
Betrayal's Final Chapter: Rediscovering Life After His Affair
Chapter 1
The cramping started during dinner, a dull ache that I initially dismissed as stress from Evan's recent distant behavior. But as the hurricane winds howled outside our windows, rattling the glass with increasing violence, the pain sharpened into something that made me double over, clutching the edge of our dining table.
"Evan," I gasped, but he was already reaching for his phone, frowning at the screen with that familiar expression he wore whenever work called. The cramping intensified, and I felt something warm and wet between my legs. My heart stopped. "Evan, I think—I think I might be pregnant, and something's wrong."
He glanced up absently, still scrolling through messages. "What? Kyla, I'm dealing with a crisis at the office. The Henderson project is falling apart, and—" His phone buzzed, cutting him off mid-sentence. The look that crossed his face when he saw the caller ID made my blood run cold. I knew that expression. I'd seen it too many times lately.
"I'm bleeding," I whispered, my voice barely audible over the storm's fury. "Evan, please. I need to get to a hospital."
But he was already answering the call, turning away from me. "Adhara? What's wrong? Slow down, I can barely hear you over the wind."
Adhara. Of course it was her. It was always her these days.
Another wave of pain crashed through me, so intense I had to grip the wall to stay upright. I could hear her voice through the phone, high and panicked, something about being stranded and scared. The cramping was getting worse, and I could feel myself growing lightheaded.
"Evan," I tried again, my voice stronger now, desperate. "I'm having a miscarriage. I need you to drive me to the hospital. Now."
He covered the phone with his hand, looking at me with irritation rather than concern. "Can't you see I'm handling an emergency? Adhara's car broke down in this storm, and she's alone and terrified. Just... take an Uber or something."
"An Uber?" The words came out as a broken laugh. "In a hurricane? Evan, I'm losing our baby."
But he was already grabbing his keys, his jacket, his attention completely consumed by whatever sob story Adhara was feeding him through the phone. "I'll be back as soon as I can. You'll be fine. You're always fine."
The door slammed behind him, leaving me alone with the storm and the growing pool of blood on our hardwood floor.
Somehow, I made it to my car. The pain was coming in waves now, each one worse than the last, and I had to stop twice just getting to the garage. The hurricane winds nearly knocked me over, rain lashing against my face like tiny needles. My hands shook as I fumbled with the keys, and I had to bite back a scream when another cramp seized me.
The drive to the hospital was a nightmare of blurred vision and white-knuckled determination. I called Evan seventeen times. Seventeen. Each call went straight to voicemail, his cheerful recorded voice a mockery of the man who had just abandoned me in my darkest hour.
By the time I stumbled into the emergency room, my jeans were soaked through with blood, and I could barely stand. The nurses took one look at me and rushed me into a room where a doctor with kind eyes confirmed what I already knew.
"I'm sorry," she said gently, her hand warm on my shoulder. "The pregnancy has terminated. The stress and delay in receiving care likely contributed to the complications."
I stared at the ceiling tiles, counting the small holes in each square while the doctor explained procedures and follow-up care. Her words seemed to come from very far away, muffled by the sound of my own heartbeat and the mechanical beeping of monitors.
When I woke up hours later, the storm had passed, leaving behind an eerie quiet that felt more ominous than the hurricane's rage. The first thing I did was check my phone. No missed calls from Evan. No texts asking if I was okay. Just a single message sent three hours after I'd arrived at the hospital:
"Dealing with a situation. Will check on you later."
I read it twice, then set the phone aside. The sterile hospital room felt colder than the storm outside, and for the first time in six years of marriage, I truly understood that I was completely alone.
You may also like





