
Breaking Free from False Love
Chapter 3
I spent the next two days in the hotel room, nursing my sprained ankle and the deeper wounds no one could see. Lincoln had found me in the vineyard only after an hour of searching—not because he'd noticed my absence, but because the event coordinator had asked where I was. His irritation at having to leave the reception was barely concealed as he helped me limp back to our room.
"You should be more careful," was all he'd said before returning to the party, leaving me alone with ice packs and pain medication.
With nothing but my phone for company, I made the mistake of opening social media. That's when I saw them—the photos Jessie had posted. Lincoln and her sharing wine, their glasses clinking under sunset lighting. Lincoln laughing at something she'd said, his head thrown back in a way I hadn't seen in years. Jessie leaning close to him, her hand on his chest, her caption reading: "Perfect evening with perfect company #NapaValley #BusinessAndPleasure."
She had tagged every location we'd visited—places I'd barely seen while confined to the hotel room with my injury. The vineyards I'd glimpsed only from windows. The restaurants where I'd sat alone at the table while Lincoln took business calls that somehow always involved Jessie.
My thumb trembled as I scrolled through image after image. In one particularly painful photo, Lincoln was feeding Jessie a chocolate-covered strawberry, his fingers lingering near her lips. The intimacy was unmistakable, the betrayal documented in high definition for anyone—for me—to see.
By the time we returned home three days later, the photos had multiplied. Jessie seemed determined to create a digital timeline of their affair, each post more intimate than the last. When I finally gathered the courage to confront Lincoln in our kitchen, he was already dressed for work, barely glancing up from his coffee.
"You need to talk to Jessie about those photos," I said, my voice steadier than I expected. "They're inappropriate."
Lincoln's expression hardened. "What photos?"
I showed him my phone, the screen displaying Jessie and him sharing a private toast, their foreheads nearly touching. "These. And dozens more like them."
"This is ridiculous, Autumn." He pushed the phone away. "They're completely innocent. We were working."
"Working doesn't involve feeding each other strawberries, Lincoln."
He sighed dramatically. "This jealousy isn't attractive. Jessie is my secretary. We were at a business retreat."
"She's pregnant with your child." The words escaped before I could stop them.
Lincoln's coffee mug froze halfway to his lips. For a moment, genuine shock registered on his face before his features smoothed into practiced neutrality. "Where did you hear that absurd rumor?"
"At the hospital, when you couldn't be bothered to answer your phone."
"You're being paranoid," he said coldly. "This is exactly why we agreed not to have children—you're too emotional, too unstable."
The gaslighting was so blatant it almost made me laugh. Almost.
"I need to get to work," he continued, setting down his mug. "Maybe use today to get some rest. You're clearly not thinking clearly."
A week later, I had my follow-up appointment at Mercy General. Dr. Mitchell had been concerned about my recovery, especially given the emotional trauma compounding the physical loss. I arrived early, hoping to be in and out before Lincoln knew I was gone.
The universe had other plans.
As I approached the women's health department, I heard Lincoln's voice—warm, concerned, tender in a way he hadn't spoken to me in years. I rounded the corner to find him in the waiting area, kneeling before Jessie who sat in a chair, her face a perfect mask of distress as he held her hand.
"It's going to be fine," he was saying, his thumb stroking the back of her hand. "The doctor said it's just some cramping. Perfectly normal at this stage."
My heart stopped. This stage. Of her pregnancy.
Neither of them noticed me frozen in the doorway, watching as Lincoln presented Jessie with a bouquet of pink roses—my favorite flowers that he'd never once brought me. She accepted them with a tremulous smile, her free hand drifting to rest protectively over her abdomen.
The gesture was unmistakable. So was the look of adoration on my husband's face as he gazed at another woman carrying the child he'd never wanted with me.
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