

Chapter 1 of When His Mistress Faked Pregnancy, I Took Everything
I smoothed the crisp linen tablecloth one last time, adjusting the sterling silver candlesticks to perfectly frame the crystal vase of red roses between them. Nine years. Nine years of us, of building a life together, of weathering storms. The dining room in our Connecticut mansion glowed with warm light, casting dancing shadows across the mahogany table set for two.
The anniversary dinner I'd planned was intimate—Mark's favorite beef Wellington, a bottle of the Bordeaux we'd discovered on our honeymoon, and the chocolate soufflé that always made his eyes light up. Nine years deserved celebration, deserved acknowledgment of all we'd overcome together.
I checked my watch again. 7:45 PM. He'd promised to be home by seven.
My phone buzzed with a text. Mark's name flashed on the screen.
*Emergency at the office. Don't wait up. Sorry.*
Just like that. No explanation, no promise to make it up to me. The familiar hollow feeling expanded in my chest as I stood alone in our dining room, surrounded by flickering candlelight and cooling food.
"Sorry," I whispered to the empty chair across from me, mimicking his dismissive tone. How many nights had I sat like this, making excuses for him? How many times had I convinced myself that his business truly needed him more than I did?
I sank into my chair, pouring myself a glass of the expensive wine. As I raised it to my lips, a buzzing sound from the hallway caught my attention. Mark's phone. He must have forgotten it in his rush to this supposed emergency.
I found it on the console table, screen lighting up with incoming messages. Without thinking, I pressed my thumb to the home button—he'd added my fingerprint years ago, back when we still shared everything.
*Can't wait to see you tonight. Wearing that red thing you love...*
My stomach dropped as I stared at the message preview from someone named Lauren Hayes.
Lauren Hayes.
The name was vaguely familiar—someone from his office? My finger hovered over the notification, a voice in my head warning me not to look, that some things couldn't be unseen. But nine years of loyalty, of sacrifice, of standing by him through everything demanded the truth.
I tapped the message.
The screen filled with texts, dozens of them, stretching back months. Explicit messages. Photos no wife should ever see of another woman. Promises and plans.
*Baby's kicking again. Can't believe we're really doing this!*
Pregnant. She was pregnant.
My legs gave out, and I slid down against the wall, still clutching his phone as message after message revealed the elaborate betrayal. The candlelight in the dining room continued to flicker, oblivious to the fact that my world was burning down around me.
I didn't cry. Not then. Instead, I methodically read every message, every declaration of love, every plan they'd made—including his promise to leave me once the baby was born. Their baby. While I had grieved the child we'd lost, he had been creating a new family in secret.
The night stretched endlessly as I paced our hallways, his phone clutched in my hand like evidence at a crime scene. Sleep was impossible. My mind raced through every moment of our marriage, reframing each memory through this new, terrible lens.
By dawn, I had screenshots of everything. Months of messages. Plans for their future. His complaints about me. Her smug assurances that she would be a better partner, a better mother than I could ever be.
As the first light of morning filtered through our bedroom windows, something hardened inside me. The shock and pain crystallized into something else entirely—cold, clear resolve.
Nine years I had given him. Nine years of supporting his family's failing business with my parents' money. Nine years of standing by him when his parents treated me with thinly veiled contempt. Nine years of rebuilding myself after we lost our baby—a loss he seemed to forget within weeks.
I stared at my reflection in the bathroom mirror, barely recognizing the hollow-eyed woman looking back at me. This would be the last time Mark Jennings made me feel worthless.
This would be the last time I was anyone's doormat.
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