
A Pregnant Wife’s Explosive Payback
Chapter 3
The digital clock on the nightstand flicked to 2:00 AM.
Beside me, Caleb’s breathing had finally leveled into the rhythmic, heavy rasp of deep sleep. He looked peaceful. He looked like the man who had spent the evening helping Mia assemble a Lego set, his hands steady and his voice patient.
I stayed motionless for five minutes, counting his exhales.
One. Two. Three.
I eased the duvet back, the fabric whispering against the sheets. My twenty-week bump made every movement a tactical maneuver. I gripped the edge of the nightstand, steadying myself as I stood. My eyes stayed fixed on Caleb’s face. He didn't stir.
I reached for his phone. It was tethered to the charging cable, a small green bolt of lightning illuminating the glass. I pinched the plug and pulled it free with a faint *click*.
I didn't stay in the bedroom. I didn't want the glow of the screen to wake him. I padded down the hallway to the small home office, my bare feet cold on the hardwood. Once inside, I shut the door and turned the lock.
I stared at the black screen.
"Come on, Caleb," I whispered. "Don't be smarter than I think you are."
I swiped up. The passcode screen appeared. I tried our anniversary first. *Incorrect.* I tried his mother’s birthday. *Incorrect.*
One more try before the lockout. I thought of Mia, her face smeared with strawberry cake earlier that evening. I punched in her birth date.
The icons blossomed onto the screen. I was in.
My thumb hovered over the green message icon. My heart felt like a bird trapped in a cage, battering against my ribs. I tapped it.
The list of names was mundane. His boss. His brother. A group chat for his fantasy football league. Then, near the top, a thread with a man named "Contractor Mike."
I opened it. The most recent message was from 11:15 PM last night.
*The wife is finally out. Counting down the minutes until I can hear your voice, babe.*
I felt a wave of nausea so violent I had to lean my forehead against the cool surface of the desk. *The wife.* I wasn't Ella. I wasn't the mother of his children. I was a hurdle to be cleared.
I scrolled up. I went back weeks, then months. My thumb moved faster and faster.
"Three years," I breathed, the words catching in my throat.
The first message in the archive was dated three years ago. Mia had just turned one. I remembered that time—I was exhausted, struggling with weaning, my body feeling like it didn't belong to me anymore. While I was pacing the nursery at 3:00 AM, Caleb was typing to Sienna Marsh.
*I just need someone who sees me,* he had written back then. *Not just the guy who pays the bills.*
I kept scrolling. There was a strange gap—two years of silence where the messages stopped. Maybe he had tried to be better. Maybe he had felt guilty. Then, ten months ago, the thread roared back to life.
Caleb had initiated it. He had sent a photo of himself and Mia at the zoo.
*Thinking of you,* the caption read. *I miss what we had.*
I sank to the floor, my back against the bookshelf. The hardwood felt hard and unforgiving against my spine. I didn't cry. The shock had moved past tears into a cold, vibrating clarity.
I began a mental audit. Every "late night at the office" from last November. Every "weekend fishing trip" that resulted in no fish. Every "regional sales meeting" in Chicago.
I cross-referenced the dates in the messages with my own calendar.
*August 14th.* He said he was at a conference. He was actually at a boutique hotel in the city with her.
*October 2nd.* He told me he was helping his brother fix a deck. He was actually sending Sienna photos of lingerie he wanted her to buy.
Then I found the message that stopped my heart. It was from two weeks ago.
*If we pull the trigger on the divorce now, the house is a problem,* Caleb had typed. *The courts usually give it to the mother, especially with a newborn. I need to find a way to flip the equity or list it before she realizes what’s happening. I’m not losing my investment because she can’t hold a job.*
I stared at the words until they burned into my retinas. *Investment.* This home, the one we had picked out because of the oak tree in the backyard, was just an asset he was trying to liquidate behind my back.
He wasn't just leaving. He was planning to strip the floorboards from under me while I was still recovering from labor.
A sharp, sudden kick from the baby jolted me. I gasped, my hand flying to my stomach.
"I know," I whispered to the dark room. "I know."
I looked at the window. The sky was turning a bruised purple, the first hint of dawn creeping over the horizon. I had been sitting on the floor for four hours.
I stood up, my joints aching. I needed to move. I needed to be precise.
I scrolled back to the top of the message thread and took photos of his screen with my own phone. I captured everything—the "Contractor Mike" alias, the financial plotting, the ultrasound he had mocked.
Once I was finished, I deleted the photos I had taken of his screen from his "recently deleted" folder, just in case he checked. I exited the app and locked his phone.
I walked back to the bedroom. The air was heavy with the scent of his cologne. Caleb was still snoring, his arm flung across the space where I should have been sleeping.
I plugged his phone back into the charger. I positioned the cable at the exact angle it had been in at 2:00 AM. I aligned the phone with the edge of the nightstand, down to the millimeter.
I climbed back into bed, my movements fluid and silent. I lay on my side, facing away from him.
A few minutes later, Caleb shifted. His hand reached out, heavy and warm, and settled over the curve of my pregnant belly. He let out a long, contented sigh in his sleep.
I didn't flinch. I didn't pull away. I stayed perfectly still, counting his breaths as the sun began to bleed through the curtains.
*One. Two. Three.*
I knew what I had to do. I couldn't scream. I couldn't confront him in a fit of rage and give him the chance to hide the money or change his passwords.
I would wait. I would call a lawyer the second he left for work. I would secure my life and my children's future while he was busy playing the part of the doting father.
The baby kicked again, a hard, rhythmic thud against the mattress.
I closed my eyes, but I didn't sleep. I just watched the light grow stronger, waiting for the man next to me to wake up so I could start the lie that would set me free.
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