back door, and I see a black tinted car sitting there waiting.
“I’m sorry, Valentina,” my father instantly cries out. “I’m so sorry. I didn’t have a choice. I had to do it, or he said that he would kill you. Please forgive me. He left me no other choice.”
For a second, everything is a blur. I think that’s because I don’t want to see the back window of the car roll down and Leonardo sitting inside the car. My father’s betrayal, coupled with the threats from Leonardo Conti endangering me and my unborn child, is something I can’t bring myself to acknowledge. I simply can’t believe that he’s done this to me again. I thought he would feel guilty for arranging my marriage to Leonardo in the first place and prioritizing his business survival over personal happiness. Maybe he has regret over that, but it hasn’t stopped him from selling me out yet again.