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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 4

The courtyard garden sat between the east wing and the parking structure, tucked behind a low hedge that nobody seemed to tend. There were four benches, a pair of dogwood trees that had already dropped their blossoms, and a water feature that made a sound like a faucet left running. I'd found it by accident, following a maintenance worker through a side door when the waiting room started to feel like a held breath.

Cristian had texted at one-fifty: *Surgery running long. There by 2:30. Sorry, love.*

I sat on the bench nearest the east wing and watched a pigeon work at something on the pavement. The air smelled like exhaust and cut grass, that particular New York combination that means spring is trying. I had forty minutes.

I took out my phone and scrolled through nothing. Put it away. Took it out again. The appointment was at three. Routine. Heartbeat check, measurements, the kind of visit where the doctor says everything looks good and hands you a printout with a blurry gray image on it, and you're supposed to feel something large and warm.

I'd been feeling something large. It wasn't warm.

At two-fifteen, I heard his voice.

Not words. Just the register of it — low, private, the tone he used when he wasn't performing for a room. I turned my head slowly, the way you do when you already know what you're going to see.

Through the gap in the hedge, maybe thirty feet away, Cristian stood in the narrow corridor between the garden wall and the parking structure. He was still in his scrub cap. His white coat was open. Kensley Dixon had her face pressed into his chest, both arms wrapped around his waist, and his hand — his left hand, the one with the ring — was moving through her hair. Slow. Deliberate. The way you touch someone you've touched a thousand times.

It wasn't sexual. That almost made it worse.

It was tender. The exact tenderness he'd been building for me, brick by careful brick, for three weeks. The orange juice with the pulp. The tulip at six a.m. The thumb tracing circles on my knee in the doctor's office. I had watched all of it and thought: *performance.* I had been right. But I hadn't understood, until this moment, what the real thing looked like on him.

This was the real thing. And it wasn't for me.

I took out my phone.

My hands did not shake. I noticed that, the way you notice small details when the large ones have already been processed. Steady hands. Clear frame. I took the first photograph, then adjusted the angle slightly and took two more. The hedge gave me cover. Neither of them looked up.

I put the phone in my bag.

I sat back on the bench and looked at the dogwood trees. One of them had a branch that grew sideways before correcting upward, a long scar of bark where something had bent it years ago. It had kept growing anyway. I stared at that branch for a while.

The pigeon was gone. The water feature kept running.

At two-thirty-two, Cristian came through the side door, slightly breathless, scrub cap traded for his jacket. He smelled like hospital soap and something floral underneath it, faint but there, the way a word is still there after you've erased it from a whiteboard.

Not my perfume.

"Hey." He bent and kissed my temple. "I'm so sorry. The attending held us over. How are you feeling? Did you eat?"

"I'm fine," I said. "I had a granola bar."

"That's not enough." He sat beside me and squeezed my hand. His fingers were warm. "How'd the wait go? You should've texted me if you needed anything."

"It was peaceful out here."

He looked around the courtyard like he was seeing it for the first time. "I didn't even know this was here."

"Neither did I."

He opened his Moleskine on his knee. The questions were still there in two neat columns, the same ones from last week, updated with two new additions at the bottom. He had underlined one of them. I watched him read it over, his brow slightly furrowed, the picture of a man preparing to advocate for his family.

The last thread went quietly. Not a snap. More like a hand finally letting go of something it had been holding too long.

I knew exactly what I was going to do.

"You ready?" he said.

"Yes," I said. "Let's go in."

---

That night I locked the bathroom door and sat on the edge of the tub.

I pulled up the three photographs. The hedge cut across the bottom third of each frame. In the clearest one, you could see his ring. You could see her hands at the small of his back. You could see his face in profile, eyes closed, chin resting on the top of her head.

I looked at it for a long time.

Then I opened my notebook to a fresh page and wrote one line:

*Tuesday. New Jersey. Done.*

I closed the notebook.

The bathroom was quiet. The fan wasn't running — that was his habit, not mine. The tile was cool through my clothes. Outside the door I could hear the television, some nature documentary he'd put on, a narrator's voice describing migration patterns in a calm, unhurried tone.

I was not crying.

I want to be clear about that, because I think people expect tears at a moment like this, and I understand why. But grief and clarity are not the same thing, and what I felt sitting on that tub was not grief. It was the particular stillness that arrives when you stop arguing with what you already know. When the last small voice that kept saying *maybe you're wrong, maybe you're missing something, maybe there's an explanation* finally goes quiet.

I had not been wrong.

I had not been missing anything.

There was no explanation.

I sat there until the documentary ended and the apartment went quiet. Then I picked up my phone and found the clinic's website — a plain, professional page, a New Jersey area code, a scheduling portal that asked for a date and a time.

I chose Tuesday at nine a.m.

I confirmed the appointment.

I closed the app, put the phone face-down on the tile beside me, and sat with my hands in my lap for a while longer.

The apartment was very still.

In the kitchen, the refrigerator hummed. On the nightstand in the bedroom, the chipped college mug sat where Cristian had placed it that morning, already filled with decaf, already waiting for me.

I stood up. I washed my face. I dried it with the hand towel and hung it back straight.

Then I unlocked the door and went to bed.

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