
Pregnant, Broken, and Falling for the Wrong Man
Chapter 7
The front door clicked shut at 9:45 PM.
I didn’t move from the wingback chair in the living room. The lamp beside me was dimmed, casting long, skeletal shadows across the hardwood. I had spent the last hour listening to the rhythmic breathing of our two children through the baby monitor. They were safe. They were asleep.
Daniel’s footsteps slowed as he entered the room. He smelled of cold air and expensive cologne—the same scent I’d smelled on him in the hotel hallway.
He sat on the edge of the coffee table, directly across from me. He looked exhausted, his tie loosened, his eyes bloodshot.
“Mara,” he began, his voice a low rasp. “That day at the hotel... I can explain everything.”
“I was standing in the hallway, Daniel,” I said. I didn’t look up from my hands. “I saw the door open. I saw her face. I saw yours. You don’t need to explain what my eyes already recorded.”
He leaned forward, reaching out as if to touch my knee. I pulled back before he could make contact.
“It wasn’t what it looked like,” he insisted. “That woman... she means nothing to me. Absolutely nothing.”
I finally lifted my gaze. I studied the familiar lines of his face, looking for a version of the man I thought I’d married. He wasn’t there.
“I know,” I said.
Daniel faltered, his hand hovering in mid-air. “You... you know?”
“I know she means nothing. That’s why it’s worse.”
I leaned back, the leather of the chair cool against my neck.
“If you loved her, it would be a tragedy. But you don’t. You did this simply because you could. Because you thought I was too distracted by the pregnancy to notice. Because you felt entitled to it.”
The silence that followed was heavy. For the first time in our marriage, Daniel didn’t have a quick retort. He didn’t have a charming deflection. He just sat there, his mouth slightly open, the gears in his head grinding to a halt.
“Mara, listen to me,” he said, recovering his footing. “You’re pregnant. You’re sensitive right now. We can’t make life-altering decisions when you’re in this state. It’s not the time to—”
“I’ve already contacted a lawyer.”
I reached into my pocket and pulled out the crisp, white business card Sarah Miller had given me. I placed it on the marble surface of the coffee table between us.
Daniel stared at the embossed gold lettering. His face went pale, then a mottled, angry red. He reached out and snatched the card.
“That’s for you to look at,” I said, my voice cutting through his sudden movement. “It’s not for you to keep.”
He froze. His fingers tightened on the card, nearly creasing it, before he slowly lowered it back onto the marble.
“A lawyer?” He let out a sharp, incredulous breath. “You’re serious? Over a mistake? Think about the kids, Mara. Think about the house. You’re being impulsive. You aren’t thinking clearly.”
“My lawyer thinks I’m thinking very clearly,” I countered.
“Your lawyer doesn’t know our life!” Daniel snapped. He stood up, pacing the small space between the sofa and the window. “He doesn’t know how hard I work for this family. He doesn’t know the pressure I’m under. He’s just a shark looking for a payday.”
“She,” I corrected. “And she knows exactly as much as she needs to. She’s seen the screenshots, Daniel. She’s seen the medical report from the ER.”
Daniel stopped pacing. He turned to face me, his silhouette blocking the light from the hallway.
“You’re really going to do this? You’re going to blow up our lives because of a few videos and a hotel room?”
“You blew it up,” I said. “I’m just the one documenting the explosion.”
He looked at me for a long time, his jaw working as if he wanted to scream. Instead, he let out a long, jagged sigh. He didn’t look at the baby monitor. He didn’t ask how I was feeling.
“Fine,” he muttered. “If you want to play it this way, we’ll play. But don’t expect me to make this easy for you.”
He turned on his heel and walked toward the back of the house. The heavy oak door of the study slammed shut, the vibration rattling the picture frames in the hallway.
I stayed in the chair. I didn’t cry. I didn’t feel the urge to follow him and demand more answers. I just sat in the silence he’d left behind.
Eventually, the chill of the room seeped into my bones. I stood up and walked toward the kitchen to get a glass of water. As I passed the entryway, I saw his overcoat hanging on the hook. It looked heavy, expensive, and utterly hollow.
I stared at the coat, and for a split second, I wasn’t in my kitchen. I was back in that hotel corridor. I felt the rough texture of the carpet against my palms. I felt the sharp, sickening jolt in my abdomen as I hit the floor. I felt the cold realization that the man standing over me didn’t care if I got back up.
I finished my water and walked to the master bedroom.
I stepped inside and closed the door. My hand trembled as I reached for the lock. We had lived here for four years, and I had never once felt the need to use it.
I turned the thumb-turn. The click was small, but in the quiet of the house, it sounded like a gunshot.
I sat on the edge of the bed, my hand resting on the swell of my stomach. The baby kicked—a sharp, insistent thud against my ribs.
“Just us,” I whispered into the dark.
I lay down on my side, facing the door. I watched the sliver of light beneath the frame, waiting for a shadow to block it out.
The house was still, but the air felt charged, like the moments before a thunderstorm breaks.
My phone vibrated on the nightstand. I picked it up, expecting another threat from Daniel or a message from my mother.
It was an alert from the security system I’d installed on my laptop.
Unauthorized login attempt: 10:12 PM. Location: Home Office.
Daniel wasn’t sleeping. He was looking for the files.
I watched the screen as a second notification popped up.
Access Denied. Emergency Protocol Initiated.
Somewhere in the house, a quiet hum began—the sound of a hard drive wiping itself clean. I closed my eyes, a ghost of a smile touching my lips.
He thought he was the only one who knew how to hide things.
Then, a new message appeared on the screen, one that didn’t come from my security software. It was a text from an unsaved number.
Mara, check the vents in the nursery. He didn’t just hide the money. —L.
My heart hammered against my ribs. I looked at the locked bedroom door, then back at the phone.
L.
Lexi.
I stood up, the floorboards groaning under my weight. I had to get to the nursery before Daniel realized what he’d missed.
I reached for the lock, but before I could turn it, I heard the sound of footsteps returning to the hallway. They weren’t pacing this time. They were heavy, fast, and headed straight for my door.
“Mara!” Daniel’s voice was a low growl on the other side of the wood. “Open the door. Now.”
He rattled the handle, the metal clanging violently.
“I know what you did to the computer,” he hissed. “Open the door, or I’m kicking it in.”
I backed away from the door, my eyes darting toward the window. I wasn’t a victim anymore. I was a witness. And witnesses were dangerous.
The first blow struck the wood, and the frame groaned.
* * *
As the wood splintered, I realized the man on the other side wasn’t just trying to talk—he was trying to survive, and he’d kill the truth to do it.
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