After My Husband Held Her Newborn, I Planned My Escape Novel Cover

After My Husband Held Her Newborn, I Planned My Escape

8.7 / 10.0
The evenings used to be ours. That's what I kept thinking as we walked the path along the east side of the community, the one that loops past the fountain and back through the oak trees. Ryan's hand wasn't in mine — it hadn't been for a while — but he was there, walking beside me, and for a few minutes it felt almost normal. Almost like two years ago, before everything. I was seven months along. My back ached constantly and my ankles swelled by afternoon, but I still looked forward to these walks. They were the one thing left in our marriage that felt uncomplicated. Then his phone rang. I didn't have to see the screen. I knew from the way his whole body changed — shoulders pulling back, jaw tightening, that particular stillness that came over him whenever it was her.

After My Husband Held Her Newborn, I Planned My Escape Chapter 1

The evenings used to be ours.

That's what I kept thinking as we walked the path along the east side of the community, the one that loops past the fountain and back through the oak trees. Ryan's hand wasn't in mine — it hadn't been for a while — but he was there, walking beside me, and for a few minutes it felt almost normal. Almost like two years ago, before everything.

I was seven months along. My back ached constantly and my ankles swelled by afternoon, but I still looked forward to these walks. They were the one thing left in our marriage that felt uncomplicated.

Then his phone rang.

I didn't have to see the screen. I knew from the way his whole body changed — shoulders pulling back, jaw tightening, that particular stillness that came over him whenever it was her. He'd been doing it for two years and he still didn't know I could read it.

"It's Demi," he said. "Something's wrong."

He was already turning toward the parking lot.

"Ryan." My voice came out steadier than I felt.

He looked back at me, and for just a second I saw something move across his face. Not guilt, exactly. More like inconvenience. "I have to go. Go back inside, okay? Don't stand out here too long."

Then he was gone. Taillights. The sound of the gate sliding open and then closed.

I stood on the path with one hand pressed flat against my stomach — a habit I'd picked up somewhere in the second trimester and couldn't seem to stop — and I watched the space where his car had been.

The fountain kept running. The oak trees didn't move. Everything looked exactly the same.

I went back inside and sat on the couch for a long time without turning on any lights.

---

I told myself I wasn't going to follow him.

I told myself that for about forty minutes before I picked up my keys.

We had one of those shared location apps — Ryan had set it up himself, back when he was still performing the role of attentive husband. I opened it in the parking garage and watched the little dot settle on an address I recognized. St. Mercy Private Hospital. The good one, on the north side. The kind with private rooms and fresh flowers in the lobby.

I drove there in the dark, one hand on the wheel and one on my stomach, telling myself there was a reasonable explanation. There was always a reasonable explanation. That was the thing about Ryan — he was never without one.

The maternity ward was on the fourth floor. I didn't plan to go up. I was going to wait in the lobby, or maybe just sit in the car, or maybe just turn around and go home and pretend I hadn't come at all.

I went up.

The elevator opened onto soft lighting and the particular quiet of a ward where people are either in pain or just past it. A nurses' station. A corridor with numbered doors. And at the far end, through the window of a recovery room, Ryan.

He was holding a baby.

Not standing awkwardly the way men do when someone hands them a newborn at a party. He was holding this baby the way you hold something you've been waiting for. Both arms, head tilted down, the kind of careful that looks like practice.

Demi was in the bed behind him. She looked — I don't have a better word for it — radiant. Hair loose, cheeks flushed, smiling at Ryan with the particular ease of a woman who has just gotten exactly what she wanted.

I don't know how long I stood there. Long enough for a nurse to appear at my elbow.

"Are you here for the Coleman family?" she asked, warm and efficient. "Your husband's been here since the delivery. He hasn't left once." She smiled at me. "Such a devoted father."

I heard myself say something. Thank you, maybe. I don't remember.

I remember the walk to the elevator. The way the floor felt slightly wrong under my feet, like the building had shifted an inch to the left. The button. The doors closing.

---

I found Ryan in the corridor outside the room. He'd come out, maybe to get water, maybe because he'd seen me through the glass. He looked at me the way he always looked at me when he'd been caught — not ashamed, exactly, but recalibrating.

"Sydney." He said my name like it was a problem he was already solving.

"Is that your son?" I asked.

He didn't deny it. That was the thing I kept coming back to afterward — he didn't even try. He just shifted his weight and said, "It's complicated. I was going to tell you when the time was right."

"Did you ever end it?" I asked. "After I forgave you. After everything. Did you ever actually end it?"

His jaw set. That silence I knew so well.

"Go home," he said. "You're tired. You need to rest. We'll talk about this rationally when—"

"When the time is right," I finished.

I looked at him. Really looked at him — at the man I'd spent two years trying to save, who had been here, in this hospital, holding another woman's baby, while I walked home alone in the dark.

I didn't cry. I didn't raise my voice. I just turned around and walked to the elevator and pressed the button and waited.

He didn't follow me.

---

I sat at the kitchen table until the windows went from black to gray to pale morning gold. I didn't sleep. I didn't eat. I just sat there and went back through two years of it — every late night, every business trip, every time he'd said *Demi needs me* and I'd told myself it was obligation, it was grief, it was the debt a good man pays to the widow of someone he respected.

I had believed him. That was the part that sat in my chest like a stone. I had believed him because I wanted to, and because he was very good at being believed.

