MasukChapter two: The intended parents
Celyne POV
Clara’s reaction is immediate.
“Are you insane? Or are you drunk?” she explodes, pacing across the marble floor like a storm in designer silk. “Tell me this is shock talking. Tell me you’re not actually planning to risk your life for strangers.”
I don’t flinch.
“I already made the calls last night,” I say quietly. “I have an appointment at a fertility clinic in three hours.”
Her head snaps toward me. “You what?”
“I’m going.”
Clara lets out a sharp, disbelieving laugh. “Celyne, you were diagnosed a week ago.”
“I know.”
“You have stage two ovarian cancer.” Her voice cracks around the word. “Your body needs immediate treatment, not hormones. Not pregnancy.”
I grip the edge of the counter to steady myself. “They’re taking my uterus within the year.”
“And that means you gamble with the months you have left before surgery?” she fires back. “You don’t even know if you’re fit to carry a child right now! What if something happens along the way to you or the baby?”
She continued, “Have you thought about that?”
“I’ll find out today.”
Her anger only grows.
“You think this is poetic?” she demands. “You think this is some kind of dramatic final chapter where you prove something to the universe?”
I don’t answer.
Her eyes narrow.
“Or is this about Alexander?”
The name slices through me.
Clara doesn’t stop.
“If you think getting pregnant for someone else is some twisted way to prove a point to Alexander Hale and his family, then you are clearly stupid.”
The word lands harder than malignant ever did.
Stupid.
I stare at her, hurt flaring behind my ribs. I don’t defend myself. I don’t explain that this has nothing to do with Alexander’s betrayal, or the humiliation of walking away from him five years ago while his family looked at me like I was disposable.
I just walk away.
“Celyne—” she calls, but I don’t turn back.
The fertility clinic smells like antiseptic and expensive hope.
White walls. Soft music. Women with hopeful eyes sitting beside men who look terrified and reverent all at once.
A nurse calls my name.
“Ms. Celyne?”
I rise.
Inside the doctor’s office, I’m handed a stack of documents. Consent forms. Risk acknowledgments. Liability waivers that read like quiet warnings.
Full-body tests follow.
Blood drawn.
Ultrasound.
Hormone panels.
A cold wand pressing against a part of me that soon won’t exist.
I stare at the ceiling while machines hum.
Later, the doctor sits across from me, hands folded.
“We ran your results,” he says carefully. “The cancer is localized, but pregnancy will accelerate hormonal activity.”
“I know.”
“It is not medically advisable for you to carry a child in your condition.”
“I know.”
He studies me.
“You were referred by someone very close to me,” he continues slowly. “That is the only reason I am even entertaining this discussion.”
I swallow.
“I am asking you not to deprive me of this,” I whisper. “One chance. One time before it’s gone.”
He leans back.
“Delaying treatment can worsen your prognosis. I hope you’re aware of that.”
“I don’t care.”
His gaze sharpens. “You should.”
“As long as it doesn’t affect the baby.”
Silence stretches between us.
Finally, he exhales.
“I will allow the process to begin,” he says. “But you will return in one month for observation. If there are complications, we stop.”
Relief floods me so violently I almost cry.
“Thank you.”
“Go home,” he adds. “And think carefully. You still have time to change your mind.”
I don’t intend to.
The weeks that follow are torture.
Every morning I wake with fear lodged in my throat.
What if it doesn’t work?
What if it does?
I notice small changes—fatigue that feels different from illness. A strange tenderness in my chest. A faint wave of nausea that makes Clara watch me with worried eyes.
She doesn’t bring up Alexander again.
But the silence between us holds his name.
At night, I press my hand to my stomach and whisper apologies to a future I’m building recklessly.
One month later, I sit on the edge of an examination bed while a nurse draws blood again.
The wait is worse this time.
The doctor returns with a file.
He doesn’t smile.
“You’re one week along,” he says.
For a second, I don’t understand.
Then it hits me.
Pregnant.
I stare down at my stomach like it’s something sacred.
I should feel joy.
I should feel triumph.
Instead, I feel… suspended.
“Your levels are stable for now,” he continues. “But we need to monitor you closely.”
I nod absently, still holding my abdomen.
“There’s something else,” he says gently. “The intended parents are here today. They’d like to meet you.”
My heart stutters.
“Today?”
“Yes.”
He rises. “Stay here. I’ll have the nurse call you shortly.”
An hour later, a knock sounds against the door.
“Ms. Celyne?” the nurse says softly. “They’re ready.”
My legs feel unsteady as I follow her down the corridor.
Every step echoes.
We stop outside a private consultation room.
The nurse opens the door.
And the world tilts.
Alexander Hale stands by the window, sunlight cutting sharp lines across his impossibly familiar face.
Tall.
Immaculate.
Controlled.
Beside him stands a woman in a tailored ivory suit, elegant and composed. Her dark hair falls perfectly over one shoulder.
