
My Husband’s Mistress Took Everything While I Was Pregnant
Chapter 3
I couldn't sleep that night. The image of Leo wrapping his coat around Wynter's shoulders played on repeat in my mind. Something wasn't right. Hank's story had been too convenient, too perfectly timed.
My intuition had been screaming at me for months. It was time to listen.
The next afternoon, I sat in my car outside a coffee shop, using a borrowed phone to call Hank. My hands trembled as I dialed the number.
"Hank Watson speaking," he answered, sounding professional.
"Mr. Watson, this is Sarah from Allstate Insurance," I said, forcing my voice into a businesslike tone. "I'm calling about the accident claim from last night involving Wynter Hughes."
A pause. "Oh, yeah. The fender bender."
"We need to verify some details for our records. Can you confirm your location at the time of the incident?"
"I was..." He hesitated. "I was with Ms. Hughes when it happened."
"Could you tell me exactly where you were before the accident? For our timeline."
Another pause, longer this time. "We were... at her office. Picking up some files."
"And what time did you leave the office?"
"Um, around eight, I think?"
"Mr. Watson," I pressed, "our records show the accident occurred at 7:30 PM. Are you sure about the timing?"
"Eight," he insisted, then quickly added, "Or maybe seven-thirty. I wasn't really paying attention."
"Where were you before meeting Ms. Hughes?" I asked, my heart pounding.
"I was at my sister's birthday dinner," he blurted out. "The whole family was there. We had reservations at Romano's at six."
The line went silent. I could practically hear the realization dawn on him.
"Mr. Watson?"
"Who is this?" His voice had changed completely.
"It's Eden," I whispered. "Leo's wife."
The phone slipped from my fingers.
---
I found him in the parking lot of their company building an hour later. He was sitting on a bench, staring at the ground, looking like a man whose world had collapsed.
"Hank," I said, approaching slowly.
He looked up, his face pale. "Eden, I—"
"You lied for them." My voice was steady despite the storm raging inside me.
"I didn't want to." He ran his hands through his hair. "But Leo said if I didn't back up his story, he'd make sure I lost my job."
"Why?" I demanded. "Why would he risk everything for her?"
Hank couldn't meet my eyes. "They've been having an affair for months, Eden. Everyone at the office knows except you."
The words hit me like physical blows. "Everyone knows?"
He nodded miserably. "I'm so sorry. When I saw you at the hospital, so pregnant and scared... I couldn't keep lying."
Tears burned my eyes, but I refused to let them fall. Not here. Not now.
---
That evening, I stood in the aisle of an office supply store, staring at a small black lockbox. It was exactly what I needed.
"Can I help you find anything else?" the saleswoman asked.
"No," I said, picking up the box. "This is perfect."
At home, I sat cross-legged on our bedroom floor, the lockbox open before me. Inside went a new journal—not the pretty one Leo had given me for our anniversary, but a plain, unmarked notebook I'd purchased with cash.
On the first page, I wrote the date and a single sentence: "Today I stopped being a victim."
Then I began to write everything down. Every late night. Every unexplained charge on our credit card. Every time Leo's phone buzzed and he stepped away to answer it.
I saved screenshots of his texts when he left his phone unlocked—careful to replace them exactly as they were before closing the app.
"Working late," he'd written to Wynter at 10:17 PM last Tuesday.
"Can't wait to see you," she'd replied.
I documented the expensive restaurant charges—dinners for two when he'd told me he was grabbing takeout alone.
By midnight, I had filled twenty pages. The timeline of betrayal was unmistakable.
---
Three days later, the stress caught up with me.
I was standing at the kitchen counter, slicing apples for lunch, when the room suddenly tilted sideways. My vision blurred, darkness creeping in from the edges.
The knife clattered to the floor as my knees buckled.
I came to with my cheek pressed against the cool tile, apple slices scattered around me like fallen leaves.
"Leo," I whispered into the empty house.
Hours later, when he finally came home, I was lying on the couch, still weak and shaking.
"Leo," I said as he walked in. "I fainted today."
He froze, his eyes narrowing. For a moment—just a moment—I thought I saw concern flash across his face.
Then he rolled his eyes. "You're being dramatic again."
"I hit my head," I insisted. "I think I need to see a doctor."
"You just want attention," he snapped, loosening his tie. "You're always making yourself the victim."
He strode past me toward the bathroom, and that's when I caught it—the unmistakable scent of expensive perfume clinging to his collar.
Wynter's perfume.
"I'm going to take a shower," he called over his shoulder. "Maybe when I come out, you'll have calmed down."
As the bathroom door closed behind him, I pressed my hand to my belly, feeling the baby shift restlessly within.
"We're going to be okay," I whispered. "We don't need him anymore."
The shower started running, washing away the evidence of his betrayal—but not mine. Not anymore.
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