My Husband Framed Me After Childbirth,Now He’s Begging a Grave for Forgiveness
Plot Summary
Immediately after giving birth, Samantha is falsely accused of infidelity by her husband, Cyril, who presents a forged paternity test. Cast out while still recovering from a C-section, Samantha endures public humiliation orchestrated by Cyril and his manipulative adopted sister, Ruth, as she resolves to leave for good when the man who truly waited for her arrives.
Search Tags
- Character-Oriented: Samantha Pruitt, Cyril Sanchez, Ruth Sanchez, Cyril and Samantha, Samantha and Ruth
- Plot-Oriented: what happens to Samantha after childbirth, what happens to Cyril after framing Samantha, paternity test drama, betrayal after childbirth, husband begs for forgiveness
Character Relationships
Samantha Pruitt & Cyril Sanchez: Samantha is Cyril's wife and the mother of his child. After a decade-long wait for each other, their marriage is shattered in a single day when Cyril, influenced by his sister, falsely accuses Samantha of adultery and cruelly casts her out while she is physically vulnerable post-surgery.
Cyril Sanchez & Ruth Sanchez: Ruth is Cyril's adopted sister. She possesses an unhealthy, possessive attachment to him and masterfully manipulates him with feigned illness and emotional pleas. Cyril prioritizes Ruth's whims over his wife's well-being, revealing a deeply flawed and toxic sibling dynamic.
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The day I gave birth to my daughter, my husband threw a paternity test in my faceone that said he wasn't the father.
His voice dripped with wounded outrage.
Samantha Pruitt, I gave you everything. How could you humiliate me like this?
We're done. I want the $88,000 bride price back by the end of the month. Take your bastard and get out. I never want to see either of you again.
I held my sleeping newborn against my chest.
No tears. No begging.
Just a calm nod.
After all, I'd heard everything last nightstanding outside the delivery room, invisible, while his precious adopted sister clung to his arm.
"Cyril Sanchez," Ruth Sanchez had whined, her voice dripping with sweetness, "my dying wish is to have you all to myself for one year. Just like when we were kids. Can't you send her away? Just for a little while?"
And my husbandmy husbandhad gazed at her like she hung the moon.
"Silly girl, don't talk like that. You'll be fine after the appendectomy. And yesthis whole year, I'll be yours alone."
I'd been lying on the operating table when I heard it. Tears slid silently into my hair.
He didn't know.
The man who'd waited ten years for me was coming tomorrow.
Not just for a year. This time, I was never coming back.
1.
Ruth jabbed a manicured finger toward my daughter, gasping with theatrical horror.
"Oh my God, Cyrilno wonder she looked wrong to me. She's a bastard."
Her voice rang through the room, shrill and performative. One razor-sharp acrylic nail pressed into my baby's delicate cheek, leaving a tiny red mark.
"God, she's hideous. All wrinkled like a little old man." Ruth's lip curled. "They say daughters take after their fathers. Guess you're not picky, sisyou'll spread your legs for anyone."
Cyril's expression was ice. Distant. Like I was a stranger who'd wandered into his life by accident.
"Samantha. Since this child isn't a Sanchez, she doesn't deserve this room." His gaze swept over me without warmth. "Take your bastard and get out. Now."
I looked at Ruthdraped head to toe in Chanel couture, a single diamond on her stiletto worth more than a hundred nights in this VIP suite.
Then I looked at myself.
I'd been wheeled out of surgery alone. No nurse. No aide. Just me, still bleeding, holding my newborn with shaking arms.
A bitter laugh caught in my throat.
So that was it. My daughter and I together couldn't outweigh one pouty request from his dear little sister.
I clutched my baby and tried to move. My legs screamed in protest.
The moment I shifted, something warm and wet gushed between my thighs. The white sheets bloomed crimson beneath me.
Ruth shrieked.
"EW! Oh my God, that's disgusting! Look at all thatthat blood! It smells horrible!" She pressed a hand to her chest, staggering dramatically. "I'm going to have nightmares!"
She flung herself into Cyril's armsand with one vicious swipe, ripped the blanket off my body.
Cold air hit my skin like a slap.
I lay exposed in nothing but a postpartum diaper. The eight-centimeter incision across my abdomen was still seeping, blood trickling down to join the mess pooling beneath me.
Drip. Drip. Drip.
The door was wide open. People walked past, glancing in.
I wanted to disappear. To sink through the floor. I felt like I'd been stripped naked and thrown into the street.
