
Pregnant, Broken, and Falling for the Wrong Man
Chapter 2
I stared at the security alert for a full minute before I moved.
The IP address was exactly two miles from my house. The login had been authenticated through the primary account holder—Daniel—at 1:58 AM the night before. Less than an hour before he had crawled into bed beside me and whispered that our daughter was kicking.
He hadn’t been working from his laptop in our bedroom. He had been signed into the cameras of our own home, on a device that wasn’t his.
I didn’t panic. Panic was a luxury for the woman I had been twenty-four hours ago.
I pulled the laptop onto my knees, my back pressed flat against the cold leather of the sofa. I navigated to his primary email—the one he thought was secure because he rotated the password every ninety days. He didn’t realize I had watched him thumb the new one in last month while he was distracted on a phone call.
My eyes scanned the inbox. There, buried between a LinkedIn notification and a flight confirmation, was the subject line that made my pulse flatten into a cold, flat line.
Diamond Tier Renewal: Welcome back to VividPass — your private studio is ready.
I clicked. The receipt loaded. Renewal fee: $1,200/month. Lifetime tips paid out: $84,720. Active subscriptions: one. Username of recipient: LexiLuv_19.
“Lexi,” I whispered to the empty living room.
VividPass wasn’t a site for clips. It wasn’t passive porn. It was a one-on-one, live interactive platform—real-time video, real-time tip requests, real-time custom shows. He hadn’t been watching strangers. He had been paying one stranger, every single week, for two and a half years.
I raised my phone, centered the screen, and captured the confirmation.
Click.
File 002.
I used the login credentials saved in his browser’s auto-fill. The site loaded with a slick, dark interface. A notification bell in the corner showed a red dot. I clicked the message icon.
The chat history was a ledger of betrayal.
Daniel had a favorite. A user named Lexi_Luv.
I scrolled through the logs. Six video sessions. All with her.
Last Thursday. Forty-two minutes.
The time before that? Fifty-three minutes.
“Fifty-three minutes,” I muttered.
I looked at the timestamps. He had been “stuck in traffic” on his way home from a client meeting that day. He had been sitting in his car, or perhaps a parking lot, watching a stranger.
I scrolled down to the text exchanges. Daniel’s words were right there, stripped of his usual professional polish.
DanielV: You looked incredible in the red last time. Wear the silk tonight?
Lexi_Luv: For you? Always. See you at 11?
DanielV: I’ll be there. Don’t start without me.
I felt a phantom chill creep up my spine. He didn’t just watch; he directed. He complimented her skin, the way she moved, the specific curve of her waist. Things he hadn’t said to me in months.
I began the process. One screen at a time.
Click. 003.
Click. 004.
Click. 005.
By the time I reached the end of the thread, I had eleven new images. My gallery was a mosaic of my husband’s secret life.
I closed the chat and clicked on Lexi_Luv’s profile.
The woman on the screen was young. Maybe twenty-three. She had blonde hair that looked soft, eyes that were wide and expertly painted. She looked nothing like me. I was thirty-one, my face was puffy from the pregnancy, and my hair was usually shoved into a clip.
I stared at her public bio. Your private escape. Tell me your fantasies.
I took one last shot of her profile page.
File 014.
I stood up too fast. A wave of dizziness hit me, and I gripped the arm of the sofa until the room stopped spinning. I needed to move. I needed to wash the sight of her off my retinas.
I walked into the master bathroom and turned the faucet to cold. I splashed my face, the water stinging my skin. I didn’t reach for a towel immediately. I just stood there, dripping into the sink, staring at the woman in the mirror.
My eyes looked different. The softness was gone.
“You’re still here, Mara,” I told my reflection.
I stayed there for three minutes, watching the water droplets slide down my cheeks like silver tracks. I wasn’t crying. I was calibrating.
I walked back to the kitchen. I needed to be doing something. I needed a prop.
I pulled a head of kale and some carrots from the fridge. I took the chef’s knife from the block. The blade was heavy, well-balanced. I began to chop.
Thump. Thump. Thump.
The sound of the garage door rumbling open echoed through the house.
I didn’t stop. I didn’t flinch. I kept my rhythm steady.
The mudroom door clicked. Feet moved across the hardwood.
“Mara? You home?”
“In the kitchen,” I called out. My voice sounded remarkably normal.
Daniel walked in, tossing his keys onto the island. He looked tired, his tie loosened at the collar. He walked over to me, his presence filling the space.
“Smells healthy in here,” he said.
“We need the vitamins,” I replied, keeping my eyes on the carrots.
He stood behind me, close enough that I could feel the heat radiating from his suit jacket. He reached out, his hand settling on my shoulder. His thumb rubbed small circles against the fabric of my shirt.
“How was your day?” he asked.
“Fine,” I said. “Productive.”
“Good. Any calls?”
“Just the usual. Bills. House stuff.”
I continued to slice. The knife hit the wooden board with a sharp, clean snap. I didn’t lean back into his touch. I didn’t pull away either. I simply existed as a physical object under his hand.
“You seem quiet,” he murmured. “Everything okay with the baby?”
“She’s fine, Daniel. Just a little heavy today.”
“You should sit down. I can finish this.”
“I’ve got it,” I said. I turned my head slightly, giving him a profile view. “I’m almost done.”
He lingered for a second longer, his grip tightening almost imperceptibly on my shoulder before he let go.
“I’m going to go change. Then maybe we can catch a movie on the couch?”
“Sure,” I said. “A movie sounds perfect.”
He walked away, his footsteps fading as he headed toward the bedroom.
I stopped chopping. I pulled my phone out from under the edge of the cutting board.
Fourteen files. Fourteen pieces of a bomb I was building in the palm of my hand.
I looked at the username I’d written on a post-it note earlier. Lexi_Luv.
She wasn’t just a username anymore. She was a weapon. And I was going to find out exactly where she lived.
I heard the shower start in the other room.
I picked up the knife again and finished the last carrot. My hands were perfectly still.
He thought he was coming home to a wife. He didn’t realize he was living with an auditor.
I moved to the sink to rinse the blade, but as the water ran, a new notification popped up on my screen.
It was a direct message on the VividPass app.
Lexi_Luv: Hey baby, you coming back tonight? I have something new to show you.
I stared at the screen, my finger hovering over the glass.
I wasn’t Daniel. But I knew exactly how he’d answer.
I typed back four words.
Not tonight. Change of plans.
I hit send and waited. The “read” receipt appeared instantly.
Then, my phone began to vibrate. Not a message. A call.
From Daniel’s work phone.
I looked toward the bathroom. The shower was still running.
I answered the call.
“Hello?” I said.
There was a long silence on the other end. Then, a woman’s voice—not the one from the videos, but someone sharper, older—spoke.
“Is this the wife?”
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