
Pregnant Wife's Justice
Chapter 2
Two days passed before I could bring myself to reach out to Charlie. Two days of mechanically going through the motions—smiling when Jameson kissed my forehead, nodding when he asked about the baby, pretending to sleep while he whispered sweet lies into the darkness beside me.
I waited until Jameson left for his morning meeting with the board, then pulled out the burner phone I'd bought with cash from a convenience store three blocks away. My fingers trembled as I typed the encrypted message through a secure app I'd researched obsessively the night before.
*It's Elle. I need help. Can't explain over normal channels. Meet me at Riverside Park, the old oak where we used to sit. Today, 2 PM. Come alone.*
I stared at the message for a full minute before hitting send. Charlie Holmes. My childhood sweetheart, the boy who'd promised to marry me under that same oak tree when we were twelve. The man whose family had lost everything, forcing him to leave town and breaking both our hearts. I hadn't spoken to him in years, but I'd followed his success from afar—how he'd rebuilt his fortune, how he'd become one of the most influential businessmen on the East Coast.
The response came within minutes: *I'll be there.*
Those three words nearly broke me. No questions, no hesitation. Just the unwavering loyalty I remembered from the boy who'd once given me his last piece of candy and walked me home through thunderstorms.
The park was nearly empty when I arrived, autumn leaves crunching under my feet as I made my way to our old spot. I'd chosen a loose sweater that concealed my pregnancy—I wasn't ready to explain that complication yet. My heart hammered against my ribs as I spotted a familiar figure already waiting by the massive oak.
Charlie had changed. The lanky teenager I'd loved was now a man—broader shoulders, silver threading through his dark hair, lines around his eyes that spoke of years of hard-won success. But when he turned and saw me, his expression softened into something achingly familiar.
"Elle." My name on his lips was a prayer, a question, a homecoming all at once.
I tried to speak, tried to maintain the composure I'd practiced in the mirror that morning. Instead, everything I'd been holding back for two days came pouring out in a broken sob. "Charlie, I—I don't know where else to turn."
He crossed the distance between us in three strides, his arms coming around me with the same protective instinct he'd had at seventeen. "Hey, it's okay. Whatever it is, we'll figure it out."
The kindness in his voice shattered the last of my defenses. Standing there in his embrace, surrounded by the scent of his cologne and the memory of simpler times, I told him everything. The overheard phone call, Jameson's betrayal, my father's denied transplant, the three years of lies I'd been living.
"He married me to cover up the truth about my mother's death," I whispered against his shoulder. "And now he's going to let my father die to protect her—Sienna Williams. The woman who stole my first fiancé, the woman he's been obsessed with all along."
Charlie's arms tightened around me, and I felt the tremor of rage that ran through his body. When he pulled back to look at me, his eyes held a coldness I'd never seen before.
"What do you need?" His voice was steady, controlled. "Money? Resources? A place to disappear?"
"Evidence." The word came out stronger than I felt. "I need to prove what he's done. To my father, to my mother, to me. I need to make him pay for all of it."
Charlie studied my face for a long moment, and I saw the exact instant he recognized the change in me—the death of the innocent girl he'd once known and the birth of something harder, more dangerous.
"Then we'll get you evidence." He reached into his jacket and pulled out a business card, writing something on the back. "This is my private investigator. Tell him I sent you—he'll provide whatever surveillance equipment you need. Cameras, recording devices, encrypted communication systems."
I took the card with shaking fingers. "Charlie, if Jameson finds out you're helping me—"
"Let me worry about Jameson King." The steel in his voice made me look up sharply. "I've been watching his business practices for years, Elle. I know exactly what kind of man he is. I just never imagined..." He trailed off, his jaw clenching. "I should have fought harder to keep you. Should have found a way back to you sooner."
"You're here now," I said quietly. "That's what matters."
He cupped my face gently, his thumb brushing away a tear I hadn't realized had fallen. "I'm not going anywhere this time. Whatever you need, however long it takes—I'm with you."
As I walked back to my car, Charlie's card burning like a secret in my palm, I felt something I hadn't experienced in months: hope. Not the naive hope I'd once carried, but something sharper, more purposeful.
Jameson thought he'd broken me. He thought his pregnant, grieving wife was too weak, too compliant to be a threat.
He was about to learn just how wrong he was.
You may also like





