
Betrayal in Her Pregnancy
Chapter 3
I spent three days gathering every scrap of evidence. Hotel receipts carefully organized by date. Screenshots of text messages between Hunter and Lucy. A detailed timeline of his 'late nights' that matched perfectly with their rendezvous. I even had a diary I'd kept over the past year, documenting Hunter's pattern of neglect and lies—including his absence during my miscarriage.
Each piece of evidence felt like another nail in the coffin of our marriage. By the time I finished, I had a thick folder that told the complete story of betrayal. A story that even Hunter couldn't deny.
I waited for him in the living room, the folder on the coffee table before me. When he walked through the door, his eyes immediately went to the folder, then to my face. Something in my expression must have alarmed him.
"What's wrong?" he asked, loosening his tie.
"Sit down, Hunter," I said, my voice steadier than I expected. "We need to talk."
He sat across from me, maintaining a careful distance. I pushed the folder toward him.
"Open it."
He flipped through the pages, his expression changing from confusion to shock to anger. His hands began to shake slightly as he saw the depth of my investigation—the dates, times, locations. The evidence of his life with Lucy.
"You've been spying on me?" His voice rose, indignation replacing guilt. "Going through my phone? Following me? What the hell, Alana?"
I almost laughed at the absurdity. "That's what concerns you? Not the fact that you've been cheating on me for months? Not the fact that you were with her when I lost our baby?"
"You had no right to invade my privacy like this," he snapped, standing up and throwing the folder back onto the table. "This is a complete violation of trust!"
"*I* violated *your* trust?" The irony was staggering. "You've been sleeping with Lucy—the student I've been supporting financially—while planning to abandon me and our unborn child for three years in Singapore, and you're talking about trust?"
"You don't understand the pressure I'm under," he said, pacing now. "My career demands sacrifices—"
"Stop." I raised my hand. "Just stop. I'm not asking for explanations anymore. I want you to end it with Lucy and cancel the Singapore assignment."
Hunter's laugh was cold. "You can't be serious. This assignment is the opportunity of a lifetime. And as for Lucy..." He hesitated, his eyes hardening. "What I have with her is real. She understands me in ways you never have."
The words hit like physical blows, but I refused to crumble. "Then there's nothing left to discuss."
"What does that mean?" His tone turned threatening.
"It means I'm leaving you, Hunter. I'm going to raise this child alone."
His face flushed with anger. "You're not taking my child anywhere."
"Your child?" I stood, protective instinct flaring. "The one you called 'inconvenient'? The one you planned to abandon for three years? That child?"
He moved closer, towering over me. "You're overreacting. You always do this—turn everything into drama. This is why I needed space."
"No, this is why I need to leave."
---
I waited until Hunter left for work the next day. I'd stayed awake all night, listening to his breathing beside me, feeling like I was lying next to a stranger. When the front door closed behind him, I moved quickly, methodically packing the essentials—clothes, personal documents, sentimental items I couldn't bear to leave behind.
I wrote a letter explaining my decision and left it on the kitchen counter. Not for reconciliation, but for closure. I needed him to understand that this wasn't impulsive or emotional—it was the only path forward for me and my child.
I'd barely settled into a small furnished apartment when the calls began. First from Hunter, then his parents, then mine. Each voice more accusatory than the last.
"You need to work this out," my mother insisted. "Marriage has rough patches."
"A child needs a father," Hunter's father lectured. "You're being selfish."
"He made a mistake," my father said. "Men sometimes do."
Their words revealed so much about why I'd accepted Hunter's behavior for so long. I'd been raised to believe that a woman's role was to accommodate, to forgive, to maintain the family unit at any cost.
But the most devastating confrontation came three days after I left, when a sharp knock at my door revealed Hunter's mother, Margaret, her lips pressed into a thin line of disapproval.
"May I come in?" she asked, not waiting for an answer before pushing past me.
She surveyed my small temporary apartment with obvious disdain. "So this is where you're hiding."
"I'm not hiding, Margaret. I'm starting over."
"Don't be ridiculous." She placed her designer handbag on my second-hand coffee table. "Hunter told me everything. You're overreacting to normal male behavior. Men stray sometimes—it's in their nature. A smart woman looks the other way."
"Is that what you did with your husband?" I asked quietly.
Her eyes flashed. "Don't you dare judge me. I built a life, a family. You're throwing yours away because your ego can't handle a little competition."
"Lucy isn't competition," I said. "She's welcome to him."
"That girl understands what you never did—how to make Hunter feel important, special." Margaret's smile turned cruel. "I've already given her the Knight family necklace. The one that should have been yours."
I remembered that necklace—a diamond pendant passed down to each daughter-in-law on her wedding day. Margaret had told me it was being cleaned when I got married, that I would receive it "soon." Five years of "soon."
"I hope it brings her better luck than it would have brought me," I said, moving toward the door. "Now please leave."
"Hunter was right about you," she hissed. "You were never Knight family material."
As I closed the door behind her, I placed my hand on my stomach. "No," I whispered to my unborn child. "We're something much better than that."
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