"Cover me." My voice cracked with humiliation. "Please."
Something flickered across Cyril's facediscomfort, maybe. He shifted to block the doorway and pulled the blanket back over me.
"Enough. You look like we tortured you." His jaw tightened. "Someone get a wheelchair. Move her to the general ward."
Ruth's head snapped up.
"Cyril!" Her eyes went wide with disbelief. "This woman cheated on you. In ancient times, adulteresses were drowned in pig cages! She should crawl out of herelet the whole hospital see what a shameless whore looks like. Let them see what happens when you betray a Sanchez."
"But she just had surgery"
"Are you seriously defending her right now?" Ruth's voice pitched higher, cracking with accusation. "Her and her bastard?"
Tears welled in her eyes, perfectly on cue.
Cyril exhaled slowly.
And when he looked at her, his gaze softened into something unbearably tender.
"Fine, fine, fine. You're the Sanchez family's precious little princess, the only treasure in your brother's heart. Whatever you say goes."
Ruth let out a satisfied hum.
She sauntered ahead of me, clapping her hands as she broadcast my so-called "affair" to anyone within earshot.
"Everyone, come look! This shameless woman cheated on my brother and still expected him to raise another man's child! A cheap, worthless trampwatch your husbands around her, or she'll sink her claws into them too!"
The stares came from every direction, each one a blade.
Someone's temper snapped. A thermos container flew through the air and cracked against my chest, splattering hot congee across my body.
Scalding. A blister rose instantly on my exposed skin.
Cyril didn't spare me a single glance.
He stayed at Ruth's side, quietly kicking small stones out of her path, devoting himself entirely to clearing every obstacle from her way.
Watching this, my chest felt crushed beneath something waterlogged and heavysuffocating, as if I might never draw another full breath.
By the time I gritted my teeth and made it to the standard room, my legs had turned to jelly.
I collapsed onto the hospital bed, too weak to do anything but curl around my daughter.
My little one, you don't have a father anymore.
But that's okay. After tonight, we'll start over. Just the two of us.
That night, Nora burst into wails, her tiny body burning up.
I dragged myself upright and carried her to the door
Only to be blocked by the guards.
"Miss Pruitt, apologies. Without orders from Mr. Sanchez or Miss Sanchez, you're not permitted to leave this room."
I clutched my daughter tighter against my chest, my voice rising to a desperate shout. "Move! My daughter has a high fevershe needs medical attention now!"
The guard's expression didn't flicker.
"Apologies. Until you've repaid the eight hundred eighty thousand dollars in bride price, you're not taking a single step outside. If you run, Mr. Sanchez will hold us accountable for that debt. Please don't make this difficult."
Ice spread through my veins. Something in my mind detonated.
Eight hundred eighty thousand in bride price.
Everyone said I'd struck gold marrying Cyril Sancheza sparrow landing on a phoenix branch, destined for a lifetime of luxury as a wealthy man's wife.
But no one knew the truth.
Because of one offhand remark from Ruth: "If she really loved you, she wouldn't spend a single cent of your money. Otherwise, what makes her different from all those gold-diggers after the Sanchez fortune?"
From our wedding day until now, every expense of mine fell outside the household budget.
The haute couture gowns for galas. The glittering jewelry. Even the luxury car that drove us to events together
Ruth would extend her palm the moment the party ended, demanding I pay for the ride.
Three short years as Mrs. Sanchez.
I had already burned through every penny I'd saved from my entire working life. My account didn't even have a hundred dollars left.
Where was I supposed to find eight hundred eighty thousand to give Cyril?
The baby in my arms had cried herself hoarse from the fever, her little face scrunched in misery.
I turned pleading eyes to the guard, my voice sinking into the dirt with humiliation.
"I'll find a way to pay it back."
"Please, just this oncelet us through. She's premature. She's already in danger being out of the incubator. If this fever keeps climbing, she'll die..."
Three days ago, Ruth's appendicitis had flared up.
The doctor scheduled surgery for three months outthe exact same window as my due date.
Ruth had dissolved into sobs.
"If my surgery happens while she's in labor, you'll abandon me to take care of her, won't you?"
Cyril tried to comfort her.
But Ruth only cried harder.
"You've changed! The old you would never have let me get appendicitis in the first place! Now that you have her, you don't love me anymoreyour whole heart belongs to her now! I'm going to tell Mom and Dad in heaven that you're bullying me!"
The moment she threw herself into the pool, they forced the labor-inducing injection into my veins.
