
Pregnant When My Husband Chose Her Over Me
Chapter 3
The invitation arrived by courier three days after Adrian walked out. Cream cardstock, embossed gold lettering. *Butler-Hunter Charity Gala.* My name was handwritten in Carly's looping script across the envelope.
Inside, a note card. No greeting. Just: *If you want to discuss financial arrangements for your situation, attend. Bring a pen. The NDA is non-negotiable.*
My situation. My child reduced to a line item in their damage control.
I should have burned it. Should have called a lawyer. Instead, I found myself standing in front of my closet at seven p.m. on Saturday, pulling out a black dress with an empire waist that hid the small swell of my stomach. Ten weeks now. The nausea had finally eased, replaced by a bone-deep exhaustion that made every decision feel like wading through mud.
I touched my father's ring beneath the neckline. The metal was warm from my skin.
*For you,* I thought, pressing my palm to my belly. *I'll endure this for you.*
The Plaza ballroom glittered like a jewelry box. Crystal chandeliers threw fractured light across marble floors. Women in gowns worth more than my car drifted past, their laughter sharp as champagne bubbles. I felt every eye track my entrance, felt the whispers ripple outward like stones dropped in still water.
*That's her. The mistress. Can you believe she showed her face?*
I kept my chin up, my steps measured. I would not give them the satisfaction of seeing me break.
Then I saw Tate.
He stood near the bar in a tuxedo that fit him like it was born there, a glass of something amber in his hand. Our eyes met across the room. He didn't smile, didn't wave. Just a slight nod. *I'm here.* The knot in my chest loosened a fraction.
Carly found me before I made it halfway across the floor.
She materialized in white silk, her dress cut low enough to make a statement, her wedding ring catching the light like a weapon. She held a glass of red wine, the liquid dark as old blood.
"Gracelyn." Her voice dripped honey. "I'm so glad you could make it. Adrian will be thrilled."
I said nothing. My hands stayed at my sides, empty.
She stepped closer, her perfume cloying. "I know this must be difficult for you. Seeing us together. Seeing what's real." She gestured vaguely at the room, at the banner proclaiming the Butler-Hunter Foundation. "But I think it's important we handle this situation with grace. For everyone's sake."
"Where's the NDA?" My voice came out flat.
Her smile sharpened. "Straight to business. I always admired that about you." She raised the wine glass to her lips, then paused. Her eyes flicked past me, calculating. "Oh, how clumsy of me—"
She stumbled forward. The wine arced through the air in a perfect crimson spray, splashing across her white dress, her chest, her throat. She screamed.
The music stopped.
"She threw wine on me!" Carly's voice pitched high, theatrical. "She attacked me!"
Every head in the ballroom turned. I stood frozen, my hands still at my sides, empty and useless. The wine glass lay shattered at Carly's feet, red liquid pooling on white marble like a crime scene.
"I didn't—" The words stuck in my throat.
Adrian appeared from nowhere, his face a mask of concern. He went straight to Carly, his hands on her shoulders, his body angled between us like a shield.
"Are you hurt?" His voice was gentle. Tender. The voice he used to use with me.
Carly pressed her face into his chest, her shoulders shaking. "She's obsessed with you, Adrian. I tried to be kind, tried to offer her help, and she—"
"Grace." Adrian turned to me. His eyes were cold. "This needs to stop."
The crowd pressed closer, a circle of designer gowns and judgment. I saw phones raised, cameras pointed. This would be everywhere by morning.
"I didn't touch her," I said quietly. "She threw it on herself."
Adrian's jaw tightened. "You need to leave. Now. Before you embarrass yourself further."
"I'm carrying your child." The words came out before I could stop them.
His expression didn't change. "My attorneys will contact you about a settlement. But if you continue to harass my wife, we'll pursue a restraining order." He raised his hand, and two security guards materialized at my elbows. "Escort Ms. Kennedy out. Make sure she doesn't come back."
The guards' hands closed around my arms. Not rough, but firm. Inevitable.
I didn't fight. I let them walk me through the crowd, past the staring faces and raised phones, past the glittering chandeliers and the banner proclaiming a foundation built on my father's grave.
At the door, I looked back once.
Adrian had his arm around Carly, his head bent to hers, playing the devoted husband for the cameras. She looked up at me over his shoulder and smiled.
Then Tate was there, his coat already off, draping it over my shoulders. He didn't ask what happened. Didn't offer empty comfort. He just walked me out into the cold November air, his presence solid and real beside me.
"I've got you," he said quietly.
And for the first time in weeks, I believed someone did.
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