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Three Months Gone, Everything Changed
Three Months Gone, Everything Changed

Three Months Gone, Everything Changed

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In Three Months Gone, Everything Changed, Elena Vance returns from a business trip to find her husband Nathan moved his mistress into her home. This modern romance novel follows her calculated mission for a reckoning. Read novels online to see her trade betrayal for a new life.

Chapter 1 of Three Months Gone, Everything Changed

Elena Vance comes home from a three-month assignment in Berlin to find the locks unchanged but her entire life replaced. The Queen Anne townhouse she bought with her own savings now smells of baby powder and another woman's vanilla perfume. In her guest room, a stranger named Misty rocks a newborn wrapped in a blanket Elena's grandmother crocheted.

"They said you were divorced," Misty whispers, genuinely bewildered. "Nathan told me this was our home now."

Nathan—the husband who encouraged Elena to take the European project. The man who swore he'd "hold down the fort." While she was sleeping in Berlin hotel rooms and closing multimillion-dollar deals, he was moving his pregnant mistress into the house she paid for, filing fraudulent paperwork to add Misty's name to the deed, and draining their joint accounts to fund his secret family.

But Nathan has made a catastrophic miscalculation. He expects tears, hysterics, a wife too shattered to fight back. Instead, Elena checks into a hotel, hires a forensic accountant, and starts recording every conversation. She doesn't want revenge—she wants a reckoning. In front of his entire family.

And when the paternity test comes back, revealing a truth even Nathan didn't see coming, Elena is already gone. She's building a new life with a venture capitalist who actually deserves her. Nathan is left with nothing but a basement apartment, a ruined reputation, and the slow, excruciating realization that he destroyed the only real thing he ever had.

Now he's the one watching her through a rain-streaked window, knowing she'll never look back.

Chapter 1

Elena Vance had always believed that home was a feeling, not a place.

That belief died on a rain-soaked Tuesday evening in late October, when she turned her key in the lock of the Queen Anne townhouse she'd purchased six years ago with every dollar she'd saved since her first job out of Stanford. The door was already unlocked. She pushed it open with her hip, dragging her Tumi roller bag over the threshold, and the first thing she noticed was the smell.

Not the clean, citrus-verbena scent of her Diptyque diffuser. Not the faint leather-and-cedar trace of Nathan's cologne. Something else entirely. Baby powder. Desitin cream. And beneath it, a cloying vanilla perfume that made the back of her throat tighten.

The entryway light was on. Elena's hand froze on the door handle.

She'd been in Berlin for ninety-three days. Ninety-three days of sixteen-hour sprints, of navigating German labor laws and stubborn engineering teams, of video calls at 3 a.m. because Seattle time zones were merciless. Nathan had encouraged her to take the lead on the European expansion. "You've been grinding for this VP title for years," he'd said, his hand warm on her shoulder. "I'll hold down the fort. Go crush it."

The fort, apparently, had been overtaken.

A sound drifted from the direction of the guest bedroom—no, the nursery they'd never built because they'd agreed to wait until her next promotion. A thin, reedy cry. A baby's cry.

Elena set her suitcase down. The wheels made a soft thud against the reclaimed oak flooring she'd sourced from a salvage yard in Portland. The crying stopped. Then a woman's voice, light and breathy, with that particular Pacific Northwest lilt that made every sentence sound like a question:

"Shhh, sweet pea. Mommy's here. Daddy will be home soon."

Daddy.

Elena didn't move. Her eyes traveled across the entryway. The shoe bench she'd found at a consignment shop in Ballard was still there, but the top shelf—her shelf, where her Blundstones and her Rothy's flats sat in neat alignment—was crammed with unfamiliar footwear. A pair of worn UGG slippers in blush pink. Birkenstock sandals with the cork footbed darkened by sweat. A pair of cheap ballet flats from Target, the kind she hadn't worn since grad school.

Below them, tiny shoes. Soft-soled crib booties. A pair of miniature Crocs in sunflower yellow.

The guest bathroom door was ajar. Inside, a Diaper Genie stood where her vintage hamper used to be.

Elena walked toward the kitchen. Her kitchen. The marble countertops she'd agonized over. The Bertazzoni range she'd saved for during two years of Nathan's "freelance consulting" phase. On the Sub-Zero refrigerator, held by a magnet from their trip to Cannon Beach, was a handwritten schedule in bubbly, looping script:

FEEDING & NAP SCHEDULE

7:00 – Bottle (6 oz, warm)

9:30 – Nap #1

11:00 – Pureed pears

1:00 – Nap #2

3:30 – Bottle

The handwriting wasn't hers. It wasn't Nathan's.

She heard footsteps. Soft, tentative. Elena turned.

A young woman stood in the hallway arch, clutching a baby wrapped in a pale yellow swaddle blanket. The woman was maybe twenty-six or twenty-seven, with long honey-blonde hair pulled into a messy topknot and the kind of dewy, unlined face that suggested a diligent skincare routine and not enough life experience to know better. She wore a pair of Lululemon leggings and one of Nathan's old Stanford hoodies—the gray one with the frayed cuffs that Elena had tried to throw away twice.

"Who are you?" the woman asked, her voice a half-octave higher than before.

Elena stared at her. "I'm Elena. This is my house."

The woman's face cycled through confusion, then dawning horror, then something that looked almost like indignation. "Nathan said—he told me you were separated. Like, legally. He said the divorce was almost final."

"I've been married to Nathan for seven years," Elena said. "I've been in Berlin for three months. There's no separation. There's no divorce."

The baby—a tiny thing with a scrunched pink face and a dusting of blonde fuzz—began to whimper. The woman bounced it automatically, her eyes never leaving Elena's face.

