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My Husband’s Affair Made Me End Our Miracle Baby Novel Cover

My Husband’s Affair Made Me End Our Miracle Baby

The red-eye from Seattle touched down at JFK three hours early, a small victory in a week of conference rooms and strategic planning sessions. I stretched my legs in the cramped cabin, already calculating how to maximize the unexpected gift of time. My phone buzzed with work emails, but I silenced it and opened Instagram instead. Through the small oval window, Manhattan's lights shimmered like scattered diamonds against the night sky. I took a quick photo and posted it with a caption that felt like a promise: 'Home before midnight for once.' The cab ride through Queens was a blur of highway lights and late-night radio. I didn't text Cristian. For once, I wanted to surprise him—to walk through our door and find him reading by lamplight, or maybe asleep on the couch with his glasses still on. Ten years of marriage, and I still loved that moment of return, that quiet reclamation of home. Our apartment building lobby was quiet at this hour, the security guard nodding at me with familiar recognition. I stepped into the elevator and pressed the button for the fifteenth floor, watching the numbers climb.
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Chapter 3

The gift basket arrived on a Tuesday, delivered by a courier in a pressed uniform who made me sign for it like it was something important.

It was wrapped in ivory tissue and tied with a satin ribbon the color of cream. I set it on the kitchen counter and cut the ribbon with scissors. Inside: a glass jar of organic prenatal vitamins with a label in French, a cashmere blanket folded into a perfect square, a small stuffed rabbit with a tag from a boutique on the Upper East Side, and a card in Evelyn Wood's handwriting, the letters tall and deliberate.

*For our grandchild. With all our love. — Evelyn & Mikael*

I read it twice.

Then I turned it face-down and set it in the recycling bin under the counter.

I left the basket on the counter for a moment, looking at it. The cashmere was soft. The vitamins were the expensive kind. Everything about it was perfectly calibrated — generous enough to be undeniable, personal enough to feel like a claim. *Our grandchild.* Not *you.* Not *Sloane.* The child. The asset. The reason to stay.

I folded the tissue paper neatly and put it in the recycling bin on top of the card.

Then I opened my laptop.

---

Claire Adler's office was on the thirty-second floor of a building on Lexington, with a view of the Chrysler Building and a waiting room that smelled like good coffee and quiet money. Her assistant offered me water in a real glass. I said yes.

Claire herself was maybe fifty, with reading glasses pushed up into silver-streaked hair and the kind of stillness that comes from having heard every version of every story. She shook my hand once, firm, and gestured to the chair across from her desk.

"Tell me what you have," she said.

So I told her. Ten-year marriage. Joint assets — the apartment, two investment accounts, a vacation property in Connecticut that had been in my name before the wedding. An affair I had witnessed directly but not yet documented formally. A pregnancy that complicated the timeline.

I said all of it the way I would present a quarterly report. Claire took notes without looking up.

When I finished, she set her pen down. "You said not yet documented formally. What do you have informally?"

"Enough to start."

She studied me for a moment. "Most clients come in here in pieces. You're not in pieces."

"I was," I said. "I'm done with that part."

The corner of her mouth moved. "All right. Here's where we are. New York is an equitable distribution state, which means the court divides assets fairly, not equally. Given the length of the marriage and the asset profile you've described, you're looking at a significant settlement — but the leverage you bring to the table before filing determines how much of this stays out of a courtroom."

"I want it out of a courtroom."

"Then build the paper trail. Documented evidence of the affair strengthens your negotiating position considerably. It won't change the asset math, but it changes his willingness to fight you on it." She paused. "How cooperative do you expect him to be?"

I thought about the tulip in the bud vase. The Moleskine full of prenatal questions. The fan running in the bathroom at nine p.m.

"He thinks he's winning," I said.

"Good," Claire said. "Let him keep thinking that."

I asked about the timeline. She said it depended on how much leverage I wanted before I moved. I told her I'd be in touch, shook her hand again, and took the elevator down alone.

On the street, I stood for a moment in the cold. Taxis moved past. A woman walked a dog the size of a small horse. The city kept its usual indifferent pace, and I felt, for the first time in weeks, like I was moving at the right speed inside it.

I took out my notebook and wrote: *Claire Adler. Paper trail. Don't move early.*

I clicked the pen closed and walked to the subway.

---

He brought it up over dinner on Thursday. Pasta he'd made from scratch, the kind that took forty minutes and left flour on the counter. He'd lit the candles on the table, the ones we kept for company.

He waited until I'd eaten half my plate. Then he slid a printed reservation across the table, casual, like it had just occurred to him.

"The Catskills," he said. "The inn where we stayed for our first anniversary. I called them this morning — they had a cancellation. The room with the fireplace." He smiled. "I thought we could use a weekend away. Just us."

I looked at the printout. The dates. The room number. The inn's logo at the top, the same one I remembered from ten years ago, when we'd driven up in his old Civic with a broken heater and laughed about it the whole way.

I looked at him.

His expression was careful. Warm. Rehearsed in the way that only I could see now — the slight over-softness around the eyes, the smile held a half-second too long.

"I have a work commitment that weekend," I said.

The smile stayed. His eyes didn't.

Something moved behind them — a quick recalculation, a door closing — and then the warmth flooded back in, smooth and immediate, like a man who had practiced recovering.

"Of course," he said. "We can reschedule. It's flexible."

"Sure."

He reached across the table and covered my hand with his. His palm was warm. I let it stay there.

"I just want you to know I'm not going anywhere," he said. "Whatever it takes."

I looked at our hands. His fingers were long, the knuckles familiar. I had held this hand at his residency graduation. At my father's birthday dinner. At the closing on the Connecticut property, when the lawyer slid the papers across and we signed our names side by side.

"I know," I said.

After dinner, while he washed the dishes, I went to the bedroom and opened the nightstand drawer. I took out the leather notebook and turned to a fresh page.

*Thursday. Catskills reservation — first anniversary inn. Candles. Rehearsed.* I paused, then added: *He's escalating.*

I closed the notebook. Put it back under the paperbacks. Pushed the drawer shut with the heel of my hand until I heard the click.

In the kitchen, the water was still running. He was humming something low and tuneless, the way he did when he thought things were going well.

I stood in the hallway and listened to it for a moment.

Then I went back to the bedroom, opened my laptop, and sent Claire Adler an email.

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