Hailey Wall POV:
Austen's head snapped up. "Isolde, are you okay? What happened? Tell me everything." His voice was a frantic whisper, a stark contrast to the clipped, impatient tone he'd used with me just hours ago. He sounded utterly consumed, as if the world had shrunk to encompass only her crisis.
I stared at him, then at the phone, then back at him. My own shock mirrored Isolde's momentary silence on the other end. Even she seemed surprised by the sheer intensity of his response.
"Are you serious, Austen?" The words tore from my throat, raw and ragged. "You're actually going to go? For her?" All the hopes I'd secretly harbored, the tiny spark of excitement about our anniversary, about the news I was carrying, flickered and died. "What about our anniversary? What about... our family dinner tomorrow night? The surprise I was planning?"
He' d always talked about wanting kids, a little Austen or a little Hailey. He' d even picked out names. I' d imagined telling him, seeing the joy light up his face. Now, that vision crumbled into dust.
"Austen? Who is that?" Isolde's voice, though soft, cut through my despair. Her tone was innocent, almost childlike, but I could hear the subtle edge of calculation beneath it.
I didn't wait for Austen to answer. My grip on his sleeve tightened. "It's his wife, Isolde. Hailey. His legal wife."
A beat of silence. Then Isolde let out a small, delicate gasp. "Oh, I… I didn't realize. Austen, I'm so sorry. I shouldn't have called. I'm just… so desperate." Her voice was a symphony of fragility.
Austen looked at me, a flicker of something-annoyance? anger?-crossing his face. "Hailey, it's just a fashion show. It's just a job. We're just talking." He tried to pull his arm away.
Just talking. Just a job. My throat burned with unspoken words. When had he ever rushed to my side, frantic with concern, when my "jobs" were on the line? When had he ever offered to drop everything, just because I was "desperate"? His "incompetence" with a camera had always conveniently protected him from ever having to truly engage with my professional world, let alone save it.
The air in the hallway felt heavy, thick with unspoken accusations and the clamor of a past that refused to stay buried.
"No, Austen, it's okay," Isolde's voice returned, now tinged with a tragic nobility. "Hailey's right. It's not fair to her. I'll… I'll figure it out. I'll find someone else. You stay with your wife." The line clicked, a soft, final sound.
"No!" Austen cried out, his voice sharp with desperation. He frantically pressed his phone against his ear, hoping she hadn't hung up. "Isolde, wait! Don't hang up!"
He turned on me then, his eyes blazing, a fury I' d never seen directed at me. He roughly yanked his arm from my grasp, his fingers digging into my arm as he pushed my hand away. The force surprised me, sending a jolt of pain up my arm. He didn't even seem to notice.
"What are you doing, Hailey?" he hissed, his voice low and dangerous. "Are you trying to ruin her career? She needs me! This is important!"
Important? My own career, the one I had built with my bare hands, the one that kept us in this beautiful apartment, the one he openly disparaged as "little influencer shoots"-that was never important enough for him to even pretend to pick up a camera. But Isolde's career, her fashion show, her "essence," that was worth abandoning his wife, his home, his anniversary.
A cold, aching emptiness settled in my stomach. The baby. My baby. This tiny, growing life inside me was supposed to be the culmination of our love, the start of our family. I had endured weeks of nausea, the fatigue that stole my energy, the constant worry about my brand deals, knowing my body was changing, knowing I might have to pull back from the very career he now mocked. I hadn't complained. Not once. Because it was for us. For him.
And now, here he was, raging at me, for her.
Tears, hot and unstoppable, streamed down my face. My chest ached, a deep, hollow pain. This wasn't just about a secret, or a camera. This was about where I stood in his life. Nowhere.
He didn't even look at my tears. He was already pulling a duffel bag from the closet, throwing in clothes with furious efficiency. "I have to go. She needs me. I'll call you when I land." He didn't look at me, didn't touch me. He just zipped the bag.
He stopped at the door, his hand on the handle. "You should get some rest, Hailey. You're overreacting." He opened the door.
"Austen," I pleaded, my voice barely a whisper, broken and desperate. "Don't go. Please. If you walk out that door now… you'll regret it."
He paused, his back to me. For a split second, I thought he might turn around. He might see me, really see me, standing here, broken and pleading.
Then, he sighed, a sound of weary resignation. "Goodbye, Hailey."
The door clicked shut, the sound echoing through the sudden, vast emptiness of our apartment. I stood there, rooted to the spot, listening to his footsteps recede, then the distant hum of the elevator, carrying him away. To her.
My hand instinctively went to my belly, a small, tentative touch. My baby, I thought, a fresh wave of tears washing over me. We're alone.
I looked down at my phone again. The number for the clinic was still on the screen. My fingers, still trembling from his rough touch, didn't hesitate this time. I pressed call.
"Yes," I whispered into the receiver, my voice thick with unshed tears. "I'd like to confirm my appointment for today. And… I don't think I'll be needing an ultrasound after all. Just… the other procedure."





