
After My Husband’s Mistress Sent Me the Pregnancy Photo
Chapter 1
The phone buzzed at 11:47 p.m.
I was in bed with a book I hadn't been reading. The screen lit up the dark room. Motion alert. Anderson Tech, Floor 47. Corey's office.
I almost ignored it. He worked late. He always worked late.
But something in me, some small cold thing, made me tap the notification.
The live feed loaded. Three inches of screen. Black and white. Crisp.
My husband was on his desk. His shirt was open. His hand was in someone's hair. The someone was Angelique Shaw, his executive assistant. She was the one I had hired two springs ago because her resume was clean and her smile was practiced.
She was looking up. Not at him.
At the camera.
She knew.
I sat very still. The book slid off my lap and hit the rug. I didn't pick it up. My hand was steady. That surprised me. I noticed my hand was steady the way a person notices the weather.
I did not cry. I did not call him. I did not throw the phone.
I got out of bed. I walked to my office down the hall. I sat down at my laptop. I opened a spreadsheet.
Column A: Assets. Column B: Location. Column C: Liquidity. Column D: Timeline.
I typed for forty minutes. The cursor blinked. I did not.
***
Three days later, I sat in a leather chair in a neurologist's office on the Upper East Side. The light through the blinds cut my hands into stripes.
Dr. Reyes had a soft voice and a hard chart. He was kind in the way doctors are kind when there is no good news to give.
"Early-onset," he said. "It's rare at your age. We caught it early. There are options."
He slid a brochure across the desk. I didn't pick it up.
I had known something was wrong for months. The lost names. The Tuesday I drove past my own exit. The way I'd stood in the kitchen last week holding a mug, unsure if I'd already drunk from it.
I'd been hoping it was stress. It was not stress.
"Mrs. Anderson?"
"Spencer," I said, automatically. "My maiden name is Spencer."
He blinked.
"What are the alternatives?" I asked.
"To the medication?"
"To everything."
He paused. He told me about clinical trials. He told me there were experimental things. He told me, gently, that I should not chase miracles.
I thanked him. I shook his hand. I drove home.
In my kitchen I poured a glass of water. I drank half of it. Then I sat down at my laptop and typed two words into the search bar.
Memory. Erasure.
***
The Oslo trial was buried four pages deep. A small institute on the edge of the fjord. Their published abstract used careful language. Selective suppression of emotionally salient memory clusters. Targeted. Reversible only within a narrow window.
I read the full clinical data twice. I read the consent forms three times.
Then I picked up the phone and called them under the name Greta Lindqvist. My grandmother's name. A woman who had also outlived a man who didn't deserve her.
The institute's intake coordinator had a quiet, professional voice. She did not ask why a stranger from New York wanted to forget. She asked when I could fly out for evaluation.
I told her two weeks.
Within the same week, I signed a soft offer letter from Nordlys Technologies, a clean-energy AI firm based outside Oslo. Senior executive. Full board seat. A salary that would have made Corey laugh and then go very quiet.
The negotiation happened over encrypted video at 5 a.m. my time. The CEO, a woman named Ingrid, watched me through the screen and said, "You're calmer than I expected."
"I've had three days to think about it," I said.
She didn't ask what it was.
***
The next message from Angelique arrived on a Friday.
I was in the back of a town car when my phone lit up. Unknown number. I opened it because I already knew.
The first photo was Corey's hand on the small of her back. The second was worse. The third was on the stationery of the Cap d'Antibes hotel, the one we had stayed in on our seventh anniversary. The bed I had once cried in from happiness.
Three days later, while I was waiting for a meeting to start, the second message came.
A grainy black-and-white square. A small curved shape inside it. Twelve weeks, the timestamp said.
The caption was three words.
He chose us.
My chest did something I cannot describe. Heat, then cold, then nothing at all. My fingers tightened on the phone until the case creaked.
Then I unlocked it. I opened my encrypted folder. I saved both messages. I closed the folder.
I moved the Oslo flight up by three weeks.
I did not write back. There was nothing to say to a woman who had aimed at the one wound she knew I carried, the one no one was supposed to know about.
Let her think silence meant I hadn't seen.
***
That same evening, I wore the navy dress to the leadership dinner.
The private room at Daniel was lit like a confession. Candles low, glasses high, twelve of the most expensive minds in tech eating duck and laughing too loudly. Corey sat at the head of the table. He sat me at his right.
He touched my wrist when I sat down. "You look beautiful," he said.
I smiled. I let him touch me. My pulse did not rise.
I laughed at the right jokes. I asked the head of product about his daughter's recital. I sipped one glass of wine and made it last the entire meal. I felt Angelique's photos sitting in my phone in my purse like a small live wire.
When the plates were cleared, I leaned slightly toward Dominic Hale on my left.
Dominic had been our CFO for nine years. Gray at the temples now. Sharp as a paper edge. His wife had brought soup to my apartment the week of the miscarriage. He had never once asked about it.
"Stay a moment after," I said quietly. "There's something I need to discuss."
He nodded once. Did not look at Corey. Did not look surprised.
When the room emptied, I poured him a fresh glass and slid the offer across the table on a single folded sheet of paper.
He read it. He read it again.
The number at the bottom would have made most men gasp. He did not gasp. He looked up at me, and for a long moment I saw him weighing twelve years of loyalty on a scale only he could see.
"Oslo," he said finally.
"Oslo."
"And the others?"
"I'll tell you who. You tell me how soon they can move."
He looked down at the paper again. Then he set down his glass. The crystal made a small, decisive sound against the wood.
"Tell me when," he said.
I folded the paper and slid it into my purse, next to the phone with Angelique's messages still inside.
From across the room, Corey laughed at something one of the VPs had said. The sound traveled the long table and landed somewhere behind my ribs and did not move me at all.
I looked at my husband. I looked at the man who had just chosen me over him.
I smiled, small and even, and finished my wine.
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