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Pregnant, Broken, and Falling for the Wrong Man Novel Cover

Pregnant, Broken, and Falling for the Wrong Man

I was seven months pregnant with our third child when I discovered my perfect, rising-star husband couldn't afford a private prenatal clinic. Why? Because he had just spent $84,720 tipping a live-stream cam girl. While I was doubled over the toilet with severe morning sickness, Daniel was in the next room, directing another woman to take off her silk robe. But I didn't scream. I didn't cry. I stayed in the dark, opened my phone, and started taking screenshots. As I meticulously build a paper trail to destroy him and take everything, Daniel realizes his obedient wife is slipping from his control. The man who promised to protect me suddenly drops his mask, revealing a desperate monster willing to use his own children, hidden offshore accounts, and physical threats to silence me. Enter Cole Avery. A twenty-two-year-old college student with dark amber eyes, a beat-up Honda, and a habit of showing up exactly when my world is crashing down. He doesn't ask questions. He doesn't offer empty pity. He just stands between me and the wreckage, handing me the spare key to his apartment and whispering, "Hold the line, Mara." Daniel thought he was the only one who knew how to hide things in the dark. He’s about to find out his pregnant wife is the master of the game. And this time, I’m not playing to survive. I’m playing to ruin him.
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Chapter 3

“I’m looking for my husband, Daniel Voss. He’s a guest here.”

The receptionist at the Grand Marquee didn’t look up from her monitor. “I can’t give out guest information, ma’am.”

I leaned against the marble counter, my hand pressing firmly into the small of my back. A dull, rhythmic tightening was beginning to pulse through my abdomen.

“Check the registration for Room 412,” I said, my voice dropping to a flat, dangerous whisper. “Or I can start calling the police and report a missing person right here in your lobby. My husband has been here every Thursday for a month. I have the GPS logs.”

The girl’s eyes flicked to my pregnant belly, then to my face. She tapped a few keys. Her expression shifted from boredom to a flicker of pity.

“Room 412,” she murmured. “The elevators are to your left.”

“Thank you.”

The elevator ride felt like an ascent into a vacuum. Every time the numbers ticked up, the pressure in my uterus spiked. It wasn’t a sharp pain yet, more like a heavy fist squeezing my insides and refusing to let go.

Braxton Hicks, I told myself. Just stress.

The hallway of the fourth floor smelled of industrial lavender and stale air. I found 412 and stood three doors down, leaning my shoulder against the wallpaper. I checked my watch.

2:14 PM.

According to his history, he usually stayed until three.

I waited. The tightening came again, harder this time. I closed my eyes and counted to ten, focusing on the rough texture of the wall against my palm.

Twenty minutes passed before the lock on 412 finally clicked.

The door swung inward. A woman stepped out first.

She was wearing a trench coat cinched tight at the waist, but her hair—that soft, expertly dyed blonde—was unmistakable. It was the woman from the screen. Lexi. In the harsh fluorescent light of the hallway, she looked even younger.

“Daniel, don’t forget your watch,” she called back into the room.

Daniel stepped into the frame. He was sliding his silver watch onto his wrist, his head down. He looked relaxed. He looked like a man who had just finished a productive meeting.

“Got it,” he said.

He stepped into the hallway, pulling the door shut behind him. Then he turned.

He didn’t see me at first. He reached out to touch the girl’s arm, his fingers grazing the sleeve of her coat. Then his gaze drifted down the carpet.

His hand froze. His entire body turned into a pillar of salt.

“Mara?”

His voice was a hollow croak.

I didn’t move. I stayed pinned to the wall, watching the color drain from his face until he was the same shade as his ironed dress shirt.

“So,” I said. The word felt like a shard of glass in my mouth. “This is the new filing you had to review.”

The girl, Lexi, looked between us, her eyes widening. She didn’t say a word. She backed away toward the elevators, her boots silent on the thick carpet.

Daniel took two steps toward me. He didn’t look remorseful. He looked panicked, his eyes darting around the hallway as if checking for witnesses.

“What are you doing here?” he hissed. He reached me in three strides, his voice dropping to a low, jagged edge. “Why are you following me, Mara?”

“I wanted to see the face of the woman you’re paying with our mortgage money,” I said.

I tried to stand up straight, but a sudden, sharp contraction buckled my knees. I gasped, my hand flying to my stomach.

“Don’t do this here,” Daniel snapped. He grabbed my upper arm, his grip tight enough to bruise. He began to steer me toward the wall, trying to hide me from the view of the elevator. “You’re making a scene. You’re hysterical because of the hormones.”

