
Pregnant, Broken, and Falling for the Wrong Man
Pregnant, Broken, and Falling for the Wrong Man Chapter 1
By the time my husband finally fell asleep, I had already photographed enough evidence to bury him.
He didn’t know that yet.
“You’re still working?”
I reached for the glass of water on the nightstand, my fingers brushing the cold condensation. Seven months pregnant with our third child, and the heartburn never let me sleep past one in the morning anyway.
Daniel Voss didn’t look up. His hand blurred across the keyboard as he shoved the laptop lid down, the hinge groaning under the pressure.
“Just finishing some emails, Mara. Go back to sleep.”
He didn’t meet my eyes. He kept his hand flattened against the silver casing, as if holding down something that might crawl out.
“It’s nearly one,” I said. “Leo’s school run is at seven. You said you’d take him this week.”
“I know. I’m done now anyway.” He slid the laptop onto his bedside table, positioning it so the charging port faced the wall. “I’ll go brush my teeth.”
I didn’t answer. I sat back against the headboard, watching his shadow stretch across the carpet as he retreated into the master bathroom. The door clicked shut. A moment later, the rush of the shower muffled the silence of the room.
I didn’t hesitate.
I moved across the mattress, the sheets rustling like dry leaves. The laptop was still warm; the fan hummed a low, dying rhythm. I lifted the lid just enough to wake the screen.
He hadn’t logged out.
The brightness stung my eyes. It wasn’t an email client. It wasn’t a spreadsheet. It wasn’t even the legal database I’d told myself, on every other suspicious night, that he was probably using.
It was a live-streaming portal called VividPass. The dashboard displayed a premium account status. Diamond tier. And in the top-right corner, a number in glowing pink:
Lifetime tips sent: $84,720.
My thumb went numb against the trackpad.
Eighty-four thousand dollars. From the man who told me last month we couldn’t afford the private prenatal clinic. From the man who looked our five-year-old daughter Maya in the eye and said “Daddy works late so we can have nice things.”
I navigated to his history tab. The top entry was from two minutes ago. Duration: forty-two minutes. Recipient: a girl whose username was LexiLuv_19.
The frequency was a steady pulse—three or four nights a week, stretching back through the season. I scrolled until I hit a date from three months ago. July 14th.
That was the night I had been doubled over the toilet, shaking from the worst bout of morning sickness I’d had with this baby. Daniel had patted my back, told me to try and sleep, said he had “paperwork” to catch up on in the living room.
He had spent ninety-three minutes on this site while I cried into a pillow down the hall.
I pulled my phone from my robe pocket. My hands didn’t shake; they felt icy and precise. I framed the screen in the camera lens and snapped a photo of the July 14th log. Then the August logs. Then tonight’s session. Then the lifetime tip total.
Click. Click. Click. Click.
The shower shut off.
I closed the browser tab, cleared the recent cache, and lowered the lid to the exact angle he’d left it. I was back on my side of the bed, facing the window, by the time the bathroom door creaked open.
The bed dipped as Daniel climbed in. The scent of mint and soap followed him.
“You okay?” he asked, his voice thick with that forced tenderness that, for years, I had mistaken for love.
“Just heartburn,” I lied.
He moved closer, his chest pressing against my back. He draped an arm over my waist, his palm resting heavily on the swell of my stomach. Our unborn daughter kicked—a small, sharp protest against the pressure.
“She’s active tonight,” he whispered, his breath warm against my neck.
I stared at the pale moonlight on the floral wallpaper. I didn’t move his hand. But I didn’t lean into him either. I stayed a statue, mapping out the timeline in my head.
Eighty-four thousand dollars. Six years of marriage. Two children asleep down the hall, and a third one kicking under his palm.
Every night I had thought he was being a provider, every night I had thought he was sacrificing sleep for our future, he had been paying for a front-row seat to someone else’s skin.
“Go to sleep, Mara,” he said softly.
“I’m trying.”
He settled in. His breathing evened out into the steady rhythm of a man with nothing to hide. I lay awake, counting the minutes against the timestamps on my phone.
Forty-two minutes tonight.
Ninety-three minutes the night I couldn’t stop vomiting.
Thirty minutes the day after our anniversary.
I pressed my own hand over my belly, right over his fingers. I wasn’t crying. The heat of anger had already bypassed tears and turned into something hard and crystalline.
By morning, I had a plan.
* * *
The sun hadn’t quite cleared the horizon when the alarm chirped. Daniel was already upright, stretching his arms over his head. He looked refreshed.
“Morning,” he said, leaning over to kiss my temple. “Sleep okay?”
“Like a log,” I lied. I sat up, pulling my hair into a messy knot. “Leo has a field trip permission slip on the counter. He needs your signature.”
“Right. I’ll sign it on my way out.” He stood up and headed for the closet, pulling a crisp white shirt from a hanger. “Any of those protein shakes left?”
“In the pantry.”
