Follow
Chapters
Share
My Husband Kissed His Mistress While I Was Pregnant Novel Cover

My Husband Kissed His Mistress While I Was Pregnant

The baby pressed against my ribs like a small fist trying to escape. Two in the morning, and sleep had become a distant country I could no longer visit. I reached for my phone on the nightstand, the blue light harsh against my eyes in the darkness of our bedroom. Landon slept beside me, his breathing deep and even. The man who had promised me forever, who had held my hand through every prenatal appointment, who whispered against my belly that he couldn't wait to meet our son. I scrolled through an anonymous gossip forum — the kind of digital trash I never admitted to reading, filled with college girls rating frat parties and posting photos of their weekend exploits. That's when I saw it. A post that had gone viral in the small, toxic ecosystem of the forum: 'Guess who's dating a CEO?' The girl was young — twenty-one, according to her profile. Her face was pretty in that fresh, uncomplicated way that belonged to people who hadn't yet discovered how much life could hurt them. But it was the photo that made my thumb freeze above the screen.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 4

The decision came quietly.

Not like a door slamming. More like a window finally closing — the soft, definitive click of something that had been open too long. I woke on the first morning after the hospital with the knowledge already settled inside me, the way you wake knowing it rained in the night without having heard it.

I was leaving.

The three days that followed were the strangest of my life. Not because they were dramatic. Because they weren't.

Landon made breakfast. He talked about the nursery. He asked if I was feeling okay, if the baby was moving enough, if I wanted him to cancel his Thursday dinner so we could stay in and watch something. I said I was fine. I said she was moving plenty. I said he should go to his dinner.

He went.

I sat at my drafting table and I thought.

I had spent nine years being the kind of woman who talked things through. Who believed that love meant giving someone the chance to explain. Who would have, six months ago, sat across from Landon with shaking hands and asked him to tell her it wasn't true.

But I had already given him every chance. I had given him nine years of chances, and he had used every single one of them to build a better lie.

If I confronted him now, he would cry. He was good at crying. He would hold my face in his hands and tell me it meant nothing, that Karsyn was nothing, that I was everything. He would say the word baby in a voice designed to remind me what I stood to lose. He would make me feel, for just long enough, that leaving was the cruelty and staying was the courage.

I knew this because I knew him. Nine years of knowing him.

So I would not give him the chance.

I would leave the evidence and let it speak in a voice he couldn't interrupt.

The stillness that settled over me after that was something I had no name for. Not peace. Not numbness. Something more like clarity — the specific quiet of a woman who has finally stopped waiting for a different answer.

---

Marcus Webb's office was the same as I remembered. Thirty-second floor. The city spread out behind him like a map of everything I was about to leave.

He had the papers ready. A neat stack, tabbed with small yellow flags at every signature line. He slid them across the desk without ceremony, which was exactly what I needed from him.

I read every page.

I had always read everything. Landon used to tease me about it — *babe, just sign it, you're not a lawyer* — and I would smile and keep reading. It had served me well. It was serving me now.

The language was clean and precise. Division of assets. No contest clause. My attorney's name and his. The date.

I picked up the pen.

My handwriting was the same as it always was. The same hand I used for design annotations, for fabric notes, for the small careful labels on my evidence folders. Steady. Even. The hand of a woman who had decided.

I signed every page.

When I set the pen down, Marcus looked at me for a moment.

'Filing?' he said.

'Hold it,' I said. 'Until I'm out of the country. Then file.'

He nodded. No questions. He had always understood when questions were unnecessary.

I thanked him and shook his hand and took the elevator down to the lobby. Outside, the air was cold and sharp. I stood on the sidewalk for a moment and breathed it in.

Then I went home to pack.

---

One suitcase.

I had decided that before I even opened the closet. One suitcase, because anything more would mean I was trying to carry the life I was leaving, and I was not taking that life with me. I was leaving it exactly where it was, for him to find.