“Don’t touch me.”

I tried to wrench my arm away.

“Keep your voice down!” He shoved me back, his palm hitting my shoulder with a sudden, forceful jolt.

The carpet was slick. My heels slid, and my center of gravity—already compromised by the weight of the baby—vanished. I hit the wall first, the back of my head snapping against the wood trim, and then I collapsed.

I landed hard on my side.

The impact sent a shockwave through my hips. For a second, the world went grey at the edges.

Daniel stood over me, his chest heaving. He looked down at his own hands as if they belonged to someone else.

Lexi was gone. The hallway was silent.

I stayed on the floor, my fingers digging into the carpet. The cold clarity I’d felt in the kitchen that morning returned, sharper than before. It wasn’t just anger anymore. It was an ending.

“Mara,” he started, his voice trembling now. He reached down, his fingers hovering near my shoulder. “I didn’t mean—you slipped. I was just trying to—”

“Don’t,” I whispered.

I used the wall to haul myself up. My muscles screamed, and the tightening in my belly was now a constant, dull roar. I brushed the dust off my maternity leggings, my movements slow and rhythmic.

I looked him dead in the eye.

“I want a divorce, Daniel.”

He scoffed, a nervous, jagged sound. “You’re upset. We’ll talk at home. Let’s get you to the car.”

“There is no home,” I said. “Not for you. I’m going to the hospital, and then I’m calling a locksmith. If you show up at the house, I’ll show the police the photos of your ‘private sessions’ and tell them you threw me to the ground.”

“I didn’t throw you!”

“The cameras in this hallway will say otherwise.” I pointed to the small black dome mounted near the exit sign.

Daniel looked up. His jaw tightened. The “provider” mask was gone, replaced by the face of a man who realized he’d just lost his leverage.

I didn’t wait for him to respond. I turned and walked toward the elevators. Every step felt like walking through deep water.

I made it to the lobby, through the glass doors, and into the back of a waiting yellow cab.

“Where to, lady?” the driver asked.

“St. Jude’s,” I said. “Emergency entrance.”

As the car pulled away, I looked at my hands. They were shaking so violently I had to sit on them to make it stop. It wasn’t the fall. It was the realization that the man I’d spent six years with had looked at me on the floor and his first thought had been about his reputation.

The hospital was a blur of white lights and the smell of antiseptic.

I sat in a plastic chair in the waiting room, clutching a clipboard. My name was at the top of a long list. The contractions were coming every five minutes now, a rhythmic drumming that made it hard to breathe.

“You okay?”

The voice was quiet, coming from the seat next to me.

I looked up. A young man was sitting there. He couldn’t have been more than twenty-one. He wore a faded blue student jacket with a local university crest on the pocket. His hair was messy, and he had a textbook open on his lap, but he was looking at me with genuine concern.

“I’m fine,” I said, my voice cracking.

“You’re really white,” he said. He closed his book. “And you’re holding that clipboard like you’re trying to snap it in half. Should I go grab a nurse for you?”

He didn’t look at me like I was a “wife” or a “patient” or a “hysterical woman.” He just looked at me like a person who was hurting.

I let out a breath I’d been holding since the hotel hallway.

“Yes,” I said. “Please.”

He stood up immediately, his movements quick and sure. He didn’t hesitate. He didn’t ask if I was sure.

“Hang on,” he said. “I’ll be right back.”

I watched him jog toward the triage desk. For the first time all day, the ice in my chest thawed just enough to let a single tear slide down my cheek.

I wiped it away with the back of my hand.

I reached into my pocket and felt the cool weight of my phone. The files were still there. 001 through 014.

The young man returned with a nurse and a wheelchair.

“Here we go,” the nurse said, locking the wheels. “Let’s get you back there, honey.”

As they wheeled me away, I looked back at the student. He was still standing there, holding his textbook.

“Thank you,” I said.

He gave a small, encouraging nod. “Good luck.”

The double doors swung open, swallowing me into the belly of the hospital. I knew Daniel would be calling soon. I knew the fight was just beginning.

But as the nurse began to hook me up to the monitors, my phone buzzed in my lap.

It wasn’t a call from Daniel.

It was an email from the billing department at Voss and Associates.

Attachment: Corporate_Statement_Final.pdf

I clicked it open.

The first line item wasn’t for a hotel. It was for a jewelry store in Paris—dated three weeks ago.

I hadn’t been to Paris in years.

* * *

The monitor beside my bed began to beep, a steady, frantic rhythm that matched the sudden racing of my heart.

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