Cyril wiped the tears from the corners of my eyes, his voice gentle. "Samantha, she's my only sister. She's young, she gets jealous easily. I need to put her mind at ease. You understand, don't you?"
"Once the baby's born, I'll make it up to you both. Mother and daughter."
"Don't worry. I've got you."
But what came instead was a forged DNA test. A crude, theatrical performance staged for my daughter and me.
Two bodyguards blocked the doorway now, discomfort flickering across their facesbut they held their ground.
"We're sorry, ma'am. Mr. Sanchez gave strict orders before he left. You can't leave until the debt is paid."
In my arms, my daughter had become a furnace in the span of minutes. Her cries were weakening, each whimper fainter than the last.
I was seconds from pressing a blade to my own throat to force them aside when Cyril appeared, his brow furrowed, his expression thunderous.
"Samantha." His voice cut like ice. "This is a hospital, not a street market. All this screamingdid you forget every shred of decorum the Sanchez name should have taught you?" His jaw tightened. "You've disturbed Ruth while she's having her finger treated."
My gaze followed his gesture.
That's when I saw it: a Hello Kitty band-aid wrapped around Ruth's fingertip.
And behind herover twenty doctors. Trailing after her like an entourage.
Something inside me cracked open.
No wonder no one came when I called. Not a single doctor.
He'd summoned every last one of them for a cut on her finger.
I swallowed the acid rising in my throat and stepped forward, my daughter clutched to my chest. My voice broke. "Nora has a fever. Pleasecall a doctor."
Cyril's frown deepened. He shifted his weight, about to move
Ruth doubled over, clutching her abdomen, her voice a silken whimper. "Cyril... it hurts so much. Am I dying?"
His attention snapped to her instantly.
In one fluid motion, he swept her into his arms and barked at the wall of white coats: "Prepare for surgery. Now."
I grabbed his arm, desperate. "Our daughter"
But Ruth had already wound her arms around his neck, her face buried against his throat.
"I'm so scared," she breathed. "They're going to cut out a piece of me. Will it hurt? Will I die?"
She lifted her head just enough to peer up at him through wet lashes. "Can you have all the doctors in the operating room? The more, the safer, right?" Her lip trembled. "My only regret in this life is never properly repaying everything you've done for me. I don't want to die with that debt unpaid."
Every word dripped honey.
And CyrilCyril melted like candle wax.
"Of course." His voice softened to something I hadn't heard in months. "I'll have every doctor in this hospital on standby. The Elite Medical Unit will arrive in ten minutes. I won't let anything happen to you. Not a scratch."
"What about our daughter?"
My knuckles had gone bone-white around her tiny body. I'd bitten through my lip; I tasted copper.
Every doctor on standby for her. Then who saves our child?
Cyril glanced at the bundle in my arms. Irritation flashed across his features.
He turned to the crowd of physicians. "Which one of you is pediatrics? Stay behind. Take a look."
"Cyril," Ruth cooed from the cradle of his arms, "hospitals charge for consultations, you know. And Samantha still owes us eight hundred eighty thousand dollars." A smile curled her lipssaccharine for him, venomous for me. "But for the sake of three years as sisters-in-law, I suppose I could lower myself to help."
Her eyes glittered.
"I'm losing a piece of myself today. She can keep me company."
At her signal, a bodyguard kicked over the medical waste bin.
Needles scattered across the floor. Dozens of them. The fluorescent light caught their tipscold, sharp, glinting.
Ruth looked down at me from Cyril's arms, chin lifted like a queen passing sentence.
"Pick them all up. Do that, and I'll cover your consultation fee."
Cyril's gaze slid over mebrief, dismissive.
He turned to his assistant. "Do as she says."
Then he strode toward the operating room, Ruth cradled against his chest, and didn't look back.
Not once.
I knelt on the ground, sweeping my hands across the floor, groping blindly.
Within minutes, all ten fingers were riddled with puncture woundsskin shredded, blood streaming down my wrists. Not an inch of flesh left intact.
But Nora's cries were growing weaker.
I had no choice. I stuck out my tongue and began to lick the floor, searching for needles by taste.
Half an hour later, I cupped a handful of bloodied needles and looked up at the doctor. When I spoke, blood kept welling from my mouth, spilling down my chin.
"They're all here. Please... save my daughter..."
The words left me, and so did consciousness. I collapsed.
When I woke, the sharp tang of disinfectant filled my nose.
Instinctively, I reached outbut my arms found only empty sheets. No warm little body. No soft breath against my skin.
"Nora..."
