
Pregnant and Betrayed Again
Chapter 3
I stood in the middle of my apartment—our apartment—feeling like a stranger in my own life. The silence pressed against my ears as I sank to the floor, still clutching the jeweler's receipt in my trembling hand. The crisp paper with its elegant letterhead seemed to mock me with its existence. Proof. Tangible proof that Nathan had purchased the black pearl earrings I'd coveted—not for me, but for her.
My wedding dress lay in a heap by the door where I'd dropped it upon entering. I couldn't bear to look at it, that monument to my naivety. Five years. Five years I'd given him, believing I was building something real.
"It was all a lie," I whispered to the empty room, my voice cracking. "Every promise. Every touch. Every time he said 'I love you.'"
A sob tore from my throat, raw and primal. I curled into myself on the hardwood floor, pressing my forehead against the cool surface as waves of grief crashed over me. Not just for the relationship I'd lost, but for the woman I'd been—so trusting, so devoted, so blind.
When the storm of tears finally subsided, I dragged myself to my feet. My diary sat on the bookshelf, its leather cover worn from years of use. I flipped to the back, to a hidden pocket I rarely accessed, and carefully tucked the receipt inside.
"Someday," I promised myself, "this will matter. Someday, when I'm strong enough, I'll use this."
I closed the diary with a sense of finality. Whatever came next, I would face it on my terms, not his.
* * *
Three weeks later, I sat on the edge of my bathtub at 2 AM, staring at the small plastic stick in my hand. The two pink lines were unmistakable in the harsh bathroom light.
Pregnant.
I was pregnant with Nathan Sterling's child.
A laugh bubbled up from somewhere deep inside me—a slightly hysterical sound that bounced off the tiled walls. Of course. Of course this would happen now, when my entire life had imploded.
I pressed a hand to my still-flat stomach, a tangle of emotions churning inside me. There was fear, certainly. Dread at what this would mean for my plans to rebuild my life. But beneath those darker feelings bloomed something unexpected—a fierce, protective joy that took my breath away.
"Hello, little one," I whispered, tears filling my eyes again. "Your timing is terrible, you know that?"
I sat there for what felt like hours, contemplating the new life growing inside me. Nathan's betrayal had left me hollow, but this—this tiny spark of possibility—filled that emptiness with something new. Something that belonged to me.
"We'll figure this out," I promised my unborn child. "Somehow."
But I knew I couldn't do it here, in this apartment haunted by broken promises, in this city where I might turn a corner and see them together. I needed to escape, to start fresh somewhere Nathan couldn't reach us.
* * *
The next morning, I sat at my kitchen table with my laptop open, scrolling through old email contacts with determination. Nathan had been calling relentlessly, alternating between apologies and accusations. I'd blocked his number, but I knew it was only a matter of time before he showed up at my door.
That's when I remembered Jordan Kim. We'd worked together briefly on a graphic design project for a mutual client two years ago. He'd since moved to Seattle and started his own firm. He'd always been kind, professional, and—most importantly—had no connection to Nathan.
I clicked on his email address and began typing:
*Jordan,*
*I hope this email finds you well. It's been a while since we worked together on the Meridian project. I've been following your success in Seattle from afar and am so impressed with what you've built.*
*I'm writing because I find myself in need of a fresh start, both professionally and personally. New York has become... untenable for me. I remember you once mentioned your firm was growing. Is there any chance you might need another designer on your team?*
*I understand this is out of the blue, and I'd be happy to provide an updated portfolio and references.*
*Warmly,*
*Claire Matthews*
I hesitated, my cursor hovering over the send button. This email revealed nothing of my circumstances, nothing of the desperation driving me to reach out to a near-stranger. But it was a lifeline, a first step toward escape.
I clicked send before I could second-guess myself.
As the email disappeared from my screen, my phone lit up with a text. Nathan again, somehow messaging from a new number I hadn't blocked.
*We need to talk. There's something you don't know.*
I stared at the message, my hand instinctively moving to protect my stomach. There was indeed something he didn't know—something that would change everything between us forever.
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