By the time the sun was fully up, I had made two decisions.

I would not confront Ryan again without a lawyer present.

And I would have a lawyer before the week was out.

I pressed my palm flat against my stomach. The baby moved — a slow, rolling shift, like she was getting comfortable.

"It's okay," I said quietly. "I've got us."

I meant it.

I picked up my phone and searched: *divorce attorney, confidential consultation, family law.*

The first name that came up was Claire Sutton. Twelve years of practice. A list of credentials that meant nothing to me yet. A phone number.

I wrote it down on a piece of paper, folded it once, and put it in my pocket.

Then I got up, washed my face, and started breakfast. When Ryan came home two hours later, I handed him coffee and asked how his morning was.

He said fine.

I said good.

And I kept the paper in my pocket the entire time.

Continue Reading

After My Husband Held Her Newborn, I Planned My Escape of Contents

Ch. 1 Ch. 2 Ch. 3 Ch. 4
Ch. 5
Ch. 6
Ch. 7
Ch. 8
Ch. 9
Ch. 10
Ch. 11
all

You may also like

New Release Novels

Bound To The Immortal Beast Novel Cover
9.4
I was born under the red full moon, something rare and marked as a curse in the werewolf world. My pack hated me. They wanted me gone, saying I would bring nothing but destruction. My wolf was sealed before I could reach the awakening age, leaving me worthless. Helpless. Vulnerable. Then came the night that changed my life, dragging me into the worst world possible. I was married off to the cruel rogue Alpha, Drogo. A male bound by the curse of the Moon Goddess after committing an eternal sin. He was defined as the most ruthless male in the country. Behind the shadow. Never to be dared. But what happened when I realized I bore the face of a ghost that haunted him from his past? The face of the very woman who doomed him.
From Miss to Mrs: President Cohen's Contract Wife Novel Cover
9.5
My husband chose my sister over me at the darkest point of my life. They left me to die of asthma after throwing my inhaler away. But like a shooting star would appear to the sky, Geoffrey Cohen appeared. I thought I'd forgotten him and would no longer have anything to do with him but FATE said NO
His Love, My Hell, Her Justice Novel Cover
8.8
My wedding day was ruined by a crazed woman named Isolde, who claimed my husband, Ezekiel, was her soulmate from a past life. Then, after a car accident, Ezekiel faked amnesia, siding with her and putting me through hell. He let Isolde murder my mother, forced me to face my deepest fears, and poisoned me in public. When I finally had Isolde arrested, Ezekiel's revenge was swift and brutal. He kidnapped me and, in a final act of cruelty, snapped the neck of my puppy, Muffin-the only comfort I had left. He thought he had broken me, that he had destroyed every last piece of my soul. He was wrong. He had just unleashed a monster. Now, from the shadows, I will dismantle his empire, ruin his life, and make him pay for every tear I shed. My revenge has just begun.
Rejected by the Alpha, Claimed by the King Novel Cover
9.7
I stared at the financial records spread across my kitchen table, my fingers trembling as I traced the columns of numbers. Three years. Three years since I'd forgiven Oliver for his affair with that rogue she-wolf, Summer Wilson. Three years of rebuilding our mate bond, of raising our daughter Hope, of believing we'd moved past his betrayal. And now this. "Large withdrawals," I whispered, circling the figures with my pen. "Every month for... two years." The amounts were substantial—more than what we spent on pack supplies. More than what we allocated for Hope's education. The destination was always listed as "security expenses," but the pattern was too regular, too consistent.
Rejected by the False Alpha, Embraced by Fate Novel Cover
8.2
Something was wrong. I could feel it through our mate bond, a foreign sensation that didn't belong to me or Easton. My fingers trembled as I touched the mark on my neck—his mark—that had once been a symbol of our eternal connection. I followed the sensations like a trail of breadcrumbs through the pack house, my heart pounding against my ribs. The feeling grew stronger as I approached Easton's private office. I'd supported him for ten years, from a lowly pack member to the powerful Alpha of Moonridge Pack. I'd sacrificed everything for him, even my ability to bear children after saving his life from that rogue attack. My hand hesitated on the doorknob. What if I was wrong? What if this was just another misunderstanding?
The Architect's Vengeance: Empire Falls Novel Cover
8.2
My husband, Caden, was a real estate mogul who built his empire on our love story. The world swooned when he named his latest skyscraper the "Allisson Tower," calling it a modern-day Taj Mahal. But it was my design, and his grand gestures were just a cover for a grander theft. I discovered he wasn't just cheating with his pregnant mistress. He had stolen my architectural blueprints-the very foundation of his celebrated career. He' d bring me to the same restaurant where he' d just entertained her, recycling his romantic gestures. I watched him smile genuinely at her livestream while holding my hand, sending her virtual gifts with the message, "My princess deserves all this and more. You' re the only one for me." The man who swore "absolute honesty" on our wedding day had built our entire life on a mountain of lies. He didn't just break his vows; he pulverized them, turning our love into a public spectacle. So I planned my escape. I signed the divorce papers, packaged them with irrefutable proof of his plagiarism inside a model of the first building he stole, and handed it to him as an "anniversary gift." "You can't open it for two weeks," I told him. He had no idea that in two weeks, his wife would be a ghost and his empire would be ashes.
Chapters
Read now
Share