
After His Ex Faked Cancer, I Lost Our Baby
Chapter 2
The zipper of the canvas duffel sounded like a sudden tear in the quiet room.
We were supposed to be in the Catskills. The cabin had been booked for three months—a quiet weekend to celebrate our five-year anniversary, a weekend where I had planned to place my hand over my stomach and finally tell him about the life growing inside me. Instead, Ryder was standing in the doorway with his coat already on, his phone gripped so tightly his knuckles were bloodless.
"She can't breathe, Greta," he said, his voice carrying the frantic, high-wire pitch of a man who needed to be the hero. "It's a severe panic attack. She's completely alone. I just need to go calm her down, and then I'll be right back. We can drive up tomorrow morning instead."
He didn't look at my eyes. He looked at the half-packed duffel on the bed.
"The reservation is for tonight, Ryder."
"I know. I'll make it up to you. I promise." He closed the distance between us, pressing a hurried, distracted kiss to my forehead. He smelled of winter air and adrenaline. "It's just one month. We agreed."
He didn't wait for my answer. The front door clicked shut, leaving a heavy, suffocating silence in its wake. I stood in the center of the bedroom, the evening shadows stretching long across the floorboards. Slowly, methodically, I began to unpack. I took out the thick wool sweaters, the hiking socks, the silk dress I had bought just for him. I folded them back into the drawers, smoothing out the invisible wrinkles with an unsteady hand.
He didn't come back that night. I lay on his side of the bed, the digital clock glowing red in the dark—2:00 AM, 4:00 AM, 6:00 AM. Every hour that passed cemented a cold, undeniable truth in my chest: I was no longer his partner. I was an inconvenience.
By Tuesday, the exhaustion had settled deep into my bones. I was sitting at my desk at the architectural firm, the fluorescent lights humming a dull, rhythmic headache into my temples, when my phone vibrated against the glass.
An unsaved number. An image file.
I tapped the screen. The breath hitched in my throat, trapping itself somewhere behind my ribs.
It was a photograph. Ryder and Whitney, college-aged, their faces flushed with youth and alcohol. His hands were tangled in her blonde hair, pulling her flush against him. Her eyes were closed, her lips locked with his in a desperate, consuming kiss.
Beneath the image was a text: *Found this in my old camera roll. Just reminiscing. You’re so sweet for giving us this time. -W*
Without warning, a blinding hook of pain ripped through my abdomen. It wasn't a dull ache; it was a sudden, violent tearing sensation, like a hot wire being pulled taut beneath my ribs. I gasped, doubling over in my ergonomic chair, my forehead dropping to the cool edge of the desk. My fingers dug into the armrests until my nails ached.
*Stress,* I told myself, squeezing my eyes shut as a cold sweat broke out across the back of my neck. *It’s just the pregnancy. Just the stress.* I swallowed hard against the metallic, sour taste flooding my mouth, forcing air into my lungs until the agony receded into a low, simmering throb. I deleted the message, but the image of his hands in her hair was already burned into the back of my eyelids.
Three days later, Ryder insisted on hosting a dinner party.
"It will show everyone that things are normal," he had argued, pacing our kitchen. "That we're handling this maturely. Compassionately."
I didn't argue. I spent the evening moving through my own apartment like a ghost, serving roasted garlic crostini and pouring wine for friends who smiled too brightly and avoided making direct eye contact with me. Whitney sat in the center of our velvet sofa, looking tragically beautiful. She wore a pale cashmere wrap that swallowed her thin frame, playing the role of the fragile, fading flower with terrifying precision. Ryder hovered over her, glowing with the martyrdom of his own nobility.
"I'll grab the Pinot," Ryder announced, squeezing Whitney's frail shoulder before disappearing down the hall toward the kitchen.
The moment he was out of earshot, the atmosphere in the living room shattered. The other guests were engaged in a loud debate about real estate near the windows, leaving Whitney and me isolated by the coffee table.
I reached forward to collect empty appetizer plates. Whitney leaned in.
The fragile, dying-bird posture vanished instantly. Her spine straightened. Her eyes, previously wide and watery, flattened into something dark and entirely alive.
"You have so much patience, Greta," she whispered. Her voice was a soft, melodic razor.
I didn't look up. I stacked a porcelain plate. "I prefer to keep my hands busy."
"I admire it. Really, I do." She leaned closer, the scent of expensive lilies and something faintly chemical rolling off her skin. "It takes a very specific kind of woman to smile while sharing her man in her own dining room."
My fingers tightened around the stem of a wine glass. The heat in my chest flared, burning away the last remnants of my diplomacy. I finally met her gaze.
"I'm not sharing anything, Whitney," I said, my voice barely above a breath, yet heavy enough to anchor the room. "You're on borrowed time. Make sure you don't choke on it."
Whitney’s lips curved into a slow, razor-thin smile. She didn't look like a woman preparing to die. She looked like a woman preparing for war.
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