I laid the suitcase open on the bed — our bed, the one we had picked out together at a store in SoHo, the one where he had held me through morning sickness and whispered promises against my belly — and I did not let myself think about any of that.

Sketchbooks first. Four of them, the ones from the past two years, the pages dense with designs I had never shown anyone. Then the charcoal pencils in their worn leather roll. Three changes of clothes, folded flat. My passport. The small envelope from the hospital, the one with my daughter's profile printed in gray and white, her hands folded near her face.

I held the envelope for a moment.

Then I put it in the inside pocket of the suitcase, close to the frame, where it wouldn't bend.

I left everything else. The furniture. The art we had chosen together at a gallery in Chelsea. The baby name book with the dog-eared pages. The paint swatches still fanned across the kitchen table — sage green, Honey Drop, the warm cream of a future I was no longer going to live.

I left it all exactly where it was.

---

The note took me four minutes to write.

I used a sheet of my design paper — the good kind, heavy and cream-colored, the kind I saved for final sketches. I wrote in the same hand I had used to sign the divorce papers.

*Look in the top drawer.*

That was all.

I set it on the kitchen counter beside the signed divorce papers, weighted down by the pen I had used to sign them.

Then I went to my desk.

The folder was already prepared. I had been building it for weeks, the same way I had once built his pitch decks — every source cited, every detail in its place. Screenshots with timestamps. Credit card statements with the charges circled. Hotel receipts. The calendar entries cross-referenced with her Instagram posts. The thread saved as 'Mike — Investor.' The boarding pass. The mole.

Every lie, catalogued.

I had named the folder simply: *Evidence.*

I placed it in the top drawer of my desk and closed it.

I stood in the doorway of my studio for a moment. The drafting table. The blank walls where my sketches used to hang before I had taken them down, one by one, over the past three days, rolling them carefully and sliding them into the tube I had already packed. The north-facing light that I had loved since the day we moved in.

I turned off the light.

I picked up my suitcase.

I walked out the front door and did not look back at the house, at the nursery that would never be painted sage green, at the nine years of a life I was leaving on the kitchen counter beside a pen and a note and the precise, documented record of every way I had been lied to.

Joanna's car was waiting at the end of the block.

I got in.

Neither of us said a word.

