
Pregnant When My Husband Chose Her Over Me
Chapter 4
The apartment felt cavernous without Adrian's boxes cluttering the hallway. I dragged my suitcase from the closet, the wheels catching on the hardwood. Eleven weeks. The baby was the size of a fig now, according to the app on my phone. I pressed my hand to my stomach, feeling the slight curve that my clothes still hid.
I couldn't do this here. Couldn't raise a child in a city where Carly Butler's smile would haunt every corner, where Adrian's indifference would calcify into something worse. Norway. Aunt Elena had been asking me to visit for years. She'd understand. She'd help.
I pulled out my laptop and opened a blank document. *Dear Adrian.* The cursor blinked. I typed three paragraphs about the baby, about my decision, about how I hoped someday he'd want to know his child. Then I read it back and felt nothing but exhaustion.
I deleted it. Wrote it again, shorter this time. Deleted it again.
Finally, I printed the third version, folded it into an envelope, and held my father's lighter to the corner. The paper curled and blackened, ash drifting into the kitchen sink. He didn't deserve my explanations. He'd made his choice.
The flight to Oslo left in two days. I booked it on my phone, watching the confirmation email arrive with a strange sense of relief. Then I tried to transfer money from our joint account to pay for it.
ACCESS DENIED.
I refreshed the page. Tried again. The same red text flashed across the screen. I called the bank, my fingers tight around the phone.
"I'm sorry, Ms. Kennedy," the representative said, her voice professionally sympathetic. "The account holder has placed a freeze on all transactions. You'll need to contact Mr. Hunter directly to resolve this."
The account holder. Not my husband. Not my partner. The account holder.
I hung up and stared at the ceiling, my jaw clenched so hard my teeth ached. He'd trapped me. Cut off my escape route like I was a liability he needed to contain.
My phone buzzed. A text from an unknown number.
*Birthday celebration on the Valkyrie, Saturday at 7. Attend and we'll discuss terms. Bring the NDA. Don't, and the freeze stays permanent. —A*
I read it three times. The yacht. His birthday. A public spectacle where I'd be expected to smile and apologize and sign away my dignity in front of witnesses. In front of Carly.
I typed back: *Unfreeze the account first.*
The reply came instantly. *After. Sign the papers, make nice, and you're free to go wherever you want.*
I wanted to throw the phone. Instead, I set it down carefully on the counter and pressed my palms flat against the granite. The baby needed me calm. Needed me strategic.
I could do this. One night. Sign the papers, take the money, disappear.
I texted back a single word: *Fine.*
---
The Valkyrie sat in the harbor like a floating palace, all white fiberglass and tinted windows. I stood on the dock in a navy dress that skimmed my knees, my hair pulled back in a way that made me look severe. Professional. Untouchable.
The gangway swayed slightly under my feet. Music drifted from the upper deck—something jazzy and expensive. I could see silhouettes moving behind the windows, champagne flutes catching the light.
A crew member in white checked my name off a list and gestured toward the stairs. I climbed, my hand trailing along the polished rail.
The main deck was crowded with people I half-recognized from Adrian's corporate events. They turned as I appeared, conversations faltering. I felt their eyes catalog me—the mistress, the scandal, the woman who'd thrown wine at the hostess.
Except I hadn't. But the truth didn't matter here.
Then I saw Tate.
He stood near the stern, a glass of sparkling water in his hand, talking to a man in a gray suit. When our eyes met, something in my chest unclenched. He didn't smile, didn't wave. Just a slight tilt of his head. *I'm here.*
Carly found me before I could move.
She wore red tonight, a dress that clung like a second skin, her hair swept up to show off diamond earrings. She linked her arm through Adrian's, her wedding ring prominent against his sleeve.
"Gracelyn." Her voice carried across the deck, sweet as poison. "I'm so glad you could make it. Adrian was worried you'd be difficult."
Adrian's expression was unreadable. He looked past me, toward the city lights glittering across the water.
"The lawyer's in the salon," Carly continued, steering me toward the railing. "We can take care of everything before dinner. Keep it civilized."
She leaned in close, her breath warm against my ear. Her fingers dug into my arm.
"Sign the papers, take your settlement, and disappear," she whispered. "Because I promise you, Gracelyn—that baby will never carry the Hunter name. I'll make sure of it."
She pulled back, her smile bright and empty. Then she turned and walked away, Adrian following like a shadow.
I stood at the railing, the wind cold against my face, my hand pressed to my stomach. The yacht's engines rumbled to life beneath my feet. We were moving, pulling away from the dock, heading out into the dark water.
And I realized, with a clarity that felt like ice in my veins, that I'd just walked into a trap.
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