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Husband's Affair, My Loss Novel Cover

Husband's Affair, My Loss

I stared at the pregnancy test in my trembling hands, hardly daring to breathe. The morning sunlight streamed through our kitchen window, casting a golden glow across the marble countertop where I'd placed the test after the longest three minutes of my life. Two pink lines. My heart skipped, then raced as tears welled in my eyes. After months of trying, of temperature tracking and disappointments, of Michael's reassuring hugs and whispered "next times," it had finally happened. I was pregnant. We were going to have a baby. "Oh my God," I whispered, pressing a hand to my still-flat stomach. Inside me grew the tiny beginning of our family—Michael's eyes, maybe my smile, a perfect blend of us both. Michael.
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Chapter 3

I awoke to the harsh fluorescent lights of the medical bay, my body hollow and aching. The emptiness inside me wasn't just physical—it was as if someone had carved out my soul along with my child. My tears soaked silently into the thin pillow beneath my head as fragments of the doctor's words echoed in my mind: "I'm sorry... miscarrying... nothing we could do..."

I reached instinctively for Michael's hand, needing his warmth, his strength. But the chair beside my bed sat empty, the blanket draped over it untouched. How long had I been alone? Hours, judging by the stiffness in my limbs and the dried tear tracks on my cheeks.

From somewhere above deck came the faint strains of music—a reception or dinner for the conference attendees. The sound was like salt in an open wound. While I lay here, broken and grieving the loss of our child, Michael was... where? With her?

The door to the medical bay opened, and my heart leapt with desperate hope. Michael stepped in, but the sight of him brought no comfort. His hair was neatly combed again, his shirt changed. The scent that wafted in with him wasn't the antiseptic smell of the medical bay or his familiar cologne—it was Samantha's perfume, the same floral notes I'd caught when she leaned over my IV hours earlier.

He'd been with her. While I lost our baby, while I cried alone in pain and grief, he'd been with the woman he'd betrayed me with.

"You're awake," he said, his voice hollow. He couldn't meet my eyes, his gaze darting to the monitors, the floor, the wall—anywhere but my face.

I stared at him, this stranger wearing my husband's skin. Words failed me. What could I possibly say to the man who had shattered my world twice in one day?

"The doctor says you need rest," he continued, still avoiding my gaze. "They want to keep you overnight for observation."

"Where were you?" My voice was a rasp, raw from crying.

He flinched as if I'd struck him. "I needed to... clear my head."

"With her?"

His silence was answer enough.

"Our baby is gone, Michael." I couldn't keep the accusation from my voice. "Our baby is gone, and you couldn't even stay with me."

"I can't do this right now, Isabella." He ran a hand through his hair—that nervous gesture I once found endearing. "This is... it's too much. The pregnancy, the miscarriage... I didn't even know."

"That was my surprise," I whispered. "I came to tell you about our baby."

Something like shame flickered across his face, quickly replaced by defensiveness. "Try to get some rest," he said abruptly, backing toward the door. "I'll check on you later."

And then he was gone, slipping away as quickly as he'd come, leaving behind only the lingering scent of another woman's perfume and the crushing weight of his abandonment.

In that moment, as the door closed behind him, a terrible clarity washed over me. This wasn't just about Michael's weakness or his affair. There was something calculated in the timing, in Samantha's presence at my bedside, in the way the pain had intensified immediately after she'd adjusted my IV.

I remembered the cold satisfaction in her eyes as she'd inserted the syringe, the way she'd hovered so efficiently, taking control of my care. The nurse Maria's troubled glance, her hurried exit.

A chill ran through me that had nothing to do with the sterile air of the medical bay. Samantha hadn't just stolen my husband. She'd orchestrated this entire nightmare—perhaps even my miscarriage itself.

Later that evening, unable to bear the confines of the medical bay any longer, I dragged myself from bed. My legs trembled beneath me as I made my way to the door, desperate for air that wasn't tainted with antiseptic and loss.

I moved like a ghost through the ship's corridors, following the sound of voices until I reached a partially open door to one of the conference rooms. Through the crack, I saw them—Michael and Samantha, standing close together in the empty room.

"You're doing the right thing," Samantha was saying, her hand on Michael's arm. "Her stress levels clearly caused this. She wasn't taking proper care of herself or the pregnancy."

"I didn't even know about the baby," Michael said, his voice hollow.

"Exactly." Samantha's voice dripped with false sympathy. "She didn't tell you—probably because she knew it wasn't yours."

I froze, the blood turning to ice in my veins. The cruelty of her lie stole my breath.

"What?" Michael's face contorted in confusion.

"Think about it, Michael." Samantha moved closer to him. "Why else would she hide it? Why the dramatic surprise? She needed time to make you believe it was yours."

I watched, horrified, as doubt crept across my husband's face. He was considering it—actually considering that I would betray him, that I would lie about our child.

"You're a good man, Michael," Samantha continued, her voice soft and poisonous. "You deserve better than her lies."

Michael nodded slowly, the last of his resistance crumbling under her manipulation. In that moment, I saw the full extent of what I was up against—not just a husband's infidelity, but a calculated campaign to destroy me completely.

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