I staggered out of bed and lurched toward the Doctor's Office, bare feet slapping against cold linoleum. Through the window, I spotted hermy daughter, cradled in the arms of the female doctor who had treated her last night.
Dr. Hazel Grant rocked Nora gently, feeding her from a bottle. Her eyes were soft with pity.
"What a sin," she murmured. "Born a legitimate heiress, and yet because of that sister's jealousy, she can't even have her own mother's milk. The poor little thing."
Her colleague leaned in, voice dropping low.
"You're telling me. And get thisthe paternity test? Mr. Sanchez personally supervised the forgery. The plan is to pin it on the hospital in a year, claim we made the mistake, and use that to coax the mother and daughter back. He threw millions at us to play along with this charade. Rich people and their games, honestly."
"Oh, that's nothing." Dr. Grant's voice turned conspiratorial. "I heard the sister is only adopted. Anyone with eyes can see she's got her sights set on her own brother. Last night during my rounds, I saw herwatched her kiss Mr. Sanchez right on the mouth while he was asleep. Five minutes later, he woke up." She paused meaningfully. "Didn't say a single word."
The two women exchanged knowing looks, lips curling with unspoken judgment.
I sagged against the wall, eyes burning until they ached.
Ruth Sanchez was the Sanchez family's adopted daughter. Because they were siblings in name, every time I showed even a flicker of jealousy, I became the unreasonable onethe woman trying to tear apart a brother and sister's innocent bond.
All Cyril had to do was raise an eyebrow and say, "If it were really as sordid as you imagine, I'd have married her already. You think you'd have had a chance?"
And I would fall silent. Every time.
He was right, wasn't he?
He was the heir to the richest family in the cityuntouchable, godlike. And I was just a nine-to-five nobody, punching a clock and scraping by.
So why had he sent me tens of thousands of roses?
Why had he held my hand through the darkest nights after I lost my family, patient and steady when I couldn't stop crying?
Why had he personally dealt with the supervisor who made lewd comments about me at work?
And when that car came barreling toward uswhy had he wrapped his body around mine, shielding me so completely that he was the one who ended up in the ICU?
I still remembered our wedding day. The way he'd raised his hand to the heavens and sworn:
"Samantha, I will love you and cherish you for the rest of my life. I will never betray you."
But hearts change in a heartbeat. And "forever" was just something people said to make the moment feel real.
When I looked up again, Cyril was standing in front of me.
I didn't know how long he'd been there.
His eyes met minebloodshot, hollow, bruised with exhaustionand for once, something like concern flickered across his face.
"You just gave birth. Why aren't you resting in bed?"
The scent of Ruth's perfume clung to him, thick and cloying.
It hit my stomach like a fist. I nearly retched.
I stepped back, avoiding his reaching hand.
"You wanted a divorce, didn't you?" My voice came out flat. Dead. "Let's sign it. Now."
Cyril went still.
For a few seconds, he just stared at me. Then his expression hardened, and a cold, mocking smile twisted his lips.
"Samantha, don't be stupid. You don't have a cent to your name. Leave me, and you'll be sleeping on the street tonightyou and that baby both."
I lifted my gaze to meet his. Held it.
"The baby isn't yours anyway," I said, ice in every syllable. "Why do you care?"
The mockery hit its mark.
Cyril's face contortedLoss control, reached for the fury beneath it. He snatched the divorce papers from his assistant's hands and signed with such force the pen nearly tore through the page.
I reached for the document to add my own signature, but before the ink could dry
He ripped it from my grasp.
"Ungrateful bitch."
He jabbed a finger toward the hospital entrance, veins bulging at his temple.
"Get out. Get out of my hospital. Now."
I held my daughter close and headed for the exit.
Beep beep
A sleek black car idled across the street. I quickened my pace toward it.
But before I could take more than a few steps, two bodyguards materialized out of nowhere and dragged me back inside.
"Did you see the trending topics? Mrs. Sanchez was forced into a divorceall because of that adopted sister."
"What a vile sister-in-law. Accusing her own brother's wife of cheating? I'd expose her online too."
The hospital buzzed with the same conversation at every turn.
This had Ruth's fingerprints all over it.
What I couldn't figure out was why she'd deliberately thrown herself into the eye of the storm.
Then Cyril's palm cracked across my faceno questions asked, no explanation sought.
"Samantha, I never knew you could be this vicious." His voice was ice and venom. "No wonder you were so eager to sign those divorce papers. You'd planned to destroy Ruth all along, hadn't you? Playing the sympathy card with your postpartum divorce story, dragging me into your schemeyou're despicable."
