
The Podcast That Destroyed Everything
Chapter 4
POV of Evelyn
I spent nearly two hours getting ready the next morning, my hands trembling as I applied my makeup. Each stroke of mascara, each dab of concealer felt like armor I was putting on—not to impress Daniel, but to face him with dignity. The woman staring back at me from the mirror looked polished and put-together, nothing like the broken shell who had cried herself to sleep on the couch last night.
The mysterious text about 'another woman' had haunted my dreams. I'd decided not to confront Daniel with it immediately—I wanted to see his face first, gauge his sincerity before dropping that particular bomb.
I rehearsed my reconciliation speech in the car. *We've built too much to throw it all away. Marriage takes work. Everyone makes mistakes.* The words felt hollow, but I pushed forward. Eight years deserved at least one more chance, didn't it?
Our favorite café, Bluebird, came into view. It was where we'd had our first date, where Daniel had nervously spilled coffee all over himself trying to impress me. Where he'd proposed five years later, getting down on one knee between tables of applauding strangers.
I spotted his car in the parking lot and took a deep breath. This was it—the beginning of our new chapter. Forgiveness. Healing.
Then I saw the sleek black Audi parked beside his. My stomach clenched. I knew that car.
Through the window, I could see them. Daniel and Kara, sitting across from each other at our table. Our special place.
I nearly turned around. Nearly fled. But something hardened inside me, and I marched through the door, the bell announcing my arrival with cheerful obliviousness.
Daniel's head snapped up, his eyes widening when he saw me. "Evie," he said, standing quickly.
"What is she doing here?" My voice was ice, my gaze fixed on Kara, who had the audacity to look uncomfortable.
"Evie, sit down. We need to talk." Daniel gestured to the empty chair, his expression grave.
I remained standing, that sense of foreboding from the text message expanding in my chest. "About what?"
Kara cleared her throat, her perfectly manicured hand resting protectively over her stomach. "I'm pregnant."
Two words. Just two simple words, and my world imploded all over again.
"We don't know if it's mine—" Daniel began quickly, but Kara cut him off.
"Of course it's yours!" she snapped, eyes flashing. "We've been together for six months!"
I stared at Daniel, the betrayal cutting deeper with every breath. "You said it was just physical. Just a mistake."
"It was!" Daniel's voice cracked with desperation. "But now... things are complicated."
"Complicated?" I repeated, my voice rising. "You got your mistress pregnant!"
The few other customers in the café were now openly staring, but I couldn't bring myself to care. My humiliation was already public property anyway.
Daniel lowered his voice. "I know. That's why... I think we should separate."
The floor seemed to tilt beneath me. "What?"
"Just temporarily," he added quickly. "Until we figure out the paternity."
I couldn't believe what I was hearing. "You want to SEPARATE? So you can play house with her?"
Kara's lips curled into a small, victorious smile. "He needs to be there for his child."
Something snapped inside me. I grabbed Daniel's water glass and threw the contents directly in his face. "You're not the man I married."
He sputtered, wiping water from his eyes. "Evie, please be reasonable—"
"Reasonable? REASONABLE?!" My voice echoed through the café. "I came here to save our marriage. And you brought HER." The realization hit me with stunning clarity. "You didn't want to reconcile. You wanted permission to leave."
His silence was all the confirmation I needed.
With trembling fingers, I pulled off my wedding ring and dropped it onto the table with a small, final clink. "You want to leave? Leave. But don't ever come back."
I turned and walked away, my spine straight, my dignity intact despite the tears threatening to spill.
"Evelyn, wait—" Daniel called after me, but I didn't stop, didn't turn.
It wasn't until I reached the parking lot that I allowed myself to break down, great heaving sobs that felt torn from the depths of my soul. I fumbled for my car door, desperate to escape before Daniel could follow.
My phone pinged with an email notification. Anonymous sender.
Subject line: *You deserve to know the truth about Kara*
With shaking hands, I opened the message to find several attachments—documents and photos. I clicked on the first one.
What I saw made my breath catch in my throat.
This changed everything.
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