Follow
Chapters
Share
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?
Chapters
Share

Chapter 4

"Have a good checkup, babe," Caleb told me this morning, pressing a warm kiss to my temple. "Text me a picture of the sonogram. I want to see our little girl."

I smiled, a hollow stretching of my lips. "I will."

I didn't go to the clinic. I dropped Mia off at my mother-in-law’s house, blaming a sudden schedule change at the doctor’s office. Then, I merged onto the highway and drove forty miles in the opposite direction.

Now, I sat in the underground parking garage of a downtown law firm. The engine of my sedan ticked as it cooled. I stared at the concrete wall ahead. Fifteen minutes slipped by. My twenty-week bump pressed flush against the bottom of the steering wheel, a physical barrier between me and the ignition. I gripped the leather rim until my knuckles turned white, then forced my fingers to uncurl.

It was time to get out of the car.

My flats squeaked against the polished granite floor of the lobby. I gave my name to the receptionist and took a seat in the waiting area. A woman sat two chairs down from me. She looked to be about my age, bouncing a fussy infant on her knee. She held a plastic bottle half-full of formula in one hand, her eyes rimmed with red.

She stopped bouncing the baby and looked at me. Her gaze dropped to my pregnant belly, then to my bare left hand. I had taken my wedding ring off at a red light and shoved it into the cup holder.

I didn't offer a polite smile. Neither did she. We just held eye contact for a brief, heavy second. We didn't need to speak. We were casualties in the same war, sitting in the same sterile room, waiting for someone to tell us how to survive.

"Mrs. Whitmore?" a male voice called.

I stood up.

A man stood at the edge of the hallway. He looked to be in his mid-thirties, wearing a sharp navy suit without a tie. A silver wedding band caught the overhead light on his left hand.

"I'm Adrian Hale," he said, stepping aside to let me pass.

I followed him into a corner office and took the leather chair across from his desk. A framed photo faced outward near his pen cup. It showed Adrian and two young toddlers standing on a pier.

He didn’t offer me coffee. He didn’t ask about my drive or the weather. He sat down, folded his hands on the desk, and looked right at me.

"Are you here today to file for divorce, or to find out if you can afford to?" Adrian asked.

The bluntness of his tone stripped away the last of my nerves.

"Both," I said. My voice came out unnervingly steady. I sounded like a stranger.

I unzipped my tote bag. I pulled out the stack of printed photos I had made at a twenty-four-hour copy center before dawn. I slid them across the mahogany desk, one by one.

"This is a hotel receipt from a trip Caleb claimed was for a regional sales meeting," I said, tapping the first page.

I placed the next sheet down.

"These are text messages with his mistress. He saved her number under a fake contractor's name. They detail a ten-month affair."

I set the final paper down.

"This is my eight-week ultrasound photo. He forwarded it to her and called our child a complication."

Adrian picked up the pages. He scanned the lines of text, his expression entirely neutral. He flipped to the ultrasound, paused for a fraction of a second, and set the stack back down.

"You’re very thorough," Adrian noted.

"I had a long night."

He pulled a yellow legal pad toward him. "I need you to answer three questions, Ella. First, whose name is on the deed to your house?"

"His," I answered. "We bought it before we got married. He said there was no need to pay the fees to add my name later."

Adrian wrote a single line on the pad. "Second. Have you maintained an independent bank account at any point in the last three years?"

I shook my head. "Everything goes into our joint account. I stopped working when our oldest daughter was born."

Adrian’s jaw tightened. "Third. Does Caleb Whitmore know you are sitting in this chair right now?"

I shook my head much harder. "No. God, no. He thinks I’m getting my blood pressure checked."

"Good. Keep it that way." Adrian pointed his pen at the stack of evidence. "Did you bring the joint bank statements I requested over the phone?"

"Yes." I pulled a manila folder from my bag. "I went through them this morning. I found two outbound wire transfers I don't recognize."

I pushed the folder across the desk.

Adrian opened it. He ran his pen down the columns of numbers I had highlighted. He stopped on a page from October, then flipped to January. He looked from the numbers to the screenshot of Caleb’s text messages.

