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A Pregnant Wife’s Explosive Payback Novel Cover

A Pregnant Wife’s Explosive Payback

At twenty weeks pregnant, Ella Whitmore gets a hotel receipt from her husband's mistress—dated to her eighth week. Thirteen years, two daughters, a "family man" lie—all shattered. He begs, he serves water, mows the lawn, buys her juice. She thinks she's done feeling. But her brain keeps flipping back to the safe version of him. Until a phone call outside the delivery room proves: he never truly left the other woman. Would you stay?
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Chapter 2

The garage door rattled shut, the vibration humming through the floorboards and up into my heels. I stood in the kitchen, my fingers white-knuckled around the hotel receipt.

"Mommy! Daddy’s home!" Mia squealed, her small feet thundering toward the mudroom.

I shoved the paper into my apron pocket, my heart hammering a frantic rhythm against my ribs. I smoothed the fabric over my bump and forced my facial muscles into something resembling a smile. It felt brittle, like dried clay.

Caleb stepped into the kitchen, a white bakery box balanced in one hand. He looked exactly the same as he had this morning—handsome, dependable, and utterly familiar.

"There’s my birthday girl!" Caleb laughed, dropping to one knee as Mia collided with his legs.

"Did you get the strawberry one?" Mia asked, her hands hovering near the box.

"Only the best for my favorite four-year-old." He kissed her forehead, then looked up at me. His eyes were warm, filled with the practiced affection of a man who had spent thirteen years perfecting his role. "Hey, babe. You look tired. Did the little one give you a hard time today?"

"I’m okay," I said. The lie tasted like copper in my mouth. "Just a long afternoon."

"Go sit down," he urged, standing up and reaching out to brush a stray hair from my face. I flinched, just a fraction of an inch, but he didn't seem to notice. "I’ve got the cake. Why don't we do an early dinner?"

"That sounds fine."

I watched him move around the kitchen. He knew where every spoon was, which plates Mia liked, and exactly how I took my water—ice first, then the tap. He was a ghost haunting a life he had already decided to leave.

We sat at the dining table ten minutes later. Caleb had picked up pasta from the Italian place down the street. He leaned over, his fork poised over his plate, then paused.

"Wait, I almost forgot." He reached for the bowl of shrimp in the center. "You need the protein."

He began peeling a shrimp, his movements methodical. He removed the shell, dipped it in a bit of garlic butter, and set it on my plate.

"How was the appointment today?" he asked. "Any discomfort during the ultrasound?"

I stared at the shrimp. "The technician said everything looked normal."

"Good. That’s good." He took a bite of his own food. "We should start thinking about names again this weekend. I was thinking something classic. Maybe Clara?"

"You're very focused on the future today," I remarked.

Caleb grinned, that boyish charm that had won me over in college flashing across his face. "Why wouldn't I be? We’re expanding the team. Life is good, Ella."

I gripped my fork until the metal bit into my palm. *Life is good.* Did he say that to Sienna Marsh last night at 11:00 PM? Did he say it while he was booking a room at the Drake?

"Daddy?" Mia asked, her mouth full of noodles.

"Yeah, sprout?"

"When you go on your work trips, do you miss us?"

The air in the room seemed to vanish. I froze, my gaze fixed on Caleb’s throat. I watched his Adam’s apple bob as he swallowed.

"Every single second," Caleb said without a beat of hesitation. "I count the minutes until I can get back to my girls. Why do you ask?"

"Because Mommy was sad today," Mia said, pointing her fork at me. "She stayed by the door a long time."

Caleb’s eyes flicked to mine, sharp and probing. "Is that right? Someone come by?"

"Just a delivery," I said, my voice steady. "Nothing important."

"You sure? You seem... quiet."

"I'm just hungry, Caleb. Let's eat."

After dinner, the room went dark, save for the four flickering candles on the strawberry shortcake. The light cast long, dancing shadows across the walls.

"Make a wish, Mia," Caleb whispered, leaning in close to her.

Mia squeezed her eyes shut. "I wish for my baby sister to come out soon so we can all play together forever!"

Caleb laughed and pressed his hand firmly against my stomach. "I second that wish. We’re ready for you, little girl."

The heat of his palm through my shirt made my skin crawl. I looked down at my bump, thinking of the grainy black-and-white image Sienna had shown me. He had taken the first glimpse of our child’s life and turned it into a 'complication' for his mistress to pity. He wasn't wishing for a daughter; he was wishing for an end to the charade.

"Blow them out, sweetie," I said, my voice cracking.

Mia took a deep breath and puffed. The candles died, leaving us in a haze of sweet-smelling smoke.

"Alright," Caleb said, standing up and stretching. "I promised Mia a trip to the park before bed. Why don't you go upstairs and take a long bath? Put your feet up. I’ll handle the cleanup when we get back."

"You’re going now?"

"The sun is still up," he said, checking his watch. "We’ll be back in forty minutes. Plenty of time for you to relax."

"Go, Mommy! Rest!" Mia cheered, already running for her shoes.

I watched them leave. I stood at the window until the taillights of Caleb’s SUV disappeared around the corner. The silence that followed was deafening.

I pulled the receipt from my pocket and walked toward the master bedroom. Each step felt like I was wading through deep water. I entered the bathroom and turned the deadbolt. The click echoed against the tile.

I stood before the vanity mirror. My face looked pale, my eyes shadowed. I didn't recognize the woman staring back. I looked like a victim.

"Sienna Marsh," I whispered.

The name felt heavy, a stone in my mouth.

"Sienna Marsh."

I pulled out my phone. My hands were shaking so violently I almost dropped it. I laid the hotel receipt on the marble counter, smoothing the wrinkles. I took a photo. Then I took a photo of the message logs Sienna had given me—the ones I had tucked into my dresser drawer.

I opened my photo app and created a new album.

*What the children's mother needs to remember.*

I moved the photos into the folder, one by one. The Drake Hotel. The "complication" text. The ultrasound he had stolen from me.

I leaned over the sink, my breathing coming in shallow, ragged bursts. I wasn't the wife he thought I was. Not anymore. That woman had died the moment the doorbell rang this afternoon.

I folded the original receipt back into a small, tight square and shoved it deep into my apron.

A sudden noise startled me—the heavy thud of the front door closing. Then, the jingle of keys being tossed onto the entryway table.

"Ella? You in there?"

Caleb’s voice drifted up the stairs, sounding cheerful and domestic.

"We’re back! Mia forgot her sweater, so we’re just grabbing it and heading out again!"

I stood frozen in the center of the bathroom, the phone still hot in my hand. He was right outside the door. He was acting like the perfect father, the perfect husband, while the evidence of his betrayal was pressed against my leg.

I stared at the locked door. My heart hammered. Should I walk out there and scream? Should I throw the phone in his face and demand the truth?

"Ella? You okay?" His footsteps started up the stairs, heavy and rhythmic.

I looked at the mirror one last time. I didn't see a victim anymore. I saw a woman who was starting to count her own minutes.

The doorknob turned, then stopped.

"Ella? Why is the door locked?"

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