
Pregnant, Broken, and Falling for the Wrong Man
Chapter 6
“This is the most organized initial consultation I’ve seen in a decade, Mara.”
Sarah Miller slid the tablet back across the mahogany desk. Her eyes, sharp and rimmed with thin gold frames, didn’t leave my face. On the screen, the folder labeled ‘001’ was open, showing the first timestamped photo of Daniel’s laptop.
“I didn’t want to leave anything to chance,” I said.
My voice was steadier than my hands. I kept them tucked under the table, gripping the edge of my chair. The office was high up, the city traffic a muffled hum below us.
“Fourteen files of digital infidelity, a certified medical report from St. Jude’s, and a personal memo regarding the hotel incident.” Sarah tapped a pen against her chin. “Most women in your position spend the first hour crying. You’ve handed me a roadmap to a settlement.”
“I started saving everything from the first night I saw him angle the screen away,” I told her. “I knew if I didn’t have proof, he’d make me the villain. He’s very good at that.”
Sarah leaned back, her leather chair groaning under the movement. “He’ll try. His legal team will likely point to your pregnancy. They’ll argue that your hormones made you paranoid, that the ‘fall’ at the hotel was a result of a dizzy spell common in the third trimester.”
“Can he win with that?”
“He can try,” Sarah repeated, a cold smile touching her lips. “But your records speak. The ER physician noted bruising consistent with a forceful shove, not a simple trip. And these chat logs? They aren’t the ramblings of a paranoid wife. They’re a ledger of his deceit.”
I looked at the framed degrees on her wall. “I want him out of the house.”
“That’s the next step. I’ll file the petition for divorce and a motion for exclusive possession of the marital residence based on the physical altercation.” Sarah paused, her gaze softening just a fraction. “The court usually moves quickly when there’s a safety concern for an expectant mother. But he might fight it. He’ll claim he has nowhere to go.”
“He has the money he spent on ‘Lexi_Luv,’” I snapped. “He can find a hotel.”
“Is there any reason he would counter-claim? Anything he can use to suggest you’re unstable?”
I thought about the warehouse. I thought about the woman with the headset and the files I’d found in that hidden room. I hadn’t told Sarah about the warehouse yet. I wasn’t sure if that was a legal weapon or a different kind of bomb.
“He’ll say I’m hysterical,” I said. “He’s already started the narrative. He told me at the hotel that I was making a scene because of my hormones.”
“Let him,” Sarah said. “We’ll use his own words against him. It’s a classic gaslighting tactic. Judges see it every day. It rarely works when there’s a paper trail this thick.”
She pulled a fresh set of documents from a drawer.
“I suggest you move out temporarily, or we serve him the papers and demand he leaves immediately. Staying in that house with him is a liability, Mara. For you and the baby.”
“I have two children to think about,” I said, my hand instinctively moving to my stomach. “Moving is a massive undertaking. I need time to pack their things, to find a place that’s safe. I can’t just disappear into a shelter.”
“Then we go for the house,” Sarah decided. “But until the order is signed, you need to protect your assets. Separate your finances today. Don’t wait for the filing.”
I nodded. “I’m doing that the moment I leave this office.”
“Good. And Mara?” Sarah stood up, signaling the end of the meeting. “Don’t talk to him. Not about the divorce, not about the baby, not about the weather. Every word you say to him is a gift you’re giving his lawyers.”
I stood up, feeling the familiar ache in my lower back. “I’ve already stopped talking.”
The sunlight outside was blindingly bright. I walked half a block before my legs felt like lead. I found a green metal bench near a bus stop and sat down. My phone was already in my hand.
I opened my banking app.
It took three minutes to transfer my personal savings into an account Daniel couldn’t access. It took another five to unbind the joint credit cards from my digital wallet and request a freeze on the secondary cards.
I watched the loading bar crawl across the screen.
Transaction Complete.
Eight minutes. That was all it took to sever the financial tether that had bound us for six years. I sat there as the eight minutes finished, staring at the screen until it went dark. I didn’t feel the rush of triumph I expected. I just felt empty, like a house that had been gutted by fire.
A notification popped up at the top of the screen.
Daniel: Mara, please. We need to talk. I’ve been at the house all day waiting for you. I can explain everything. It isn’t what you think.
I didn’t hit reply. I didn’t even open the message. I swiped it away, watching it disappear into the void of my notifications.
It isn’t what you think. It was the same script he’d been using since the laptop screen hit the keyboard three months ago.
I reached into my coat pocket, my fingers brushing against a scrap of paper. I pulled it out. The neon-yellow sticky note was wrinkled, the ink of the phone number slightly faded from the heat of my palm.
Cole.
I looked at the digits. I remembered the way he’d stood in the hospital hallway—a solid, quiet presence that asked for nothing. He was a stranger, a kid with a stats textbook and an ugly Honda, but he’d seen the war zone in my eyes before I’d even admitted it existed.
I didn’t send a text. I wasn’t ready to pull anyone else into the wreckage.
I stood up and started walking toward the bus stop. After ten steps, I paused. The wind caught the yellow paper, nearly tearing it from my grip.
I pulled out my phone again.
I opened my contacts. I typed in the name. Cole.
I hit save.
The paper went back into my pocket. I looked down the street, watching the bus pull away from the curb. I didn’t run for it. I just stood there, a woman with fourteen files, two children, and a bank account that finally belonged to her.
My phone buzzed again. Another text from Daniel.
Daniel: If you don’t come home and talk to me, I’m calling your mother. She needs to know you’re acting like this.
I gripped the phone so hard the glass dug into my skin. I turned around and headed back toward the lawyer’s office. I didn’t need a bus. I needed a restraining order.
As I crossed the street, a black SUV with tinted windows pulled up to the curb, idling just a few feet away. The driver didn’t get out, but the window rolled down an inch.
“Mrs. Voss?”
The voice was low, filtered through the glass. It wasn’t Daniel. It was the man from the porch—the one who had been waiting for me to find the coordinates.
* * *
The window rolled down further, and I saw the glint of a silver badge resting on the dashboard.
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