"Look at this message right here," Adrian said, tapping the printed screenshot. "Your husband mentions needing to flip the equity or list the house before you realize what’s happening. He specifically says he won't lose his investment."

"I saw that," I said, my throat tightening.

Adrian turned the bank statements around and pushed the two highlighted transfer records back to me.

"Look at the dates on these wires," Adrian instructed. "One from ten months ago, right around the time this affair resumed. Another from three months ago. Do you see the amounts?"

I stared at the black ink. "Twelve thousand dollars. And fifteen thousand."

"Twenty-seven thousand dollars total," Adrian confirmed. "Do you know what that specific amount covers, Ella?"

I did the math in my head. The numbers clicked into place.

"My delivery," I whispered. "The hospital bills, the anesthesiologist, the recovery room for a C-section. It’s exactly three times the out-of-pocket maximum on our family health insurance."

"He’s draining the joint account," Adrian said flatly. "He’s preparing for a split, ensuring he has liquid cash while leaving you to shoulder the medical debt when the baby arrives."

The baby froze.

For a full second, the constant, reassuring fluttering against my ribs ceased completely.

Ten months.

Caleb had been planning his exit for ten months. While I was folding his socks, ironing his work shirts, and picking out nursery paint colors, he was quietly siphoning our life savings. He hadn't just made a mistake in a hotel room. He was executing a financial strategy to ruin me.

"I'm a single dad," Adrian said suddenly, his voice dropping in volume. He gestured to the framed photo of the two toddlers on his desk. "I know what it looks like when a partner decides to burn the house down on their way out the door. Your husband is holding the match."

I stared at the circled numbers until the digits blurred. The betrayal shifted inside me, morphing from heartbreak into a cold, hard need for survival.

"Can we stop him?" I asked, my tone sharpening into a weapon.

"We can freeze the assets the moment we file," Adrian replied. "But we need to track where that twenty-seven thousand went first. If he moved it to an offshore account or a hidden LLC, it complicates the asset division."

Adrian tapped his pen against the desk. He leaned over the wood, his eyes locking onto mine with intense focus.

"Do you want to know where this money is now?"

