I met Daniel Thompson during my freshman year at college in Boston. Back then, we were just classmates in a Corporate Finance course. Daniel was tall, good-looking, calm, and carried himself with a maturity that made people naturally trust him. I was Emily Carter, a meticulous Accounting major who spent most of her time buried in spreadsheets and case studies.
We stayed friends all through college. It wasn’t until after graduation—when we both had stable jobs—that our friendship slowly turned into love.
Daniel landed a position as a credit analyst at a major bank in downtown Boston, earning around $85,000 a year to start. I worked as an accountant for a private medical equipment distribution company with a salary of $60,000. We weren’t wealthy, but we were comfortable—and full of plans for the future.
Daniel was the kind of man who made a strong first impression. Soft-spoken, polite, never quick to anger. My parents adored him. Every Thanksgiving and Christmas, my mom would remind me, “Don’t forget to bring Daniel.” My father even trusted him enough to ask for investment advice.
We got married two years after we started dating. It was a small but intimate wedding in a historic church in Cambridge. With our savings and about $40,000 in wedding gifts, we put a down payment on a modest house in the suburbs worth $420,000. We took out a mortgage for the rest, knowing we’d be paying it off for the next 25 years.
During our first year of marriage, we focused on building financial stability. Daniel’s job grew busier—client meetings, major loan contracts. I worked hard to prove myself at my company.
By the end of our second year, once our house finally felt like a home, we started talking about having a baby. But right then, my company offered me a one-year transfer to Chicago to be considered for a Regional Chief Accountant position. The promotion would raise my salary to $95,000 a year.
I was torn. Having a baby would mean stepping back from a major career opportunity.
Daniel simply held my hand and said,
“Go. We have our whole lives to have a child. I can wait.”
His understanding made me love him even more.
A year later, I earned the promotion. When I returned to Boston, I told him,
“I want us to have a baby this year.”
He smiled and hugged me like I was his entire world.
Three months later, I found out I was pregnant.
The first time I saw those two pink lines on the test, my hands trembled. When I told Daniel, he lifted me off the ground and spun me around the living room. He researched prenatal diets, ordered the best prenatal vitamins, and even signed us up for a $600 childbirth class.
My mother-in-law, Margaret Thompson, was overjoyed. Every week she drove over with homemade chicken soup, frozen lasagna, organic salads.
“Emily, just rest. I’ll handle the food,” she insisted.
I had never felt so loved and cared for. At night, Daniel would press his ear against my belly and whisper to our baby. He even opened a 529 college savings account before the child was born.
Everything felt perfect.
When I reached five months pregnant, I had a routine check-up scheduled one afternoon. Daniel texted me saying he had an important client meeting but would pick me up afterward.
I felt slightly disappointed but understood.
The OB-GYN clinic was on the third floor of a small office building. After the ultrasound, the doctor assured me the baby was healthy and developing well. I smiled at the black-and-white image on the screen, overwhelmed with happiness.
As I stepped out into the hallway to wait for Daniel, a woman I had never seen before marched straight toward me.
She looked about thirty, with dyed blonde hair and heavy makeup. Her eyes were sharp.
“Are you Emily Carter?” she asked.
Startled, I nodded.
Her gaze dropped to my belly, and she smirked.
“So you’re pregnant too? No wonder Daniel’s been neglecting me.”
My heart plummeted.
“I… who are you?”
She laughed coldly.
“You don’t know? You look smart. How could you not know your husband has a mistress?”
My ears rang. The hallway noise faded into nothing.
She stepped closer.
“I’ve been sleeping with your husband for six months. He told me he’d divorce you.”
I instinctively stepped back, shielding my belly. I couldn’t let anything happen to my baby.
Suddenly, she raised her hand as if to slap me.
People gasped. A nurse rushed forward.
At that exact moment, Daniel stepped out of the elevator.
He took in the scene, his face darkening.
He grabbed the woman’s wrist. She instantly turned to him, tears welling up as if she were the victim.
“Daniel, you’re finally here! Look at her—she’s pregnant…”
Before she could finish, Daniel slapped her hard across the face.
The sound echoed down the hallway.
“You dare touch my wife?” he growled. “Get out of here. Don’t let me ever see you again.”
She clutched her cheek and screamed,
“You slept with me and now you pretend to be righteous? You promised you’d leave her! You said you were just waiting for her promotion!”
Whispers spread among the onlookers.
I stood frozen.
Daniel didn’t look at her again. He rushed to me, his voice shaking.
“Are you okay? Is the baby okay?”
I couldn’t answer. I looked at him like he was a stranger.
The doctor later confirmed the baby was unharmed. But my heart felt shattered into pieces.
That night, I locked myself in our bedroom. Daniel knelt outside the door for hours.
“Emily, I was stupid. I made a mistake. I met her during client dinners. It meant nothing. I never intended to leave you. I swear.”
I cried silently.
I remembered the late nights. The faint scent of unfamiliar perfume I had chosen to ignore. The texts about “urgent meetings.”
Had I loved him too blindly to see the truth?
“For our child… please give me a chance to fix this,” he pleaded.
But the question in my mind wasn’t whether he regretted it.
It was whether I could ever live again with a man who had betrayed me so smoothly.
Did my unborn child deserve to grow up in a family where trust had already been broken?
I placed my hand on my belly and felt a gentle kick.
Tears slid down my cheeks.
The marriage I once believed was perfect had collapsed in a hospital hallway.
And in that moment, I knew that whatever decision I made next, my life would never be the same again.
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