I walked into the kitchen. The tile was cold under my bare feet. Down the hall, Maya was singing some made-up song to her stuffed rabbit, and Leo was already arguing with his sneaker laces. I reached for the coffee maker, my movements mechanical, while my phone burned in my robe pocket.
I attached the four photos I’d taken in the dark.
I didn’t send them to a friend. I didn’t send them to my sister.
I typed in my own secondary email address—the one I used for junk mail and expired subscriptions.
Subject line: 001.
I hit send.
The little “whoosh” of the outgoing mail felt like a starting gun.
Daniel walked into the kitchen, buttoning his cuffs. He looked like the perfect husband—the rising star at his firm, the expectant father, the man who stayed up late “working” to take care of his family.
“What are you looking at so early?” he asked, nodding toward my phone.
“Just checking the weather,” I said, sliding the device into my pocket. “Looks like it’s going to be a long day.”
“Don’t overdo it.” He grabbed his briefcase. “I might be late tonight. There’s a new filing I need to review.”
“Of course,” I said. My voice was flat as a sheet of glass. “The work never stops, does it?”
“You know how it is.” He flashed a quick, practiced smile and bent to kiss the top of Maya’s head as she ran into the kitchen. “I’ll call you at lunch.”
I watched his car pull out of the driveway. The silence of the house settled around me, heavy and suffocating—except for the small, ordinary sounds of my children. Maya chasing the cat. Leo zipping his backpack.
The two of them, plus the one inside me, were the only reasons I wasn’t already on the phone with a divorce attorney.
They were also the reason I would be, by the end of this week.
I pulled out my phone and opened the sent folder.
001.
A single email. A single shred of evidence. But it wouldn’t be the only one.
I sat at the kitchen table and opened a fresh spreadsheet. I needed more than screenshots. I needed a trail. A paper one. A bank one. A digital one. Long enough to hang him, deep enough that no high-priced lawyer could untangle it.
I spent the next twenty minutes logging into our joint bank account. I didn’t look at the grocery bills or the mortgage payments. I looked for small, recurring amounts.
There it was. $29.99. Hidden under a generic billing name: VP Media Holdings.
It had been drafted on the 15th of every month for two years and four months.
My breath didn’t hitch. My heart didn’t race. I felt only a cold, surgical clarity. He hadn’t started this three months ago when I got pregnant. He had just stopped being careful three months ago.
I screenshotted the bank statement.
Subject: 002.
The front door suddenly creaked.
I froze, my thumb hovering over the send button.
“Mara? Forgot my gym bag!” Daniel’s voice boomed from the hallway.
I shoved the phone under a dish towel just as he rounded the corner. He was breathless, his eyes scanning the counter.
“I left it right by the—ah, there it is.” He grabbed the black nylon bag from the chair. He paused, his gaze shifting to me. “You okay? You look a little pale.”
“Just the baby,” I said, forcing a smile that didn’t reach my eyes. “She’s sitting high today.”
He stepped toward me, reaching out to touch my face. I pulled back, pretending to reach for my coffee mug.
His hand hung in the air for a second too long. His expression shifted—a flicker of suspicion crossed his features before he smoothed it over.
“Right,” he said slowly. “Well. I’m really gone this time.”
He didn’t move immediately. His eyes drifted to the dish towel on the counter, then back to my face.
“See you tonight,” I said.
He nodded. Turned. Walked out. I waited until I heard the heavy thud of the front door and the roar of his engine fading down the street.
Then I picked up the towel. My phone screen was still glowing.
I hit send on 002.
I picked up the landline and dialed a number I had memorized years ago but never thought I’d actually use.
“Voss and Associates,” a receptionist answered. His firm. Of course. Where else would I begin?
“I’d like to speak with billing,” I said. “I’m calling about a discrepancy on a personal account.”
If Daniel wanted to play with numbers and late-night sessions, I was going to find out exactly how much the buy-in had been.
As I waited on hold, I looked down at my stomach. At Maya’s drawing of our family stuck to the fridge, with four little stick figures and a tiny one in Mommy’s belly.
“It’s just us now,” I whispered. “All four of you.”
The line clicked.
“How can I help you, Mrs. Voss?”
“I need a full itemized history of my husband’s corporate credit card,” I said. “Eighteen months. Sent to a private address. Today.”
A pause. “Is everything alright, ma’am?”
“Everything,” I said, “is finally becoming very clear.”
I hung up. Six hours before Daniel came home. Six hours to find out exactly what our marriage had cost him—and exactly how much it was going to cost him to leave.
I walked to the hall closet and pulled out a suitcase I hadn’t used since our honeymoon. I didn’t pack it. I set it open on our bed, right where he would see it the moment he stepped through the door.
Then I sat down at the kitchen table, pressed one hand to the kicking weight under my ribs, and waited for the first chime of my inbox.
The first email arrived at 2:00 PM. But it wasn’t a credit card statement.
It was an alert from our home security system.
A new login. A device I didn’t recognize. From an IP address two miles away.
Someone was inside our cloud account. And they were watching the live feed of my kitchen.
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