
Pregnant, Broken, and Falling for the Wrong Man
Chapter 4
“The fetal monitor is showing some irritability, Mrs. Voss.”
The doctor, a woman with tired eyes and a name tag that read Dr. Aris, adjusted the sensor strapped across my stomach. The steady thump-thump-thump of the baby’s heart echoed through the small observation room.
“Is she okay?” I asked. My voice sounded thin, like paper tearing.
“She’s resilient,” Dr. Aris said. She stepped back, crossing her arms over her white coat. “But your body is reacting to the stress. Those weren’t just Braxton Hicks. You’re having mild, premature contractions brought on by the physical impact and the surge of cortisol.”
“The fall,” I whispered.
“The fall,” the doctor repeated. She looked at me pointedly. “The bruising on your shoulder and the back of your head... did you trip, Mara? The intake nurse mentioned a dizzy spell, but these marks look like they came from a force.”
I stared at the ceiling tiles. I could tell her. I could say his name. I could watch the hospital staff call the police and see Daniel’s career go up in flames before the sun set.
“I lost my balance,” I said. The lie felt heavy, but it was a tactical choice. Not yet. “The carpet was slick.”
Dr. Aris didn’t look like she believed me. She sighed and scribbled something on her tablet. “I’m keeping you for observation for at least six hours. We need to make sure the contractions stop completely before you go home.”
A nurse entered a moment later, carrying a stack of yellow and white forms. She set them on the rolling tray table.
“We need you to finalize the admission paperwork,” the nurse said. “Specifically the emergency contact and the discharge transport.”
I picked up the pen. My hand was steady now.
I looked at the line labeled Spouse/Next of Kin.
Daniel’s name sat in the back of my throat, bitter and sharp. I moved the pen to the next line. I started to write my mother’s name. Evelyn Ellis.
I stopped. If I called her, she’d be on a flight within the hour. She’d cry. She’d ask a thousand questions I wasn’t ready to answer. She’d try to fix a marriage that was already a corpse.
I drew a thick, black line through her name.
“Is there a problem?” the nurse asked.
“No,” I said.
“Will your husband be coming to pick you up? We’ll need his contact number to alert him when you’re cleared.”
“Don’t contact him,” I said.
The nurse paused, her hand hovering over the tray. “Mrs. Voss, it’s standard procedure for—”
“I said don’t contact him.” I looked up, meeting her gaze. “I’ll arrange my own transportation. Leave the contact section blank.”
The nurse didn’t argue. She took the clipboard, her expression shifting into that practiced, neutral mask healthcare workers use when they sense a domestic disaster. She left the room without another word.
I was alone again with the thump-thump of the monitor.
I reached for my phone. My thumb swiped through the gallery.
Room 412.
The blonde girl.
Daniel’s hand on her arm.
I opened the notes app. I didn’t write about how I felt. I wrote facts.
2:14 PM: Subject exited Room 412 with female identified as ‘Lexi_Luv’ from VividPass.
2:16 PM: Confrontation in hallway. Subject used physical force to move me. Resulted in fall.
2:40 PM: Admitted to St. Jude’s ER. Diagnosis: Premature contractions due to trauma.
I took a deep breath and opened my messaging app. I found the contact for Sarah Miller, the most aggressive divorce attorney in the city. I’d looked her up weeks ago, a “just in case” that had become a “right now.”
Mara Ellis: Sarah, I have evidence of a long-term affair and a physical altercation at a hotel today. I am currently in the ER under observation for pregnancy complications caused by the incident. What is our first move?
The reply came twelve minutes later.
Sarah Miller: Stay put. Do not speak to him. Request a copy of the forensic medical report and the security footage from the hotel if you can. I’m opening a file. Do not go home if he is there.
I stared at the screen. Do not go home.
The thought of our house—the nursery with the hand-painted clouds, the kitchen with the expensive espresso machine, the bed where he’d lied to me every morning—made my stomach turn.
By evening, the contractions had tapered off. The monitor was silent. I was moved to a plastic chair in the hallway waiting area while they processed my discharge papers.
The hospital was quieter now. The shift change had passed, and the hum of the vending machines seemed louder in the dim light.
“You’re still here.”
I looked up. The student from earlier was walking toward me. He’d ditched the textbook, but he still had that faded blue jacket on. He was carrying two steaming paper cups.
He sat in the chair next to mine, leaving a respectful gap between us. He placed one of the cups on the empty seat beside me.
“I figured you hadn’t eaten or had anything to drink in hours,” he said.
