
Mistaken Moonlight: The Cabin 1412 Affair
Chapter 2
Two pink lines. Unmistakable even under the harsh fluorescent light of my tiny bathroom. I blinked, hoping they might disappear, but they remained stubbornly visible on the plastic stick between my trembling fingers.
"No, no, no," I whispered, sinking down onto the closed toilet lid.
Two weeks had passed since that night on the cruise—that dreamlike encounter in the moonlit cabin with a stranger I'd mistaken for Mark. Two weeks of nausea I'd attributed to stress, of exhaustion I'd blamed on emotional fallout from my breakup.
But this... this changed everything.
I fumbled for my phone, scrolling to Mark's name before I could think better of it. Despite everything, some foolish part of me still believed he should know, that maybe this news would awaken something decent in him.
*I need to talk to you. It's important. Please call me when you can.*
I hit send, then waited, staring at the screen until it dimmed. Five minutes later, it lit up with his reply:
*There's nothing to talk about, Kate. I've moved on. Mrs. H and I are flying to Belize next week. Don't contact me again. Your stuff is with the landlord. Rent's paid through the end of the month.*
The coldness of it stole my breath. Two years together, and this was how it ended—a text message and my belongings in storage. I hadn't even told him about the pregnancy, and he'd already closed the door completely.
I curled up on the bathroom floor, the cool tiles pressing against my cheek as tears came. Not just for Mark—I was beginning to see what a mistake he'd been all along—but for the impossible situation I now faced. Pregnant, alone, with mounting credit card debt from the cruise I'd foolishly charged, and the design job opportunity I'd lost when the company unexpectedly folded last month.
---
Two days later, I stood in the weathered entryway of my grandmother Ruth's cottage in Seawind Town, the sea breeze carrying the scent of salt and memories through the open door. After Mark's text, my landlord had confirmed that I needed to vacate by the end of the week. With nowhere else to go and barely enough savings to cover a security deposit on a new place, I'd called Gran.
"The cottage is yours for as long as you need, sweetheart," she'd said immediately, though she'd moved to a retirement community in Florida years ago. "It's just sitting there gathering dust."
I set down my two suitcases—all I had to show for my life in the city—and looked around at the faded floral wallpaper, the mismatched furniture, the collection of seashells on the windowsill. This place had been my sanctuary during childhood summers, when my parents' divorce was still fresh and neither seemed to have time for me.
Now it would shelter me again.
I unpacked methodically, hanging my few professional outfits in the bedroom closet that smelled of cedar and mothballs. My design supplies went on the old desk by the window overlooking the gray Atlantic. When I reached the bottom of my second suitcase, my fingers brushed against something small and metal—my missing earring, the mate to the one I'd lost that night on the ship.
I held it up to the light, watching it sparkle. A reminder of the stranger whose life was continuing unchanged while mine imploded.
---
That night, unable to sleep, I sat cross-legged on Gran's lumpy couch with my laptop. The cottage had spotty Wi-Fi at best, but it was enough for me to open LinkedIn and type a name into the search bar: Alexander Sterling III.
I'd found him days ago, after hours of searching through passenger lists and social media. The Sterling name had appeared in several society pages, and there he was—the man from cabin 1412. Tall, dark-haired, impeccably dressed in a tailored suit, his expression serious as he accepted some legal award.
My cursor hovered over the message button. What would I even say? *Remember me? The drunk girl who climbed into your bed thinking you were someone else? Surprise! I'm pregnant with your child.*
I closed my eyes, taking a deep breath. He deserved to know, regardless of how awkward and humiliating it would be to tell him. I clicked the button and began to type, erasing and rewriting a dozen times before settling on something simple:
*Mr. Sterling, We met briefly on the Love Boat cruise two weeks ago. I need to speak with you about an urgent matter. Would you be willing to meet? - Katelyn Miller*
I hit send before I could lose my nerve, then closed my laptop, certain he would ignore it. Why wouldn't he? I was nothing to him but a bizarre midnight encounter, easily forgotten.
But three days and four increasingly desperate messages later, a reply appeared in my inbox:
*Ms. Miller, I recall our encounter. I'll be in Portsmouth on business this Friday. We can meet at 2 PM at Seawind Café if that's convenient. - A. Sterling*
Formal. Cold. But a response nonetheless.
I placed my hand over my still-flat stomach, anxiety churning alongside the tiny life growing inside me. "Well," I whispered to the empty room, "at least he didn't block me."
Now I just had to figure out how to tell a complete stranger he was going to be a father.
You may also like





