
After His Mistress Cost Me Our Baby, I Walked Out
After His Mistress Cost Me Our Baby, I Walked Out Chapter 1
I stood back, surveying the dining room of our Manhattan penthouse with a critical eye. The white roses—Ethan's favorite—formed perfect centerpieces, their petals catching the golden glow from the candles I'd arranged in a constellation across our glass table. Three years of marriage, and I still found myself trying to create the perfect moment, the perfect setting, as if the right ambiance might finally unlock something genuine between us.
My fingers smoothed the crisp linen tablecloth, and I inhaled the aroma of my special lemon soufflé baking in the oven. Ethan had always complimented it, one of the few dishes that consistently earned more than his perfunctory nod of approval. Tonight would be different. It had to be.
I touched the silver necklace at my throat—my mother's—drawing courage from its familiar weight. Three years ago, I'd walked away from a thriving career, from my name becoming synonymous with innovative jewelry design, all for the promise of what Ethan Sullivan represented: stability, certainty, a different kind of success. The kind my practical father would have finally acknowledged.
The clock on the wall read 7:25 PM. Ethan was rarely late. I straightened my emerald dress—the color he once said brought out my eyes—and ran a nervous hand through my hair. Five minutes. Five minutes until our anniversary dinner, until I might glimpse the man I'd fallen for, not the distant stranger who shared my bed but never his thoughts.
At 7:30 exactly, I heard the elevator doors slide open. My heart quickened as I moved toward the foyer, a smile already forming on my lips.
"Lauren." Ethan's voice carried that familiar tone—polite, measured, the same voice he used in boardrooms and business calls. But it wasn't Ethan's presence that made my smile falter. It was the woman beside him, her sleek black dress and calculating eyes as familiar as they were unwelcome.
"I hope you don't mind," Ethan continued, shrugging off his tailored jacket without meeting my gaze. "Samantha has been instrumental in our upcoming merger with VisionTech. I thought we could discuss strategy over dinner."
Samantha Reed's smile was a perfect arrangement of white teeth and red lips, not a hint of apology in her eyes. "Lauren, the place looks lovely. So... domestic."
I felt the word like a slap. Domestic. As if my efforts were quaint, provincial. As if the career I'd sacrificed had never existed.
"I wasn't expecting company," I managed, my voice steadier than I felt. "It's our anniversary."
Ethan's expression flickered—was it guilt? Annoyance? It vanished too quickly to tell. "Of course. But this merger is time-sensitive. I'm sure you understand."
He didn't wait for my response, already guiding Samantha toward our rooftop terrace where I'd set up the intimate dinner for two. I followed, watching as he pulled out a chair for her—a courtesy I couldn't remember receiving in months.
The night air was cool against my skin as I rearranged place settings, adding a third where there should have been only two. The city lights sparkled below us, a tapestry of possibilities I once found exhilarating. Now they seemed to mock me, each glittering point a reminder of a world I'd willingly left behind.
"Your husband tells me you used to design jewelry," Samantha remarked as I poured the wine. "Such a creative outlet. I've always admired women who can... indulge their artistic side before settling down."
I felt Ethan's eyes on me, waiting for the gracious response expected of a Sullivan wife. Before I could form words, his phone rang. He answered immediately, putting it on speaker.
"Mom, Dad—I have you on speaker with Lauren and Samantha."
"Wonderful!" Eleanor Sullivan's voice was warm. "Samantha, dear, how are those projections looking?"
As Samantha launched into business talk, Richard Sullivan's baritone joined in with approving laughter at her insights. They didn't mention our anniversary. They didn't address me at all.
I sat silently, the candlelight casting shadows across my face as my husband and his parents engaged with the woman who seemed to have claimed my place in their world. The soufflé would be perfect tonight, I thought distantly. And no one who mattered would notice.
One week later, I stood in our marble foyer, tiny floral-print onesies clutched in my trembling hands. The pregnancy test had shown positive that morning, and despite everything, joy had bloomed fierce and undeniable in my chest. This could change everything. This could bring Ethan back to me.
"I'm pregnant," I announced, my voice catching with emotion as he walked through the door.
Ethan froze, his expression unreadable. Then his eyes narrowed, clinical and cold. "Interesting timing," he said, setting down his briefcase. "Just when the merger's going through. Just when Samantha and I will be traveling more."
The tiny clothes fell from my hands, landing soundlessly on the polished floor. In that moment, I knew with devastating clarity that the joy I felt was mine alone to carry.
After His Mistress Cost Me Our Baby, I Walked Out of Contents
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