“Elara Wynn,” the nurse says warmly. “Mr. and Mrs. Hale—your intended parents.”
Mrs.
The word slams into my chest.
Alexander turns slowly.
Our eyes meet.
Recognition flares first.
Then shock.
Then something darker.
Elara’s manicured hand slides possessively into the crook of his arm as she smiles at me politely.
“So,” she says, voice smooth and curious, “you’re our surrogate. What a small world.”
And in that moment, I realize the universe has a cruel sense of humor.
Because the child growing inside me—
Is Alexander’s.
The same Alexander.
Chapter five- A trap?Alexander’s POV“What exactly is going on here?”Elara’s voice cuts through the silence like glass shattering on marble.I don’t answer.I can’t.The name still echoes in my head like a gunshot.Celyne.Of all the people in the world… how is it her?My fingers remain locked together on the desk as I stare blankly ahead, but my mind is racing with a thousand questions I cannot answer.Across the office, Elara begins pacing slowly, her heels clicking sharply against the polished floor.“How is Celyne suddenly a surrogate at our hospital after disappearing for five years?” she continues, her voice tightening with irritation. “And how convenient that she just happens to be carrying our child.”Her words hang in the air.Our child.The phrase feels strange… foreign.I still haven’t processed it.I had walked into that clinic expecting a routine check. A quick confirmation that the surrogate agency had finally matched us with someone suitable.Instead I walked into a g
Chapter four: My lossesCelyne POVThe blood wouldn’t stop.By the time I reached the hospital, my vision had already begun to blur. Nurses rushed toward me the moment they saw the state I was in. Their voices overlapped as they guided me onto a stretcher.“Get the doctor.”“She’s losing a lot of blood.”“How far along is the pregnancy?”My fingers trembled as I clutched the edge of the sheet.“I… I don’t know,” I whispered weakly.Everything felt distant after that.The bright hospital lights above me streaked into white lines as they wheeled me down the corridor. Somewhere in the haze of panic, I remember hearing Alexander’s voice.Sharp. Urgent.“Celyne!”His hand gripped mine tightly.“I’m here,” he said.But fear had already swallowed me whole.When I woke up, the room was silent.A steady beeping from the monitor filled the air.For a moment, I didn’t remember why I was there. Then my hand moved instinctively to my stomach.Flat.Empty.The door opened quietly and the doctor ste
Chapter three: Love at first sight Celyne Pov“Alexander…?”The name leaves my lips before I can stop it.For a moment, no one moves.Alexander’s eyes lock onto mine, and the world seems to collapse into that single point of recognition. The same steel-gray gaze that once softened when he looked at me now stares back in disbelief.His jaw tightens.Elara’s fingers curl possessively around his arm.“What did you just say?” she asks, her voice still smooth but also edged with recognition.My heart begins to pound violently against my ribs.Alexander opens his mouth—perhaps to speak, perhaps to ask a thousand questions—but the panic flooding my veins is louder than anything he might say.I can’t breathe.I can’t stay here.Before either of them can move, I spin around.“I’m sorry,” I blurt out to no one in particular, my voice shaking.Then I run.The hallway stretches endlessly as I rush past nurses and patients, my pulse roaring in my ears. My hands tremble so badly I almost slam into
Chapter two: The intended parents Celyne POVClara’s reaction is immediate.“Are you insane? Or are you drunk?” she explodes, pacing across the marble floor like a storm in designer silk. “Tell me this is shock talking. Tell me you’re not actually planning to risk your life for strangers.”I don’t flinch.“I already made the calls last night,” I say quietly. “I have an appointment at a fertility clinic in three hours.”Her head snaps toward me. “You what?”“I’m going.”Clara lets out a sharp, disbelieving laugh. “Celyne, you were diagnosed a week ago.”“I know.”“You have stage two ovarian cancer.” Her voice cracks around the word. “Your body needs immediate treatment, not hormones. Not pregnancy.”I grip the edge of the counter to steady myself. “They’re taking my uterus within the year.”“And that means you gamble with the months you have left before surgery?” she fires back. “You don’t even know if you’re fit to carry a child right now! What if something happens along the way to y
Chapter one: A surrogate mother Clara povThe paper trembles in my hand.Not because of the cold.Not because of the wind slicing through the quiet Paris evening.But because of the word printed in bold across the top of the page.Malignant.The doctor had said it gently. Too gently.“Stage two ovarian cancer, Ms. Celyne. We caught it early, but your uterus will likely need to be removed within the year and you need to start treatment immediately to avoid it from worsening.”A tear slips down my cheek, warm against the winter air. Then another. And another. They fall soundlessly onto the diagnosis sheet like quiet confessions.I don’t remember leaving the hospital.I don’t remember how I ended up walking.But I am walking now.Endlessly.The streets of Paris blur around me—golden lamps reflecting off wet pavement, the distant hum of traffic, laughter spilling from cafés. Life moving forward. People living.And I am standing still inside a sentence that has already decided my future.