"I'm Misty," she said finally, as if that explained everything. "Misty Reed. Nathan and I have been together for… a while."

"How long is a while?"

Misty's gaze flickered toward the kitchen calendar. "Since last year. Around Thanksgiving? We met at that kombucha bar on Capitol Hill. He said his wife was never home. He said you were, like, married to your job."

Thanksgiving. Elena remembered that Thanksgiving. She'd hosted Nathan's entire family—his mother Lydia, his sister Becca, his uncle Ted who always drank too much bourbon and told inappropriate stories about his time in the merchant marine. She'd brined the turkey for forty-eight hours. Nathan had complimented the cranberry sauce and then spent the rest of the evening on his phone in the bathroom.

"You've been living here," Elena said. It wasn't a question.

"Since April," Misty admitted. "When my lease was up. Nathan said it made sense. With the baby coming and everything."

April. Elena had left for Berlin on March second.

She walked past Misty toward the primary bedroom. The door was open. The bed—her bed, the West Elm upholstered frame she'd saved for, the Parachute linen sheets she'd splurged on after her last bonus—was covered in a garish duvet covered with watercolor peonies. Her nightstand was gone, replaced by a cheap IKEA Malm unit topped with a Hatch baby monitor, a tube of lanolin cream, and a half-empty bottle of postnatal vitamins.

She opened her closet. The custom California Closets system she'd designed herself, with separate sections for her workwear, her casual pieces, her shoe collection. It was empty. No—not empty. The shelves held someone else's clothes. Athleisure sets from Outdoor Voices. Maternity jeans. A rack of nursing bras in various shades of beige.

Her clothes were in a clear plastic storage bin shoved into the corner of the guest room closet. She found them after ten minutes of searching. Her Theory blazers. Her Vince silk blouses. Her collection of vintage band tees from the nineties. All folded haphazardly, some still bearing dry cleaning tags.

At the bottom of the bin, beneath a stack of her cashmere sweaters, she found their marriage certificate. She'd kept it in her nightstand drawer, in a simple leather folio her father had given her on her wedding day. The certificate was creased now, a faint coffee ring staining one corner.

Elena held it in her hands. The paper felt thin, fragile. Like everything she'd believed about her life.

Her phone buzzed in her coat pocket. A text from Nathan:

Hey babe, just landed at Sea-Tac. Can't wait to see you. How was Berlin?

Landed. He'd been somewhere. Not Seattle. Not home.

She typed back with fingers that felt disconnected from her body:

I'm home. Come over.

Then she walked out to the balcony. The rain had started again, a fine Seattle drizzle that blurred the city lights. On the balcony railing, strung on a makeshift clothesline, were tiny baby onesies, a pair of men's boxer briefs, and a lacy bralette that was definitely not her size.

She heard the front door open. Nathan's voice, breathless and slightly too loud:

"Misty? Hey, is everything—"

He rounded the corner and stopped. His face, still handsome at thirty-six in that boyish, slightly unkempt way she'd once found charming, went through a series of micro-expressions she'd learned to read during seven years of marriage: surprise, calculation, and finally, a practiced calm that made her stomach turn.

"Elena." He smiled, spreading his hands. "You're back early. I thought you weren't coming home until next week."

"I finished ahead of schedule." Her voice was flat. "The Berlin office is fully operational. I closed the Schmidt partnership. We're on track for Q4 targets. I wanted to surprise you."

Misty had retreated to the nursery—the guest room, Elena corrected herself—and closed the door. The baby's cries had subsided into fussy murmurs.

Nathan took a step toward Elena. She took a step back.

"Elena, listen. I can explain everything. This isn't—it's not what it looks like."

"What does it look like, Nathan?"

He ran a hand through his hair—a nervous tell she'd catalogued years ago. "Misty and I… we met at a tough time. You were always working, always traveling. I was lonely. It just happened."

"It just happened." Elena repeated the words slowly. "She moved into my house. She had a baby in my guest room. She's wearing my husband's clothes. And it just happened."

"The baby wasn't planned," Nathan said quickly. "She got pregnant and I—I didn't know what to do. Her parents are in Idaho, they're super religious, they would have disowned her. I couldn't just abandon her."

"Abandon her," Elena said. "But abandoning your wife was fine."

"That's not—Elena, come on. You know I love you. Misty is just… she's temporary. A mistake. I was going to figure it out before you got back, I swear."

"Figure it out." Elena looked at him—really looked at him. The man who'd held her hand at her mother's funeral. The man who'd cheered loudest when she got the VP offer. The man who'd told her, just three months ago, that he was so proud of her for taking the Berlin assignment. "You told me to go to Berlin. You insisted. You said it was my moment, that you'd handle everything at home."

Nathan's jaw tightened. "I did handle everything."

"You moved your mistress into my house."

"For Christ's sake, Elena, it's not your house. It's our house. We're married."

"Is that what you told the county assessor's office?"

His face went still. "What?"

"I checked the property records before I came back. You filed a quitclaim deed request in April. To add Misty Reed to the title. It was rejected because it required my notarized signature." She paused. "You tried to give my house to your mistress while I was in another country."

The color drained from Nathan's face. He opened his mouth, closed it, opened it again.

"Elena—"

"Don't."

She walked past him, through the living room where a brightly colored baby gym now occupied the space where her Eames lounge chair used to sit. She picked up her suitcase. At the front door, she paused and looked back.

Nathan stood frozen in the hallway, his hands hanging uselessly at his sides. Behind him, through the partially closed nursery door, she could see Misty's pale face watching, the baby clutched to her chest.

"You have until tomorrow to get her out of my house," Elena said. "I'll be back with my lawyer."

The door clicked shut behind her.

She made it to the elevator before the first tear fell.

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