You may also like

After Public Humiliation, I Became His CEO Boss Novel Cover
9.2
I stood in the corner of the ballroom, my camera a shield between me and the glittering crowd. Through my lens, I captured Marcus's triumph—his easy smile as he accepted congratulations, the way his hand gestured animatedly when describing his vision for "Midnight Embrace." My vision. Our vision. But no one knew that part. The Beverly Hills hotel ballroom sparkled with Hollywood royalty. Crystal chandeliers cast golden light over actresses in couture gowns, producers with perfect teeth, and critics whose words could make or break careers. I adjusted my aperture, focusing on Marcus as he threw his head back in laughter at something a studio executive said. "Perfect," I whispered, capturing the moment. Three years of late nights, endless networking, and silent sacrifice had led to this—his breakthrough. I should have felt proud.
Dumped My Fake-Poor Ex, Married My Wealthy Boss Novel Cover
7.4
For six years, I worked myself to the bone to support my "struggling artist" boyfriend, Kasen. I paid the rent on our leaky Brooklyn apartment and believed in his dream, thinking our love was real. That all ended one rainy night when I delivered documents to an exclusive club and overheard him with his wealthy friends. Our life, he said, was just a "sociological experiment." He wasn't poor at all. He was a trust fund heir with a fiancée in the Hamptons, waiting to close a corporate merger. "Kaia is just a naive pet who voluntarily pays my rent," he laughed over a three-thousand-dollar glass of scotch. He told them girls like me were so desperate we'd come crawling back for a scrap of affection. My entire world shattered. I packed my bags and walked out that night with eighty-four dollars to my name, ready to start over. But escaping one monster only threw me to another. The next day, a predatory client tried to drug me during a business meeting. My boss, the terrifyingly powerful CEO Camden William, intervened. But after a night of drug-induced chaos, I woke up in his bed. He didn't offer an apology. He offered a contract. "Marry me for three years," he commanded, "and I'll give you five million dollars and make sure Kasen can never touch you again."
He Chose A Fake Heiress Over His True Queen Novel Cover
9.6
I waited seven years for Jax Vetti, the youngest Capo in New York, to finally claim me. Instead, five minutes before our scheduled engagement, he called me a burden behind a velvet curtain. Standing on the center stage of the Gala, he didn't reach for my hand. He took the hand of Chloe Davenport, his rival’s daughter, and announced to the underworld that she was carrying his heir. When the explosion tore through the ballroom moments later, Jax didn't hesitate. He threw his body over Chloe, shielding her completely, and dragged her to the safe room. I was left behind, exposed and helpless, until a massive crystal chandelier crashed down, crushing my legs and slicing my throat. While I lay bleeding out on the cold floor, Jax returned. He looked at my shattered body not with horror, but with disgust. "You're a liability, Savvy," he sneered, ordering his guards to dump me in the courtyard like trash so I wouldn't upset his pregnant fiancée. I clutched the bullet casing he gave me years ago—a blood oath he swore would bind us forever. He had promised to protect me, but tonight, he stepped over my broken body to comfort the woman who was secretly plotting his demise. His second-in-command found me before the cold took me. "He's lost his mind," Ben whispered, scooping me up and driving me to a private jet bound for Sicily. I didn't die that night. But the girl who loved Jax Vetti did. Six months later, I returned from the dead. Not as his victim, but as the woman who would turn his wedding into a funeral.
He Chose The Maid Over The Heiress Novel Cover
9.5
I was in a Zurich boardroom signing a contract worth fifty million dollars when I saw the photo that ended my marriage. It was an Instagram notification from the woman I paid to scrub my toilets. The caption read: "My little prince deserves the world." The photo showed her son holding a custom-made porcelain doll with diamond-dust eyes. It was the only one in the world, commissioned specifically for my daughter, Lily. I cancelled the deal and flew home immediately. When I arrived at my daughter's school, I found the housekeeper wearing my vintage Chanel coat and driving my car. My husband, Austyn, didn't run to greet me. He ran past our crying daughter to comfort the housekeeper's son. "Don't you dare touch my son!" he screamed at me, protecting the boy while our daughter scraped her knees on the pavement. He looked at me with pure hate, confident that he could take half my assets in a divorce. He forgot that I wasn't just a wife. I was the Duchess of the Miller Syndicate, the most powerful crime family in New York. I pulled out my phone and froze every account he had. "You want a divorce?" I asked, signaling my security team to step forward. "Take off the suit, Austyn. I paid for it." "You are leaving this marriage exactly how you entered it. With nothing."
My Escape From Two Tyrants Novel Cover
9.8
On our seventh wedding anniversary, Emerson's friend introduced a college student to the club for him. Emerson, usually so detached, actually smiled as he pulled the young woman close, murmuring in her ear, "Just like her, even the scent." This student bore a striking resemblance to his elusive first love. Watching him lose himself in an ardent kiss with her, my heart turned to ice. This marriage is over. I can't keep on like this. "I knew you were still fixated on Saoirse, so I found you a lookalike," laughed Emerson's friend loudly. Emerson had Isabelle comfortably on his lap, whispering by her ear. Rooted to the spot, a deep chill seeped through my body. Ever since Isabelle arrived, not a single person, especially Emerson, seemed to care about my feelings. He chuckled, "It's true, I can't forget her, but aren't you worried about how my wife might react, bringing someone like this right in front of her?" His friend laughed as if it was the best joke he'd heard.
The Billionaire Who Forgot Our Twins Novel Cover
7.8
Clara Bennett built her life around two promises-protect her twins and never depend on anyone. For five years, she has raised Liam and Isla alone, keeping the truth about their father buried in the past... a past that began with a single night she barely remembers. But everything changes when billionaire CEO Ethan Caldwell suddenly walks back into her life. Cold, powerful, and dangerously perceptive, Ethan offers Clara an arrangement she cannot refuse-one that forces them to live under the same roof. What Ethan doesn't know is that the twins who instantly capture his attention might be more connected to him than he realizes. As sparks ignite and tensions rise, secrets begin to surface. A ruthless corporate enemy is watching. And the truth about that forgotten night is closer to being exposed. When the truth finally comes out, Ethan will have to face the one thing he never expected... The family he never knew he had. And Clara must decide whether she can trust the man who once walked out of her life without even remembering.