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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 5

The growl of the lawnmower vibrated through the kitchen window, a steady, rhythmic hum that had defined our Saturday mornings for thirteen years.

I stood at the sink, a glass of water gripped in my hand. I hadn't taken a sip in ten minutes. Outside, Caleb pushed the mower with easy, practiced strength. He wore a faded gray T-shirt stained with sweat at the collar—the one I’d bought him three Father’s Days ago. He looked like the man I loved. He looked like the foundation of my world.

The mower cut a sharp, clean line through the overgrown grass. Behind him, the yard looked perfect. Orderly.

I looked down at the water. My reflection in the glass was distorted, my eyes two dark hollows. My brain felt like it was splitting in two. One half saw the husband who took pride in his home. The other half saw the man who had siphoned twenty-seven thousand dollars from our joint account to pay for a divorce I hadn't even known was coming.

The engine died. The sudden silence was jarring.

A minute later, the screen door creaked open and slammed shut. Caleb stepped into the kitchen, smelling of cut grass and gasoline. He wiped his forehead with the back of his hand, leaving a smear of dirt.

"God, it’s humid out there," he said, breathing hard.

He headed straight for the refrigerator. I stayed frozen by the sink. He reached past the milk and pulled out a small carton of the organic ginger-kale juice I’d started drinking to help with morning sickness.

"Here," he said, stepping toward me. He twisted the cap off and handed it to me. "You didn't look great this morning. Make sure you're staying hydrated."

I took the bottle. The plastic was cold against my palm. "Thanks."

"How are you feeling now? Any better?"

His eyes were clear, a warm, searching hazel. There was no guilt in them. No hidden agenda. Just the familiar concern of a man who knew I’d switched from orange juice to ginger because of the heartburn.

I took a sip. The sharp tang of ginger burned my throat.

*He remembers the juice,* I thought. *A man who wants to ruin me shouldn't remember that I changed my favorite flavor last Tuesday.*

The two versions of Caleb Whitmore collided in my mind. The "Contractor Mike" Caleb and the "Mowed Lawn" Caleb. My mind desperately tried to keep them separate, filing the betrayal away in a dark corner so I could just exist in this kitchen for five more minutes.

"Mommy! Daddy!"

Mia burst into the room, her pigtails lopsided from a nap. She skidded across the linoleum and wrapped her arms around Caleb’s grass-stained legs.

"Whoa, watch out, sprout! I'm all sweaty," Caleb laughed.

He didn't push her away. He dropped to one knee, ignoring the dirt on his jeans, and pulled her into a hug. He pressed a kiss to her forehead, his eyes closing for a second as he breathed in the scent of her hair.

"Did you see how short I got the grass?" he asked her. "Now we can set up the sprinkler tomorrow."

"The big one?" Mia asked, her eyes wide.

"The biggest one."

Watching him with her felt like a physical blow to my chest. My heart, which had been a cold stone since the lawyer’s office, softened. Just a fraction. Just enough to hurt.

Then, like a flash of lightning, I remembered the screenshot. The photo of Caleb and Mia at the carnival—the one he’d sent to Sienna Marsh while I was at home with a migraine. He’d used our daughter’s smile as currency to buy another woman’s affection.

"I... I need to use the bathroom," I muttered.

I didn't wait for him to respond. I turned and walked out of the kitchen, my pace quickening until I reached the master bedroom. I shut the door and bolted the bathroom lock.

The silence of the tile and marble felt safer. I leaned against the vanity, my breathing shallow. I reached into my apron pocket and pulled out the business card Adrian Hale had given me.

*Adrian Hale. Family Law.*

I stared at the embossed gold letters. I traced the phone number with my thumb. I needed to be sure this was real. I needed to remind myself that the man in the kitchen wasn't a hero; he was a strategist.

"It’s not a dream," I whispered to the mirror. "The money is gone, Ella. Don't forget the money."

I tucked the card back into my pocket and smoothed my hair. I took three deep breaths, forcing my heart rate to slow. I had to go back out. I had to play the part.

When I walked into the living room, Caleb and Mia were on the floor. A pile of wooden blocks sat between them. Caleb was balanced on his haunches, carefully adding a triangular piece to the top of a shaky tower.

"It’s gonna fall, Daddy!" Mia squealed, clapping her hands over her mouth.

"Not if we're careful," Caleb said. He looked up as I entered. "Hey. Come join the construction crew. We need an architect."

I hesitated. Every instinct told me to turn around and hide in the bedroom until he went to sleep. But Mia was looking at me, her face full of pure, uncomplicated joy.

I lowered myself onto the carpet. My twenty-week bump made it difficult to sit cross-legged, so I leaned back on one hand. The tower of blocks swayed dangerously to the left.

"Watch it," Caleb said, his voice low and playful.

He reached out to steady the base, but the middle section began to slide. Without thinking, I leaned forward. My hand shot out, my fingers bracing the side of the tower just as his hand reached the same spot.

Our fingers brushed. Then, his hand moved, his palm covering mine. He didn't let go. He squeezed my fingers, his skin warm and calloused from the yard work.

"Got it," he whispered, looking at me. "We make a good team, Ella."

I should have pulled away. I should have felt disgusted. But his touch was a ghost of thirteen years of safety. For one heartbeat, I wanted to believe him. I wanted to believe that the bank statements were a mistake and the text messages were a hallucination.

I didn't move my hand. I let him hold it, my fingers resting beneath his.

*I can let him do this for a few more days,* I told myself. *I have a lawyer. I'm in control. I can let him pretend.*

But as I looked at our joined hands, I knew the truth. I wasn't just letting him perform. I was terrified of the moment I’d have to let go for good.

Caleb’s thumb stroked the back of my hand, a slow, familiar motion that sent a shiver of pure dread through my spine.

"You're shaking," Caleb noted, his brow furrowing. "Ella, are you sure you're okay? You've been acting... different since yesterday."

I felt the weight of the lawyer's card in my pocket, a heavy secret against my thigh. I looked from our hands up to his face, searching for a crack in the mask.

"I’m just tired, Caleb," I said, my voice barely a whisper.

"Are you?" He leaned closer, his eyes narrowing as he studied my expression. "Because it feels like you're looking right through me."

The tower of blocks between us groaned. Mia reached out a tiny finger, poking the very top piece.

"Timber!" she yelled.

The tower collapsed, the wooden blocks clattering loudly across the hardwood floor, echoing like gunfire in the sudden silence of the room.

Caleb didn't look at the blocks. He didn't look at Mia. He kept his eyes locked on mine, his grip on my hand tightening just enough to be felt.

"I feel like there's something you aren't telling me, Ella," he said, his voice dropping an octave.

My heart skipped a beat. Had I left something out? Had he seen me at the law firm? Or was he just testing the strength of the cage he’d built around me?

"I could say the same to you," I replied, the words out of my mouth before I could stop them.

Caleb’s expression didn't change, but I felt the muscles in his hand go rigid. The warmth was gone.

"What's that supposed to mean?"

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