
After His Mistress Cost Me Our Baby, I Walked Out
Chapter 2
I stared at my phone in disbelief, the screen illuminating my face in the dim light of our bedroom. Samantha's name was trending. Not for her business acumen or her connections to the Sullivan empire, but for something far more salacious: leaked messages between her and the married CFO of a rival company. Photos. Hotel receipts. The scandal was exploding across every social media platform.
A strange, bitter satisfaction bloomed in my chest before guilt quickly smothered it. I shouldn't take pleasure in anyone's downfall, even Samantha's. Yet after weeks of morning sickness and Ethan's cold skepticism about my pregnancy, there was something almost vindicating about seeing the golden girl's facade crack.
The bedroom door swung open. Ethan stood in the doorway, his silhouette rigid with tension.
"You've seen it," he said flatly.
I nodded, setting my phone down. "It's everywhere."
"This is a PR nightmare." He paced to the window, his reflection fractured in the glass. "The timing couldn't be worse. The merger announcement is next week."
Of course. The merger. Not Samantha's betrayal of her partner, not the people hurt by her actions. The business implications were all that mattered.
"Lauren." His voice shifted into that tone I'd come to dread—reasonable, measured, the voice that preceded unreasonable demands. "We need you to make a statement."
"Me?" I placed a protective hand over my still-flat stomach. "What could I possibly say?"
"You're the perfect character witness. The loving wife, defending the family friend." He turned, his eyes calculating. "It humanizes her. Shows the Sullivan family stands united."
"I barely know her," I protested. "She's your associate, not mine."
"This isn't a request." His voice hardened. "The network is already setting up. You go live at noon tomorrow."
My throat tightened. "Ethan, I'm not feeling well. The doctor said to avoid stress—"
"One statement, Lauren. Five minutes on camera. For the family's reputation." He checked his watch. "I have calls to make. The PR team will brief you in the morning."
He left without waiting for my response, the door closing with quiet finality behind him.
* * *
The television studio lights were scorching. Makeup couldn't hide the pallor of my skin as I sat in the green room, clutching my mother's silver necklace like a talisman. The nausea I'd been fighting all morning intensified, accompanied by a dull cramping that made me shift uncomfortably in my seat.
"Two minutes, Mrs. Sullivan," a production assistant called.
I nodded, unable to trust my voice. Across the room, Samantha stood with Ethan, her face a perfect mask of contrition. She caught my eye and approached, her heels clicking purposefully on the floor.
"Lauren." Her voice was honey-sweet, but her eyes were calculating. "I can't tell you how much this means. Your support... it's everything."
A sharp cramp doubled me over. I gasped, clutching my abdomen.
Samantha's eyes widened slightly, understanding dawning in them before her lips curved into the barest smile. "Are you alright? You look... unwell."
"I'm fine," I managed, straightening with effort.
"Good." She patted my shoulder. "We wouldn't want anything to... interfere with your statement."
The implication hung in the air between us. She knew. And she didn't care.
"Mrs. Sullivan, you're on," the PA called.
I walked to the set on trembling legs, the lights blinding, the interviewer's sympathetic smile not reaching her eyes. The camera's red light blinked on, and I heard myself speaking words written by strangers, defending a woman who watched me suffer with satisfaction in her eyes.
"Samantha has always been a pillar of integrity in our family circle," I recited, feeling something warm and wet between my legs as another cramp seized me. "These allegations don't reflect the woman we know and trust—"
The room tilted suddenly. Lights blurred. I heard gasps, felt hands catching me as my knees buckled. Through the chaos, I glimpsed Samantha's face, her expression a strange mixture of triumph and annoyance at the interrupted broadcast.
"Call an ambulance!" someone shouted.
The last thing I saw before darkness claimed me was Ethan's face—not concerned, but inconvenienced, already reaching for his phone.
* * *
"I'm sorry, Mrs. Sullivan. There was nothing we could do."
The doctor's words floated above me in the sterile hospital room. I stared at the ceiling, tears sliding silently into my hair. My baby. Our baby. Gone.
Ethan stood by the window, his back to me, phone pressed to his ear. "...reschedule the board meeting? No, that won't be necessary. I'll be there."
He ended the call and finally turned to me. "The doctor says you'll be physically fine. They want to keep you overnight for observation."
I searched his face for grief, for any flicker of the loss that was tearing me apart from the inside. There was nothing.
"Our baby died," I whispered.
He checked his watch. "These things happen, Lauren. Perhaps it's for the best, with the merger requiring so much attention."
The words hit me like physical blows. For the best. Our child, reduced to an inconvenience.
"I need to go," he continued, already moving toward the door. "The board is waiting. I'll have my assistant check on you later."
The door closed behind him with a soft click that somehow echoed through my entire being. In that moment, something inside me hardened—a resolve forming in the hollow space where hope had lived.
This was my marriage. This was the man I had given up everything for. And as I lay there, empty and alone, I knew with absolute clarity that I couldn't do it anymore.
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