
Husband's Affair Exposed
Chapter 2
The cramping started during the quarterly board meeting, a sharp twist in my abdomen that made me grip the edge of the conference table. I tried to focus on the revenue projections Marcus was presenting, but the pain intensified with each passing minute, radiating through my lower back like fire.
"Are you alright, Ms. Cox?" Victoria's voice seemed to come from underwater.
I looked down and saw the dark stain spreading across my cream-colored skirt. The room tilted sideways, and suddenly I was standing, my chair scraping against marble floors.
"I need to... excuse me."
The emergency room at Mount Sinai was a blur of fluorescent lights and antiseptic smells. Dr. Martinez, a kind woman with gentle hands, confirmed what I already knew in my heart.
"I'm so sorry, Mrs. Pierce. You've suffered a miscarriage. The bleeding should subside in a few days, but you'll need to rest."
My baby. Our baby. The child David and I had been trying for, the future we'd whispered about in the dark. Gone.
With trembling fingers, I dialed David's number from the hospital bed. He answered on the fourth ring, his voice distracted.
"Leah? I'm in the middle of something important."
"David." My voice cracked, and the tears I'd been holding back finally spilled over. "I'm at the hospital. I lost the baby."
Silence stretched between us, broken only by the steady beep of monitors and distant conversations in the hallway.
"What do you mean, lost the baby?" His tone was flat, almost annoyed.
"A miscarriage." The word felt like broken glass in my throat. "Our baby is gone, David. I need you here. Please."
"Look, I'm really swamped with client meetings today. These deals won't close themselves. You'll be fine, right? The doctors are taking care of you?"
I stared at the phone, unable to process what I was hearing. This was the man who'd held me after every negative pregnancy test, who'd promised we'd get through this together.
"David, I just lost our child. Can't your meetings wait?"
"Leah, you're being dramatic. These things happen. We can try again later. I really have to go."
The line went dead.
I sat there in the sterile hospital room, holding the silent phone, feeling something fundamental die inside me alongside our baby. Two minutes. He'd given me two minutes for the loss of our child.
Three days later, I was home, moving through our penthouse like a ghost. The cramping had subsided, but the emptiness remained—not just in my body, but in my soul. David had returned that first night with takeout and a distracted kiss on my forehead, as if I'd had a minor procedure rather than lost our future.
I was lying on the living room sofa, staring at the city lights through floor-to-ceiling windows, when I heard his voice from the study. At first, I thought he was on a business call—until I caught the tone.
"I miss you too, baby."
The tenderness in his voice made me freeze. It was the same warmth he used to reserve for me, the gentle cadence I hadn't heard directed my way in months.
"No, she's resting. She won't be a problem tonight."
My heart hammered against my ribs as I crept closer to the partially open door.
"I can't wait to see you tonight. The usual place? The Ritz-Carlton downtown?" He laughed softly, intimately. "You know what you do to me when you wear that red dress."
I pressed my back against the hallway wall, my legs threatening to give out. While I was grieving our lost child, he was making romantic plans with his mistress.
"I love you too, Alyssa. See you at eight."
Alyssa. Even her name felt like a betrayal.
That evening, I watched David shower and dress with meticulous care—the expensive cologne I'd bought him for Christmas, the shirt I'd had tailored to fit his shoulders perfectly. He hummed while he shaved, actually hummed, as if he hadn't just buried his wife's dreams three days ago.
"Working late again?" I asked from the bedroom doorway.
"You know how it is. Big client dinner." He didn't even look at me as he adjusted his tie. "Don't wait up."
After he left, I found myself studying Muffin's behavior with new eyes. Our golden retriever had always been my shadow, following me from room to room, sleeping at the foot of our bed. But lately, she'd grown distant, more interested in David's clothes than his presence.
When David returned home after midnight, reeking of expensive perfume that wasn't mine, Muffin's reaction confirmed my worst fears. She ran to him immediately, tail wagging, but then began sniffing frantically at his jacket and pants. She whimpered and paced to the front door, looking back at David expectantly, as if waiting for someone else to follow him inside.
Someone she knew. Someone she'd been conditioned to expect.
I watched from the shadows as my own dog searched for my husband's mistress, and the last piece of my shattered heart finally crumbled to dust.
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