“You’re still here,” I repeated. I looked at the cup. “Why?”
“My friend’s still in radiology,” he said, nodding toward the back of the ward. “A nasty break. They’re taking their time with the cast.”
He pushed the cup an inch closer.
“It’s herbal tea. Red bush. No caffeine, no sugar. I checked the labels on the machine.”
I looked at him. He couldn’t have been more than twenty-two. His face was open, free of the calculated layers Daniel wore like armor.
“Thank you,” I said.
I picked up the cup. The heat seeped into my palms, chasing away the chill of the air conditioning. I took a sip. It was cheap, slightly watery tea, but it was the first thing anyone had done for me all day that didn’t require a signature or a lie.
“I’m Julian,” he said.
“Mara.”
“Nice to officially meet you, Mara.” He didn’t ask why I was alone. He didn’t ask where my husband was. He just leaned back in the plastic chair and looked at the clock on the wall. “The discharge desk is usually faster after seven. You should be out of here soon.”
“I’m in no rush,” I said.
“Lousy place to spend a Thursday night.”
“Better than some places,” I muttered.
I looked down at the tea. “Why did you help me earlier? Most people just look away when they see someone... like me.”
Julian shrugged. “My mom always said you can tell a lot about a person by how they handle a hallway. You looked like you were holding up a building by yourself. Everyone needs a hand eventually.”
I felt a lump form in my throat. I swallowed it down with a mouthful of tea.
“I’m not holding it up anymore,” I said. “I’m letting it fall.”
“Sometimes the dust has to settle before you can see the exit,” he said quietly.
He stood up as a nurse called his name from the radiology door. He checked his phone and then looked back at me.
“Hey, if you need a ride or something... I’m not a serial killer. I have a Honda Civic with a car seat in the back for my nephew. It’s safe.”
I almost smiled. It was the first time my face had moved that way in twenty-four hours. “I’ll be okay, Julian. But thank you.”
“Good luck, Mara.”
He disappeared through the double doors.
I sat there for another twenty minutes, finishing the tea. When the nurse finally brought my discharge papers, I signed them with a flourish.
I walked out of the hospital doors and into the cool night air. I didn’t call a cab. I pulled out my phone and looked at the GPS tracker for our car.
Daniel was home. The little blue dot was parked right in our driveway.
I opened my banking app. I had a separate savings account he didn’t know about—a small inheritance from my grandmother. It wasn’t much, but it was enough for a week at a quiet hotel.
I hailed a taxi.
“Where to?” the driver asked.
“The Heights,” I said. “But stop at 442 Willow Lane first. I need to pick something up.”
“You want me to wait?”
“Yes,” I said. “Keep the engine running.”
As we pulled onto my street, I saw the lights on in the living room. Daniel’s shadow moved across the window. He was pacing.
I didn’t feel fear. I felt a cold, surgical precision.
I walked up the driveway, used my key, and stepped into the house.
“Mara!” Daniel was in the hallway in seconds. He looked disheveled, his hair messy, his shirt unbuttoned at the top. “Thank God. I’ve been calling the hospitals. Why didn’t you answer? Are you okay? Is the baby—”
“Move,” I said.
I pushed past him. I went straight to the kitchen.
“Mara, talk to me! I’m so sorry about the hotel. I was just—I was confused. We can fix this.”
I didn’t look at him. I walked to the refrigerator. It was a massive, stainless steel sub-zero unit we’d picked out together. I gripped the side of it and pulled.
It groaned against the floorboards.
“What are you doing?” Daniel asked, his voice rising. “Mara, stop it! You’re going to hurt yourself!”
I ignored him. I pulled again, the heavy appliance sliding six inches to the left.
There, taped to the dusty drywall behind the fridge, was a small, laminated piece of paper.
I reached back and ripped it off.
It wasn’t a phone number. It was a set of coordinates and a key code.
Daniel went dead silent. The color didn’t just leave his face this time; he looked like he was about to faint.
“How did you find that?” he whispered.
I turned to face him, the paper gripped in my hand.
“You’re not the only one who keeps a private account, Daniel,” I said.
I walked past him toward the door, my suitcase already in my head.
“Wait,” he said, his voice cracking. “Mara, you don’t know what you’re touching. If you go there—”
The front door flew open before he could finish. Two men in dark suits stood on the porch, their eyes fixed on the paper in my hand.
* * *
The man in the lead didn’t look at Daniel. He looked directly at my stomach, then at the paper. “Mrs. Voss,” he said. “We’ve been waiting for you to find that.”
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