
After His Affair, She Aborted His Secret Child
Chapter 3
Morning light filtered through our bedroom blinds, casting thin stripes across Ryan's sleeping form. He'd returned at 3:47 AM, slipping into bed with the practiced stealth of someone accustomed to deception. I'd pretended to be asleep, my body rigid with awareness of every movement, every breath that carried the faint scent of unfamiliar perfume.
I waited until his breathing deepened before sliding out of bed. The hardwood floor felt cold beneath my feet as I moved silently through our loft—a space that had felt like home just twenty-four hours ago. Now it felt like a beautifully designed lie.
In the kitchen, I spotted it immediately. A wine glass with a perfect crescent of red lipstick on the rim, carelessly left in the sink. Not my shade. Not my glass. I picked it up, examining the stain—Bordeaux, both the wine and likely the color of her lipstick. The kind of bold shade I'd stopped wearing years ago when Ryan mentioned he preferred me "natural."
My fingers trembled as I set the glass down. I moved to the entryway where his blazer hung on our designer coat rack—the one we'd spent a ridiculous amount on because it "made a statement" to visitors. I slipped my hand into the inner pocket, a gesture I'd performed hundreds of times when helping him organize his things.
My fingers closed around a folded piece of paper. A receipt from the Malibu Beach Inn dated two weeks ago—a Tuesday when he'd told me he was at an overnight tech conference in San Diego. Room service for two. Champagne. Strawberries. A room with an ocean view.
I pressed my hand against my mouth, stifling the sound that threatened to escape. Not here. Not now. I wouldn't give him the satisfaction of my breakdown.
With mechanical precision, I moved to our shared home office. The space where we'd spent countless nights strategizing his company's growth, where I'd sacrificed my own career ambitions to become the silent architect of his success. I opened my laptop and logged into our joint bank account.
The balance stared back at me: $127,843.92. The fruits of our shared labor—though his name was the one celebrated in tech blogs and investor meetings. My finger hovered over the keyboard for just a moment before I transferred fifty thousand dollars to a savings account I'd opened years ago and never told him about. Not theft—reclamation.
Next, I inserted a flash drive into the computer. With quick, decisive clicks, I copied the operational spreadsheets I'd created, the client databases I'd built, the strategic plans I'd developed while he took the credit. I encrypted the files with a password he'd never guess—the name of the marketing position I'd declined at the Fortune 500 company ten years ago.
As the files transferred, I glanced around the office. Photos of us lined the walls—smiling, arms entwined, the perfect couple. UCLA graduation. Our first apartment. The day we rescued Baxter from the shelter. A timeline of a relationship I'd believed was unbreakable.
The computer chimed, signaling the completed transfer. I removed the flash drive and slipped it into my pocket.
In our bedroom, I pulled my navy duffel bag from the back of the closet and packed methodically—tailored jackets I'd worn to his investor meetings, high heels that had carried me through endless networking events where I'd smiled and supported and stayed in the background. My laptop. My grandmother's pearl earrings. Nothing that would immediately signal my departure.
Baxter watched from his bed in the corner, his brown eyes following my every move. When I knelt beside him, he pressed his warm body against my hand, his tail thumping softly against the floor.
"It's just us now," I whispered, clipping his leash to his collar. He stood obediently, sensing the gravity in my voice.
I took one final look at Ryan's sleeping form—the man I'd loved for a decade, the man I'd believed in, sacrificed for, built dreams with. In sleep, he looked peaceful, unburdened by the double life he'd constructed.
With Baxter at my side and my duffel bag slung over my shoulder, I slipped out the door of our Downtown LA loft. The soft click of the lock behind me sounded like the period at the end of a ten-year sentence.
I didn't look back as the elevator descended, carrying me away from the life I'd thought was mine. In my pocket, the flash drive pressed against my hip—a small, rectangular promise that the woman who walked out of that building was not the same one who had entered it ten years ago.
Somewhere in the city, a young woman in a red dress was probably waking up, checking her phone for messages from my boyfriend. Somewhere in our bed, Ryan slept on, unaware that when he reached for me, he would find only empty sheets.
And somewhere inside me, beneath the numbness and the pain, a new Madison was emerging—one who would never again make herself small for a man who couldn't see her greatness.
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