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Betrayal's Final Chapter: Rediscovering Life After His Affair Novel Cover

Betrayal's Final Chapter: Rediscovering Life After His Affair

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.
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Chapter 2

Morning light filtered through the hospital blinds, casting thin bars across my blanket as I stared at the ceiling. I'd counted every tile, memorized every crack. Sleep had come in fitful bursts, interrupted by nurses checking vitals and the hollow ache in my womb where my child should have been growing. Seventeen calls. Not one returned.

The door swung open, and my heart leapt despite everything—until I saw he wasn't alone.

"Kyla." Evan's voice held none of yesterday's irritation, replaced by something worse: pity mingled with impatience. "How are you feeling?"

Before I could answer, Adhara Kennedy stepped from behind him, her manicured hand possessively curled around his bicep. She wore a cream-colored dress that highlighted her perfect complexion, her dark hair cascading over one shoulder. She carried a fruit basket like we were acquaintances, like she hadn't been the emergency more important than his wife losing their child.

"We came as soon as we could," she said, her voice dripping with manufactured sympathy. "The roads were just awful after the storm."

I stared at Evan, searching for any sign of the man I'd married six years ago. The man I'd given up my family's support for, the one I'd built a life with from nothing. His eyes skittered away from mine.

"Seventeen calls," I whispered. "I called you seventeen times while I was bleeding out in our car."

Adhara set the fruit basket on the rolling table beside my bed. "We brought you some things. Hospital food is so dreadful." She leaned over, arranging the items, a knife balanced precariously on the edge.

As she adjusted the cellophane wrapping, the knife slipped, landing with a soft thud on my blanket, inches from my hand. I flinched, the sudden movement sending a fresh wave of pain through my abdomen.

"Oh!" Adhara gasped, her hand flying to her mouth. "I'm so clumsy. Are you alright?"

I stared at the knife, then at her face. There was something in her eyes—a flash of something calculating and cold that disappeared so quickly I might have imagined it.

"Adhara, be careful," Evan scolded, stepping forward. But not to check on me—to take her hand, examining her finger where the fruit knife had nicked her skin. A paper cut. A goddamn paper cut. "You're bleeding."

"It's nothing," she said, but leaned into him nonetheless, allowing him to fuss over the microscopic injury while I sat surrounded by machines monitoring the aftermath of my miscarriage.

They'd forgotten I was there. Or worse—they hadn't.

"The baby," I said, my voice stronger than I felt. "Our baby is gone, Evan."

He looked up, guilt flickering across his face before it hardened into something defensive. "I'm sorry that happened, Kyla. But there's something we need to discuss."

Adhara's hand drifted to her stomach, a deliberate gesture that made my blood freeze. "Actually," she said, her voice honeyed and triumphant, "we were just talking about names on the way over."

"Names?" The word felt like glass in my throat.

"For the baby," she clarified, caressing her flat abdomen. "If it's a boy, we were thinking James, after Evan's grandfather. But I'm hoping for a little girl."

The room tilted sideways. I gripped the sheets, anchoring myself as understanding crashed through me. "You're pregnant."

"Three months," she said, smiling up at Evan, who still wouldn't meet my eyes. "We wanted to wait to tell you until after the first trimester, but..."

"How long?" I asked Evan directly, ignoring her. "How long have you been sleeping with her?"

He finally looked at me then, his expression a mixture of defiance and shame. "Six months. It just... happened."

"Nothing just happens for half a year, Evan."

"I love her," he said simply, as if those three words justified everything—the betrayal, the abandonment, the loss of our child.

I closed my eyes, letting the pain wash through me. When I opened them again, I was calmer. "I want you both to leave."

"Kyla, be reasonable," Evan started. "We need to talk about arrangements. Adhara and I—"

"Get. Out."

They left, but the confrontation was far from over. Three days later, I returned to our home—the home we'd built together from our first apartment's secondhand furniture to the carefully chosen art on the walls—to find Adhara in my kitchen, drinking from my favorite mug.

"Oh good, you're back," she said, setting down the cup. "I've made a list of what you should take when you move out. Everything else stays with us."

"Move out?" I repeated, the words not quite computing.

Evan appeared from our bedroom—our bedroom—carrying a stack of my books. "Kyla, be reasonable. Adhara and I need the house for the baby. You can stay with a friend until you find a new place."

I looked between them—Adhara's smug smile, Evan's detached efficiency—and something hardened inside me. Six years of marriage, of building a life together, and he expected me to disappear quietly while he moved his mistress into our home.

"No," I said, the word simple but firm.

Adhara's smile faltered. "Excuse me?"

"I said no. I'm not moving out, and I'm not leaving with just a suitcase of clothes." I met Evan's startled gaze. "I want fair division of all our marital property. Through legal proceedings."

"You can't be serious," he scoffed.

"I've never been more serious in my life." I picked up my mug from in front of Adhara, dumping its contents in the sink. "You want a divorce? Fine. But you'll pay for what you've done—literally."

The look of shock on both their faces was the first genuine feeling I'd had since waking up in that hospital room alone.

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