"The press will be here any minute. You will apologize to Ruth publicly. Do you have any idea how brutal the comments are? She's still so youngif I hadn't gotten here in time, your little stunt would've pushed her to slit her wrists!"
On the hospital bed, Ruth sat perfectly upright.
Whole. Unharmed. Not so much as a pink mark on her wrists.
A person pretending to sleep will never wake, no matter how loud you call.
Besidessomeone was waiting for me.
"No need to make this complicated."
I handed my daughter to the nurse who'd followed us in, then pulled out my phone and opened a livestream.
I turned toward Ruth and bowed deeply from the waist.
"Miss Sanchez, I'm sorry. For all the false accusations circulating online, I offer my sincerest apology. You're not a scheming little sister who drove a wedge between husband and wife. I'm the vicious oneabsurdly jealous of a normal sibling relationship, deliberately divorcing your brother, posting sob stories online for sympathy, even paying trolls to attack you."
I bowed again.
"Miss Sanchez, you and Mr. Sanchez have always been completely innocent. Just an ordinary brother and sister. I was the one eaten alive by jealousy, using underhanded tactics to frame you. Please forgive me."
Every word rang out, crisp and unmistakable.
With each sentence, the color drained further from both their faces.
Ruthbecause I had just nailed them permanently to the cross of sibling relations for all the world to see.
Cyril's expression was harder to read. Something flickered in his eyesa flash of unease he couldn't quite suppress.
Ruth shot me a look of pure hatred.
Then, suddenly, she clutched at her hair, her voice trembling like a leaf in a gale.
"I'm not a bad womanI'm not! It was her who cheated! She's the one who made a cuckold of my brother! She didn't cherish him, so I will! If loving him makes me shameless and disgusting, then just let me die"
Her sudden breakdown shattered whatever composure Cyril had barely managed to regain.
He pulled her into his arms. "Ruth, we're not blood siblings. We were actually engaged as childrena promise between our families. Even if you do have feelings for me... you've done nothing wrong."
The moment those words left his mouth, the livestream chat exploded with roses.
Rows upon rows of "99" flooded the screen.
The glare of it seared my eyes.
A swarm of reporters burst through the door, cameras thrust in my face, shutters clicking in a deafening frenzy.
"Mrs. Sanchez! So you're the homewrecker in this story?"
"Mrs. Sanchez! You were a nobody before this marriage. Care to share what tactics you used to claw your way into the Sanchez family?"
"Breaking up a golden couple just to marry richdon't you feel any guilt?"
Camera flashes strobed across my face like an assault.
They were practically branding mehomewrecker, slut, gold-diggersearing every slur into my skin with their accusations.
Through the jostling crowd, I caught a glimpse of Ruth's face.
She was smiling.
A smile of pure, triumphant malice.
I lifted my head slightly, and a reportercatching some unspoken signalswung his camera toward the nurse's arms, firing off shot after shot of my daughter.
"Holy shit, this is the bastard kid? Ugly little thing. Mrs. Sanchez really isn't picky about whose bed she crawls into."
"Like mother, like daughteryou can see the moral rot from a mile away. Get more shots. We'll use them for cutaways later. Title it 'The Mistress's Spawn.' Guaranteed headline."
Rage detonated in my chest.
My palm connected with his face before I could think.
I hadn't even hit him hardbut he crumpled to the floor and went still.
"Oh GodGiles Chavez has a heart condition! You can't touch him!"
"He's not breathing! Murderer!"
A reporter jabbed a finger at me, eyes blazing with a hatred that could have drawn blood.
"Don't touch her." Cyril's voice cut through the chaos, cold and final. "Any issues go through my lawyers."
The words had barely left his mouth when Ruth clutched her abdomen again, her face twisting in pain.
"Cyril... I got too worked up. I think my stitches tore..."
I stood frozen, my daughter pressed to my chest, and looked at him.
Helpless. Desperate.
His gaze lingered on us for one long, unreadable moment.
Then he bent down, scooped Ruth into his arms, and said to me:
"Wait for me."
His back disappeared down the corridor.
And I was left behindsurrounded by a mob of furious reportersas cold steel handcuffs clicked around my wrists.
Three months later. The Criminal Court.
"This court finds the defendant, Ms. Samantha Pruitt, guilty of involuntary manslaughter. She is hereby sentenced to five years' imprisonment and ordered to pay three million dollars in compensation."
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