
After His Mistress Cost Me Our Baby, I Walked Out
Chapter 3
The hospital room's fluorescent lights cast a harsh glow over everything, making the already sterile environment feel even more lifeless. I stared at the ceiling, counting the tiny holes in each panel to distract myself from the hollow ache inside me. Twenty-four hours had passed since I lost our baby. Twenty-three hours and forty minutes since Ethan had walked out, choosing a board meeting over staying with me.
A gentle knock at the door pulled me from my thoughts. I expected a nurse, maybe Ethan's assistant with discharge papers. Instead, Michael Carter stood in the doorway, his familiar face a startling reminder of the life I'd left behind.
'Lauren,' he said softly, hesitating at the threshold. 'I hope it's okay that I came. I heard what happened.'
I struggled to sit up, suddenly conscious of my hospital gown and unwashed hair. 'Michael... how did you—'
'Industry gossip travels fast.' He stepped into the room, a paper bag in one hand. 'I brought soup. My grandmother's recipe. Hospital food is...' He trailed off, his eyes taking in my pale face, the untouched meal tray beside me.
'Terrible,' I finished for him, managing a weak smile.
Michael pulled up a chair and sat beside my bed, close but not crowding. Not like the doctors who prodded or the nurses who offered mechanical sympathy. He simply existed there, a calm presence in the storm of my life.
'You don't have to talk about it,' he said, unpacking the container of soup. 'But I'm here if you want to.'
The kindness in his voice nearly undid me. I'd forgotten what it felt like—to be seen as a person, not an accessory or an inconvenience.
'I lost the baby,' I whispered, the words still raw in my throat.
Michael nodded, his eyes reflecting a genuine sadness that Ethan's never had. 'I'm so sorry, Lauren.'
We sat in silence as I took a spoonful of soup—rich chicken broth with vegetables that tasted like actual food, not the processed meal the hospital had provided. The warmth spread through my chest, the first comfort I'd felt in days.
'I've been following your work,' I said eventually, needing to talk about anything else. 'The Luminescence collection was beautiful.'
'It would have been better with your input.' He smiled, no flattery in his tone, just simple truth. 'The industry misses you, Lauren. Your vision. Your talent.'
'I haven't designed anything in three years.'
'That doesn't mean you can't.' He leaned forward slightly. 'I'm starting a new studio. Smaller than before, more creative control. If you ever wanted to collaborate again...'
The offer hung in the air between us—not charity, but opportunity. A doorway back to the person I used to be.
'Thank you,' I said, meaning it more than he could know.
When Michael left, he took the emptiness with him, replacing it with something I hadn't felt in years: possibility.
* * *
Three days later, I returned to the Sullivan mansion—a house that had never been a home. The silence that greeted me was familiar, comforting even. I made my way upstairs to my private study, the one space Ethan rarely entered.
I froze in the doorway. Samantha Reed stood at my desk, her manicured fingers flipping through my locked sketchbook—the one containing designs I'd created before my marriage, ideas I'd kept private and protected.
'What are you doing?' My voice was steady, surprising even myself.
Samantha didn't startle or apologize. She merely looked up, a calculating smile on her face. 'Lauren. You're home earlier than expected.'
'That doesn't answer my question.' I stepped into the room, noticing the broken lock on my drawer.
'Just gathering information for the merger,' she replied smoothly. 'Ethan wanted a complete inventory of potential assets.'
'My personal sketches aren't assets. They're private.'
'Nothing is private in business, Lauren.' She closed the book, making no move to return it. 'Ethan agrees. You should discuss it with him.'
I found him in his office, phone pressed to his ear as usual. He held up one finger, signaling me to wait—a gesture I'd obeyed countless times before. Not today.
'Why is Samantha going through my personal belongings?' I demanded.
He ended his call with a frown. 'It's just due diligence. The merger requires transparency about all potential intellectual property.'
'Those designs are mine. From before we married.'
'And now they're part of the Sullivan portfolio.' His tone was dismissive. 'It's just business, Lauren. Don't be dramatic.'
In that moment, I saw with perfect clarity what I'd become in this marriage: not a partner, not even a person. Just another acquisition.
That night, I lay awake beside Ethan's sleeping form, plans crystallizing in my mind. Before dawn, I slipped from bed and packed a single suitcase—my design tools, remaining sketchbooks, and my mother's silver necklace. Nothing else mattered.
As the first light of day crept over the Manhattan skyline, I walked out of the Sullivan mansion, keys to a borrowed sedan in my hand. I didn't look back. There was nothing there worth seeing anymore.
You may also like