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

Bound To Love You Domineering CEO Novel Cover
8.0
She was forced to accept a marriage proposal from a strange billionaire to pay her huge debt and to take back her inheritance left to him when her mother died. Nathan’s lawyer handed her the documents, including the marriage certificate. Things were moving much faster than she had imagined they would, and everything happening seemed too easy. Too good to be true - a voice in her mind cried out - Be careful! It’s a trap! If it was a trap, though, it was very cleverly hidden. Crystal contemplated the proposal for a moment before addressing Mike, his lawyer. “I only have two questions,” she said. “The first question is this: if I sign it, does it mean that I don’t need to pay my debt?” Mike: “Yes. And your second question...?” Crystal: “Okay, I haven’t reached the legal age for marriage yet, so even if I sign it, it won’t take effect. Is that right?” Nathan quickly raised his hand and said, “If I say that it is effective, no one will dare to say that it isn’t. Do you believe that?” “I suppose so,” Crystal admitted. She hesitated for a moment, and then she signed the marriage certificate. Months later, she asked for a divorce from him. He stared at her in silence, then he uttered, “Have I ever told you how much I love you?” “What does that have to do with our divorce?” Crystal asked. “I’m only asking because I care about you,” Nathan murmured. Suddenly, tears began to stream down Nathan’s face. “I’ll be happy if you say that you care about me,” Nathan continued. “Why must you torture me this way? Haven’t I done enough to prove my love for you?” She was stunned hearing his confession and words stuck on her throat. Nathan carried on with his little speech. He said, “I have died once, and the fear of death has no hold on me. But if you admit that you care for me, then I will live for you! So, please, love me once, and I will be at your disposal!”
Her Last Name, His Claim  Novel Cover
7.5
She left him five years ago, long before he became the ruthless billionaire the world now fears. Now she's ready to marry again but first, she needs his signature. Except Enzo Wayne doesn't plan to let go. He's waited five years to remind her what belonging means. One signature, one demand, one impossible month..and one question neither of them wants to answer: What if she never stopped loving him?
Husband's Heartless Betrayal Novel Cover
9.6
I jolted awake at 2 AM, my hand instinctively reaching across the silk sheets to find Greyson's side of the bed cold and empty. The digital clock's harsh red glow seemed to mock me—eight hours until our wedding ceremony. "Greyson?" My voice echoed through our penthouse. No answer. I grabbed my phone, calling him for what must have been the tenth time since midnight. Straight to voicemail again. "Greyson, where are you? I'm getting worried. Please call me back." My bare feet padded across the marble floors as I checked every room, my heart racing faster with each empty space I encountered. His suit for tomorrow still hung pristinely in the closet.
I Exposed My Husband’s Affair at Our Company Gala Novel Cover
8.3
I came home a day early. The flight from Chicago landed at six-fifteen, and I didn't tell Reid. I thought about it — typed the text, deleted it. I told myself it was because I wanted to surprise him. That was a lie I was still willing to believe on the cab ride home. The penthouse was quiet when I stepped off the elevator. The kind of quiet that has weight to it. I set my carry-on by the door and noticed Reid's jacket on the entryway chair, his keys on the console table. Home, then. I walked toward the bedroom.
Married To The Fake Mad Billionaire Novel Cover
7.6
I am the illegitimate, mute daughter of the wealthy Owen family, kept hidden in the attic like a shameful secret. To save his failing company, my father decided to sell me off to a repulsive, predatory investor named Grossman. At the family dinner, Grossman's sweaty hands roamed my bare legs while my half-sister Kaleigh intentionally spilled red wine on my dress, laughing as she watched me suffer. When I grabbed a steak knife to defend myself, my father slammed his fist on the table. "Sit down, or I will cut off the maintenance payments for your mother's grave." My stepmother and sister sneered, treating me like a piece of meat meant to be sacrificed for their luxury. I was starved, locked away, and treated worse than a stray dog, all while my family paraded their high-society status to the world. I couldn't understand why they hated me so deeply, or who really ordered the hit that killed my mother twenty years ago. The police reports were buried, and I was entirely powerless, trapped in a house of monsters. But they didn't know that the night before, I had accidentally stumbled into the secret life of Burleigh Livingston—the ruthless, supposedly paralyzed billionaire who was faking his madness. When Burleigh suddenly crashed our family dinner and threw a limitless Black Card on the table to outbid Grossman and buy me for the night, I didn't hesitate. I grabbed the handles of his wheelchair, accepted his twisted deal, and prepared to use the devil himself to tear my family apart.
The Biker's quintuplets Mum  Novel Cover
9.2
“Men will stain your white,” a friend once told me during a business trip to Africa. I laughed it off as a joke. I wish I hadn’t. I’m Amelia, a powerful real estate mogul feared across the industry. In my late thirties, I had everything; wealth, beauty, and control. Marriage? Not on my list… until I met him; a struggling fashion designer who turned one night of fun into a lifetime commitment. They say never trust the loyalty of a broke man. I learned it the hard way. I married him, loved him, even aborted my second child to save our marriage. But love is blind, and mine cost me everything; my womb, my child, my freedom. He betrayed me with another woman, and in my rage, I killed him. That night destroyed my life; my parents’ company collapsed, my best friend died, and I was sentenced to rot in prison. Until I woke up; three years in the past. On my best friend’s wedding day… to the same man who murdered her. This time, I stopped the wedding. This time, I’ll make them all pay. But fate plays cruel games. One night of revenge led me into the arms of a powerful ex-biker; a Trillionaire with a dangerous past. I ran away with our 5 little secret. And now, he won’t stop until he has me.