
Wife's Revenge on Her Unfaithful Husband
Chapter 1
The air crackled with electricity as I squeezed through the packed crowd at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, one hand protectively cradling my swollen belly. Eight months pregnant was hardly the ideal condition for attending a Taylor Swift farewell concert, but Steven had surprised me with tickets just yesterday.
"You've been working so hard preparing the nursery," he'd said with that charming smile that had won me over eleven years ago. "You deserve a night out before the baby comes."
I'd been touched by the gesture—rare moments of thoughtfulness had become increasingly scarce in our marriage lately. As an obstetrician, Steven understood the discomforts of late pregnancy better than most husbands, yet he'd insisted I'd enjoy this once-in-a-lifetime event.
Now, wedged between sweaty bodies under the California night sky, I struggled to maintain my excitement as Steven checked his phone for the fifth time in fifteen minutes.
"Everything okay?" I shouted over the music, my voice barely audible above thousands of screaming fans.
"Just the hospital," he replied without looking up, his fingers flying across the screen.
I caught a glimpse of the text notification: *Amanda*. Not the hospital. My stomach tightened, and not from the baby's kick.
The stage lights dimmed as Taylor prepared for her next number, and in that moment of semi-darkness, I saw Steven scanning the crowd, his neck craning as if searching for someone. When the lights blazed again, illuminating his face, I recognized an expression I'd rarely seen directed at me in recent years—raw hunger, anticipation.
"I'm going to get some water," he announced suddenly, squeezing past me without waiting for a response.
I wanted to follow, but my pregnant body made quick movement impossible. Instead, I watched as he navigated through the crowd with surprising agility, moving not toward the concession stands but deeper into the audience section to my right.
The music swelled around me, but my mind was elsewhere. Amanda Clarke. The name had appeared on our home caller ID too many times to count. Steven's colleague. His research partner. His first love, though he'd only mentioned that once, years ago, when we were still dating.
"Rebecca!"
I turned to see Steven returning, but he wasn't alone. Amanda stood beside him, radiant in a sequined top that caught the stage lights. Her slim figure made my pregnant form feel even more ungainly.
"What a coincidence!" Steven exclaimed, his voice pitched too high. "Amanda's here with some friends from the hospital."
"What are the odds," I murmured, forcing a smile as Amanda air-kissed my cheek.
"You look absolutely glowing," she said, her eyes not quite meeting mine. "Steven's been telling everyone how excited you both are."
Before I could respond, a deafening crash cut through the music. The crowd surged like a wave as screams erupted from my left. A section of railing had collapsed, and panic spread through the audience like wildfire.
"What's happening?" I gasped, instinctively placing both hands over my belly.
There was no time for answers. The crowd became a living entity, pushing and shoving in blind terror. I felt myself being swept backward, losing sight of Steven and Amanda.
"Steven!" I screamed, struggling to stay upright as bodies pressed against me from all sides.
For a heartbeat, our eyes met across the churning sea of people. I reached out my hand, certain he would fight his way to me, protect his wife and unborn child.
Instead, I watched in disbelief as Steven grabbed Amanda's wrist and turned away. The crowd surged again, and I lost my footing. The ground rushed up to meet me as bodies trampled over and around me. Pain exploded in my abdomen as someone's boot connected with my side.
"My baby," I gasped, curling protectively around my belly as feet and knees crashed into me from all directions.
Through a gap in the stampeding crowd, I caught one final glimpse of my husband. Steven had hoisted himself atop a concrete barrier, reaching down not for me, but for Amanda. With horror, I realized he had used my fallen body as a stepping stone, pushing off my shoulder to gain the height he needed.
Darkness crept into the edges of my vision as the weight of bodies crushed me further into the ground. The last thing I heard before consciousness slipped away was the wail of approaching sirens, distant and fading.
When I next opened my eyes, I was being loaded into an ambulance, the paramedics' voices urgent above me.
"Eight months pregnant, multiple fractures, possible internal bleeding," one called out.
"Cedars-Sinai is closest," another responded.
I tried to speak, to ask about my baby, but no sound emerged. The ambulance doors slammed shut, and we lurched forward into the night.
Hours later—or was it minutes?—harsh fluorescent lights blinded me as I was wheeled through the emergency room doors. Through the fog of pain and shock, I heard a familiar voice.
"I'm Dr. Matthews, an obstetrician here."
Steven. My husband. He would save us.
I turned my head, seeking his face, reaching weakly for his hand. But Steven stood at a distance, his expression clinical and detached as he spoke to the attending physician.
"She's already a lost cause," he said, his voice carrying clearly across the chaos of the ER. "What's the point of resuscitation?"
As darkness claimed me again, one thought crystallized with perfect clarity: the man I had loved for eleven years had just left me to die.
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