
New Mom Confronts Cheating Husband
Chapter 4
The clinic room was sterile white. The air smelled of antiseptic and a faint, lingering perfume from the last patient. I sat on the edge of the examination bed, my hands gripping the thin paper sheet beneath me. The doctor, a woman with kind eyes and a gentle voice, had just returned.
She held a single sheet of paper. Her expression was professional, but her gaze held a softness that made my throat tighten.
“The results are back,” she said. Her voice was measured. “I need to discuss them with you.”
I nodded, my heart a dull thud against my ribs. I already know, I thought. I could feel it in my body, a low- grade wrongness I’d ignored for months. The fatigue. The odd, cramping ache. I’d blamed it on postpartum recovery. On stress. On my own brokenness.
“Ella, your test came back positive for chlamydia.”
The words hung in the air. Clinical. Factual. The sound of them was clean, sharp, like a scalpel.
I didn’t move. I didn’t breathe.
She continued, her tone careful. “It’s a very common sexually transmitted infection. It’s easily treated with antibiotics. But… we do need to consider how it was contracted.” She paused, her eyes searching mine. “Has your partner had… other sexual contact?”
A laugh bubbled in my chest. It was a raw, involuntary sound. It started as a chuckle, then grew, shaking my shoulders. I laughed until tears streamed down my face, hot and silent. The doctor watched, her professional mask slipping into something closer to pity.
“I’m sorry,” I managed, wiping my eyes with the back of my hand. “It’s just… such a polite way to ask.”
She waited.
“Yes,” I said, my voice steady now. The laughter had burned out the last of my shock. “He has. With men.
With escorts. For over a year.”
Her face didn’t change much. She’d probably heard worse. “I’ll prescribe the antibiotics. A single dose. You’ll need to abstain from sexual activity for seven days after treatment. And your partner…”
“He’s not my partner anymore,” I said. The words felt final. True.
She nodded, wrote something on her pad. “You should also consider a full panel, for your own peace of mind.
HIV, syphilis, hepatitis. Given the… nature of the contact.”
Nature of the contact. Paid. Secret. With men. With gear.
“I’ll do it,” I said.
The rest of the appointment was a blur of instructions, a prescription slip pressed into my hand, a recommendation for counseling. I walked out of the clinic into the bright, ordinary afternoon. The sun was warm on my face. People passed me, smiling, chatting, living their uninfected lives.
I got into my car, the prescription sitting on the passenger seat like a verdict. My phone rang. The screen flashed: Kai.
I stared at it. The ringtone was the one he’d chosen—a jappy, upbeat tune he said reminded him of me. I let it ring three times before I tapped the answer button.
“Hey, baby,” his voice came through, smooth and warm. “Miss you. This conference is so fucking boring.”
I closed my eyes. In the background, I could hear it. Not conference noises. Not the murmur of a lecture hall or the clink of coffee cups.
I heard a man’s laugh. Low, intimate. And the distinct, unmistakable sound of running water. A shower? A bath? The sound was close, muffled by the phone, but clear. The acoustics of a hotel bathroom.
My fingers tightened around the steering wheel. “Me too, baby,” I said. My voice was a perfect mirror of his— light, affectionate, empty.
“How’s Lily?” he asked.
“She’s perfect. Sleeping.”
“Good. I’ll be home Thursday night. Can’t wait to see you both. I’ve been thinking about you.”
Thinking about me. While the water ran in the background. While a man laughed.
“I’ve been thinking too,” I said.
He paused. “Everything okay? You sound… tired.”
“I am tired,” I admitted. “It’s hard here alone.”
“I know. It won’t be for long. We’ll get through this.”
We. The word was a ghost. A phantom of a partnership that had already dissolved in the acid of his betrayal, in the bacteria now swimming in my body.
“Okay,” I said. “Enjoy your… conference.”
Another laugh, closer this time. A playful, male sound. Kai chuckled too, a quick, nervous noise. “Yeah. I’ll try. Love you.”
“Love you,” I echoed.
I hung up.
The silence in the car was absolute. I looked at my left hand. The silver band on my ring finger—the one he’d placed there in a park, under a cherry blossom tree, a year and a lifetime ago—gleamed in the sunlight.
I slipped it off.
It was cool. Light. It left a pale band of skin on my finger, a ghost of a promise.
I drove home. Lily was in her crib, sleeping her innocent, untroubled sleep. In her nursery, on her dresser, sat a small ceramic piggy bank. A gift from my mother. For Lily’s future.
I picked it up. The slot on top was narrow. I tilted the ring, fed it into the slot. It slid in with a soft, metallic clink, falling into the hollow cavity among the imaginary coins.
I placed the bank back on the dresser.
I stood there, looking at my daughter, at the bank, at my naked finger.
The phone call played in my head again. His voice. The water. The laugh.
The conference is so boring.
He wasn’t at a conference. He was in a suite. With a man. With the gear. With the itch he’d finally, fully scratched.
And I was here. With a prescription for antibiotics. With a positive test for an infection he’d given me. With a hollow finger and a full, burning resolve.
I walked to the bathroom, the prescription slip in my hand. I filled a glass of water. I swallowed the single, large pill. The treatment.
Then I picked up my phone. I opened the screenshots I’d sent to Maya. The messages. The photos. The transaction amounts. I compiled them into a single file. I attached it to an email.
I typed a new subject line: For the lawyer.
I didn’t send it yet. I saved it as a draft.
My thumb hovered over Kai’s contact. I could call him back. I could scream. I could tell him about the clinic.
About the chlamydia. About the laugh I heard. I could unleash the fire.
But the fire wasn’t for him. Not yet.
It was for me. For my next move. For the truth, now medical, now physical, that I carried in my body.
The doorbell rang.
I froze. No one should be here. Maya was at work. My mother wasn’t due.
I walked to the front door, my pulse a quick, sharp drumbeat. I peered through the sidelight.
A man stood on my porch. Tall. Lean. Dressed in a simple black t-shirt and jeans. He held a small toolbox.
He wasn’t looking at the door; he was looking at his phone, scrolling.
My breath caught.
It wasn’t Kai.
But the man… his posture, his sharp jawline… he looked like the photos. Like the man from the messages.
Plumber Mike.
He raised his head, his eyes meeting mine through the glass. He smiled. A polite, professional smile.
“Hello,” he said, his voice clear through the door. “I’m here for the scheduled leak inspection? You booked a plumbing check for this afternoon?”
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